In the past 30 or 40 years, to suggest that Western/American culture
is better than any other culture is to get yourself the label of
“bigot” or “imperialist.” According to multiculturalists,
we must view other cultures as being equal, embracing them all in
the name of “diversity.”
The “diversity” trump card, of course, is the only argument they
had. In the rest of the world – with its dictatorships, oppression,
and primitivism – there is little that anyone would deem equal to
or better than America, when judged based on any rational standard.
American culture – which is one of prosperity, scientific advancement,
material abundance, individual rights – is objectively better than
literally all other cultures in the world now, or ever. Whereas
the history of other countries is underscored predominantly by war,
the history of America is underscored by continuous industrial improvement.
Never has the standard of living been so high or the opportunities
so vast as in America. We should do everything in our power
to export our ideals to the rest of the world. Those ideals
can by summed up in one word: freedom.
By exporting freedom, I do not mean using military force to liberate
the entire world of its dictators. I mean putting intellectual
and moral pressure on dictatorships to end and giving moral support
to the freedom fighters, who exist all over the world, and in some
places are at critical mass (such as in Iran). Doing this
is something we are failing at.
It is not just a matter of being the nice guy that we most export
freedom, it is imperative that we do so. It should have become
obvious on 9-11 that we simply cannot have dictatorships laying
around over the world.
This is arguably the biggest and most important debate of our time.
Can freedom exist in the Middle East, and what role does America
have in making that happen? Most intellectual leadership,
from both the left and the right, has been nothing but pessimistic
and cynical about this.
George Will, a conservative pundit, believes that wanting a free
Iraq is nothing but a Utopian dream, and the antithesis of conservative
values. He writes,
Condoleezza Rice, a political scientist, believes there is
scholarly evidence that democratic institutions do not merely spring
from a hospitable culture, but that they also can help create such
a culture. She is correct; they can. They did so in the young American
republic. But it would be reassuring to see more evidence that the
administration is being empirical, believing that this can happen
in some places, as opposed to ideological, believing that it must
happen everywhere it is tried.
[…]
Ron Chernow's magnificent new biography of Alexander Hamilton
begins with these of his subject's words: "I have thought it my
duty to exhibit things as they are, not as they ought to be." That
is the core of conservatism.
To help you let this sink in: Will believes that the dictatorships
in the Middle East – with their torture, abuse, rape, and murder
– should be left unchallenged, for things should be “as they are,
not as they ought to be.” I would like to take this belief
of his to the torture victims of Saddam’s regime, or the young girls
in Iran who are raped before they are killed (so they the mullahs
don’t have the moral guilt of killing a virgin), or to any freedom
fighter in the Middle East who has been wholly ignored by the West.
George Will is right in one respect, though: leaving things
as they are without challenging them – even corrupt dictatorships
like the ones in the Middle East, which is exactly what he is talking
about – is the essence of conservatism. In fact, it is the
exact definition.
Like many people probably, Will believes to advocate a free Iraq
(or any other country) is to impose an unnatural will on the Middle
East – that dictatorships are here to stay, and only the self-righteous
would want to change them. It would be beneficial for Mr.
Will and for other’s sake, then, to remember what men have the free
will to change and what they do not.
As Ayn Rand wrote in “The Metaphysical versus the Man-Made,” metaphysically-given
things – the natural laws of reality – are to be accepted as inflexible
and permanent. “Reality, to be commanded, must be obeyed.”
Man-made institutions, on the other hand, are to be judged, challenged,
and put under intense scrutiny. Of all the man-made institutions
that should be challenged, it is dictatorship.
Ronald Reagan did not believe that things should be “as they are,
not as they ought to be,” when he said, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear
down this wall.” And, let us not forget: the wall
came crumbling down.
Calling upon a free Middle East is not an impossible, Utopian dream.
In fact, it is very effective and, ultimately, is the only effective
method of ending tyranny. It is commonly known and accepted
that Ronald’ Reagan’s speeches in favor of freedom around the world
inspired people to rise up against their tyrannical regimes. He
was not afraid to say: our way is better and your way must
change. This is exactly what we should be doing in the war on terrorism
now.
Trying to fight tyranny solely militarily is ineffective and suicidal.
We tried to fight communism militarily during Vietnam and lost.
Even if we had won, it would not have mattered. When one tyrannical
regime fell, another one would have just as soon taken its place.
The same will happen with terrorism. Only when we attack terrorism
at its root, by stating that tyranny and terrorism are morally repugnant
and the world does not approve of regimes that torture their own
and other people will terrorism ultimately be eradicated.
