Rhetoric
distorts realities:
In today's bizarre political climate,
a relativist is someone who argues for moral consistency
Robert Jensen
School of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2002
Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
(Virginia), June16, 2002
by Robert Jensen
AUSTIN, Texas--A history professor of mine once returned essay exams with
the comment that some students' attitude seemed to be, "Don't bother me with
the facts--I'm going for the bigger picture."
George W. Bush wasn't in that class, but I thought of the professor's sardonic
comment as I read the commencement address the president delivered at West
Point earlier this month.
In addition to restating the Bush Doctrine (the United States has the right
to destroy any society anywhere for whatever reason it chooses regardless
of international opinion, law, or basic morality), Bush at West Point used
one of the popular contemporary buzz phrases, "moral clarity."
Given that no one really argues for moral unclarity, claiming moral clarity
is really just a cheap way to dismiss other points of view without providing
a compelling argument or dealing with the messy world of facts. The West
Point speech shows just how morally murky the president is.
In that speech, for example, Bush endorsed John F. Kennedy's and Ronald Reagan's
refusal "to gloss over the brutality of tyrants" during the Cold War. That's
accurate, if Bush meant the brutality of tyrants on the other side. American
leaders have always been quick to condemn the crimes of enemies, which is
perfectly appropriate.
But the United States has not only glossed over the brutality of tyrants
on our side; it has often actively supported and funded such brutality. Where
was the moral clarity when Kennedy backed an authoritarian regime in South
Vietnam that had almost no support among its people? Where was it when Reagan
supported vicious military dictatorships in Central America that killed tens
of thousands of innocent people? In both cases, some moral clarity on the
part of U.S. leaders would have saved lives.
"Targeting innocent civilians for murder is always and everywhere wrong,"
Bush continued. No disagreement there, but what about the U.S. military's
direct attack on the civilian population of Vietnam through massive bombing
and chemical warfare, or Reagan's support for the Contra army in Nicaragua
that focused on what were called "soft targets" (undefended civilian targets)?
Or, what about the record of Bush's father, our commander in chief during
the Gulf War? The U.S. military deliberately destroyed much of the civilian
infrastructure of Iraq, including sewage- and water-treatment plants and
electrical-generation facilities far from the supposed battle theater in
Kuwait. The military itself predicted such attacks would kill civilians,
as they were designed to do and did. The resulting civilian deaths continued
long after the war, exacerbated by the cruel economic sanctions the United
States demanded.
The point is simple: Calls for moral clarity, if they are to be more than
empty rhetoric, require that we bother ourselves with the facts and pay attention
to history.
Great powers have always gone about the business of conquest while explaining
it was in the interests of the conquered. So, when the British ravaged India
and extracted much of its wealth, it wasn't described as greed but as the
grand enterprise of bringing civilization and religion to the natives--the
white man's burden. The United States used similar rhetoric in its nearly
complete extermination of indigenous people in the conquest of North America.
These days, we no longer talk of civilizing the natives, but about bringing
freedom and democracy. Such a goal, if pursued in humane and lawful ways
under the appropriate international institutions, would be to the good. But
simply because politicians say that is their motivation for foreign and military
policy does not make it so.
Upon examination of those messy facts, it becomes clear that the United States
goes to war for the same reasons great powers have always fought--to secure
markets and resources, to extend and deepen domination of strategic regions
of the world. Old-style colonialism and conquest have been replaced with
new modes of control through economic domination and the selective use of
military power, but the goals remain the same.
Nowhere is that more obvious than in the Middle East and Central Asia. Although
sold to the public as a war on terrorism, the war in Afghanistan and the
war the Bush administration is planning against Iraq are about control of
those strategically crucial, energy-rich regions. The United States seeks
not to own the oil outright, but rather control the flow of oil and oil profits.
The plans for Iraq make this painfully clear. Given that no one has produced
evidence connecting Iraq to al-Qaida, it's hard to understand how Iraq is
the next phase in the war on terrorism, as Bush officials proclaim. While
it is true that Saddam Hussein's regime is brutal and repressive, he was
every bit as brutal throughout the 1980s when he was our valued ally (because
he was waging war on Iran, our enemy at the time). Officials warn that Hussein
is a threat to the region, but ignore the fact that the Arab nations have
rejected U.S. plans for war and apparently don't feel threatened.
It's not morality or a concern for the safety of people that leads Bush to
decry Hussein's brutality, but an interest in replacing a hostile government
with a client regime in a major oil-producing nation.
So, moral clarity, as the president uses the term, means just the opposite:
the amoral--and sometimes immoral--self-interest of the powerful. An even
more curious inversion of reality comes when those of us raising critical
questions are accused of being moral relativists.
I am not a moral relativist. While I believe that we should be open-minded
when considering the moral claims of others and humble in our own claims
to having nailed down moral truth, I believe in the project of articulating
and defending universal human rights. What seems to make me a relativist
in the eyes of politicians such as Bush and intellectual attack dogs such
as William Bennett is that I believe the United States should be as accountable
to those standards as other nations. In other words, in this odd political
climate, a relativist is someone who argues for moral consistency.
If moral judgments are applied consistently, it's clear that the United States,
like other great powers, has much to answer for. Making this simple point
these days leads to further accusations that I must hate America, another
curious claim. How is it hateful to apply moral standards to one's own nation?
If I articulate clear moral standards and try to apply them to myself as
an individual, it is usually taken as a sign of maturity. But when done at
the level of a nation, it is widely condemned as a sign of insufficient love
of country.
So, to avoid confusion, here's what I believe: All human life has equal value,
whether rich or poor, American or not. The United States has long pursued
policies in the world that work for the interests of the rich against the
poor and that sacrifice the lives of non-Americans for the affluence and
comfort of Americans. Those policies are wrong, and American citizens have
a moral obligation to stop them, using all the political freedoms that dissidents
have struggled for and won throughout American history.
That seems both moral and clear to me.
--------
Robert Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas
at Austin, a member of the Nowar
Collective
, and author of the book
Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream
. His pamphlet,
“Citizens of the Empire,”
is available at http://www.nowarcollective.com/citizensoftheempire.pdf.
He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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