By Cliff May
Wednesday, October 08, 2014
In theory, we Americans are great proponents of
diversity. In practice, how many of us stop to seriously consider the meaning
of the word? If peoples really are diverse – if we differ not just about
clothes and cuisine but over ideas, values, interests, morality, and human
rights -- that implies there is no “international community,” certainly not one
that embraces “international norms.” For years, we’ve told ourselves the world
is a “global village.” Turns out it may be more like the “several remote
nations” to which Gulliver traveled.
Multiculturalists of the left are most likely to
misconstrue diversity. But there also are those on the right who believe all
human hearts yearns for freedom. By now, I think, it’s become apparent: Freedom
may not be everyone’s cup of tea.
The Iranians who took to the streets chanting “Death to
the dictators!” in 2009: I am convinced they did -- and still do -- want
freedom which, at a minimum, would mean liberation from theocracy, limiting the
power of the billionaire mullahs, as well as the Islamic Revolutionary Guards
and the Basij thugs who have oppressed ordinary Iranians since the Islamic
Revolution of 1979.
Those protesting in Hong Kong right now are risking life
and limb to prevent Beijing Communist Party bosses from encroaching on their
freedoms. Under the 1984 declaration that paved the way for the British Crown
Colony to be turned over to China, Hong Kong was promised “a high degree of
autonomy” for the half century following the transfer of sovereignty in 1997.
The idea was not that when 2047 rolled around the people of Hong Kong would
accept dictatorship with bovine passivity. Rather, it was assumed that by then
dictators would have been relegated to the dustbin of history. At this point,
that seems rather a long shot.
In a diverse world, there will be those who believe in
peaceful coexistence and those who believe in what Franklin Roosevelt called
“philosophies …based on conquest and the subjugation of other people”; those
who believe that liberal democracy is the best form of governmental
organization and those who prefer authoritarianism or totalitarianism; those
who regard the intentional killing of other people’s children for political
purposes as wrong, and those who kill other people’s children for political
purposes, as well as moral relativists who say: “One man’s terrorist is another
man’s freedom fighter.”
Addressing the UN General Assembly last month, President
Obama asserted that “the future belongs to those who build, not those who
destroy." First: That’s a hope, not a fact. Second: The hundreds of young
Muslim men (and some women) flocking to the Islamic State (also known as ISIS
and ISIL) in Syria and Iraq see no contradiction between the two.
As they destroy ancient Christian, Yazidi, Kurdish and
“apostate” Muslim communities, they also are intending to build a caliphate for
the 21st century, an empire in the image of what they imagine Muhammad founded
in the 7th century, what my colleague Reuel Marc Gerecht calls “a new conquest
society.” Obama may not think that’s a useful thing to construct but, in a
diverse world, he can hardly expect everyone to concur.
Similarly, Hamas wants to build “an Islamic state in
Palestine, all of Palestine” as Hamas Political Bureau member Mahmoud al-Zahar
said last week. That would, obviously, require the destruction of Israel, a
goal to which Hamas has always been openly and unequivocally committed.
Some of the Americans and Europeans who hold up signs
reading “Free Palestine” ignore that. Others are just not troubled by it. Many
turn a blind eye to this, too: Wherever Islamic militants rule freedom is
limited to a choice between submission and death. In Gaza, as in the Islamic
State, as in the Islamic Republic of Iran, no one gets up on a soap box in the
public square, speaks his mind, criticizes those in power, and then goes home
for a quiet dinner with the family. In a diverse world, some people are
tolerant -- others jail or slaughter those who displease them.
There is diversity among Islamists. For example, Hamas,
al Qaeda and Iran don’t recognize the legitimacy of the Islamic State in
Syria/Iraq. Over the weekend, however, the Pakistani Taliban declared its
allegiance to Caliph Ibrahim, as the entity’s ruler, Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, now
calls himself. That must have come as a disappointment to al Qaeda leader Ayman
al Zawahiri, who is al Baghdadi’s rival (not his enemy – there’s a difference).
There are Russians who value freedom. President Vladimir
Putin is not among them. George W. Bush was mistaken when he looked into
Putin’s eyes and thought he saw an aspiring democrat, just as Barack Obama was
wrong to think he could “reset” relations with Russia based on mutual respect,
and a shared commitment to peace and international law.
If the polls are to be believed, more than 8 out of 10
Russians support Putin. An analysis by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty leads to
the conclusion that most Russians value national pride and power over freedom
and democracy. That’s diversity for you.
Within the U.S., diversity is most loudly trumpeted on
our campuses – ironic because a scholar with unfashionable ideas has about as
much chance of getting tenure as winning the lottery. People forget that tenure
was supposed to protect intellectual diversity, not abolish it.
And while many Americans continue to treasure freedom,
others are more concerned with equality of outcome. There is a tension between
the two because when individuals with dissimilar backgrounds, habits and
talents compete in a free market they inevitably wind up in different places.
But that’s not the kind of diversity most of those who claim to be championing
diversity are willing to defend.
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