We should not hesitate to advocate and enforce our enlightened
way of life for the Iraqis or anywhere else. Today, to suggest
this – to suggest and advocate that other countries be free – is
to get labeled a dictator or imperialist. George Will writes:
Speaking of culture, as neoconservative nation-builders would
be well-advised to avoid doing, Pat Moynihan said: "The central
conservative truth is that it is culture, not politics, that determines
the success of a society. The central liberal truth is that politics
can change a culture and save it from itself."
Will suggests that the way America is using her government to
impose democracy on Iraq is “liberal” (therefore, wrong) for it
uses the government to do so. He states that using the government
cannot create prosperity, only “culture” can – whatever that is,
since he did not define what culture he was talking about.
But Will should remember, it is has been proven what creates “prosperity,”
and it is not “culture”: it is freedom, specifically economic
freedom. “The Index of Economic Freedom,” put out every year by
the Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal, is a report
that judges how economically free a nation is. When the list
is put together, it becomes obvious: the more free a country
is, the more prosperous it is. If Will was really concerned
with prosperity in Iraq, he and others concerned would advocate
a completely free system of government there and would support whatever
efforts are being made to make that happen.
Freedom is not just for some men. It is for all men – for
all men who wish to live as men, anyway. Freedom is not something
men merely “yearn” for nor is it nothing but a lofty, unattainable
dream written about in poems or books. Freedom is a fundamental
requirement of man’s existence. By freedom, I mean freedom
from physical force, and therefore I mean: capitalism.
In order to live, man must be left free to think and produce.
Only a person left free – and well protected – against any roaming
thug or gang will be able to invent, build, and produce. We
should demand Iraq, now, adopt some of our enlightened principles
on government: a separation of religion and state, guaranteed
rights to free speech, individual rights, etc.
Since George Will and others are failing to see how freedom can
work or be encouraged in the Middle East, let me help them, not
to mention the Bush administration out: we must support
freedom lovers in the Middle East wherever they may be.
For those who think the Bush administration is exporting freedom
to the world, or at least doing all he can or even a sufficient
job, they are wrong. When it comes to supporting freedom lovers
– and they exist literally all over in the Middle East – who courageously
fight for free speech, democracy, etc., the Bush administration
frequently drops the ball – not to mention literally all of Western
intellectuals and media. We almost never hear of those in
the Middle East who favor freedom, love America, and want nothing
more than for America to start supporting them.
In this
article, called, “Half-Hearted: Bold words but weak action
from the Bush administration,” Michael Rubin outlines various things
in which the Bush administration has failed to support freedom lovers
and condemn dictatorships. Some examples:
- Bush praised the Libyan government for releasing Fathi El-Jahmi,
a local government official who was imprisoned for endorsing free
speech and democracy. However, one week later, the government
surrounded his house and cut off his phone line. El-Jahmi is now
missing, two days after US officials left the country. Bush
has said nothing.
- Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage referred to the
Islamic Regime of Iran as a "democracy," which currently is imprisoning
and torturing Siamak Pourzand, a 75 yr old journalist whose only
crime was speaking out in favor of democracy. (The Islamic
Regime of Iran’s “democracy,” also involves allowing only candidates
deemed “Islamic” enough by the ruling clerics to run in an election,
and voter turnout is no more than 12% as the fraudulent elections
are boycotted by the people of Iran.)
- The US deported Issam Abu Issa, a former chairman of the Palestine
International Bank, who came to the US to speak about Yassar Arafat's
corruption. They deported him after Yassar Arafat
himself told the US government that this man was a terrorist financer.
- Paul Bremer has made a speech embracing former Iraqi soldiers
and Baathists. State Department officials have told journalists
that the US may exclude those who don't favor a "re-Baathification"
of Iraq. In other words - they took out one dictator to
set up a government ripe for another.
And, probably the most important, although not in the article:
while we hear endlessly about “liberating Iraq,” we almost never
hear about liberating the Iranians, who of all people want freedom,
love America, and want nothing more than for America to turn their
attention to them.
One would think, from that list, that the Bush administration is
filled with morons, given they have the explicit goal of creating
a free Middle East but engage in these kinds of actions. However,
this
article helps to explain what is going on: The State Department
itself is filled with tyrant-apologizing leftists. It is up
to George Bush to get a handle on that, and fire those who need
fired.
Since neither Western leaders or even the Bush administration are
fully or even semi-advocating for democracy and freedom everywhere,
it is up to the people of America as a grass roots effort.
And that is already starting to happen, exactly where it should:
on college campuses. At Indiana University, a “Students
for Global Democracy” has formed. Their mission statement
is to encourage democracy and freedom around the world. Their
first project is exactly what it should be: freeing Iran.
If we want a safe and free world, we should do everything in our
power to export freedom: to condemn dictators and support
freedom lovers everywhere that they may be.