Saturday, February 23, 2008

Public Intellectuals: The Public and the Intellects

Does AA stand for alcohol anonymous or average American? After living in the most densely populated area of the US (Southern California) for ten years I honestly don’t know if there’s a difference. No, my point isn’t that the average American is a binge drinker but that he is uneducated and unaware of his role in the United States. Given that our country is driven by the average American, it’s a little unnerving that he’s drunk at the wheel. The blame game doesn’t stop there though. What about the ivory tower intellects that spend their time talking about topics that are either irrelevant to the average American’s day-to-day living or talked about at a level so intellectually elevated that the average American can’t make that connection. No wonder then that 3 hour car chases and Brittney Spears’ latest scandal get more air time than immigration policies, international trade agreements and interest rate fluctuations combined. ABC 7 news is the number one rated news station in Southern California and yet no decently educated person would think they were getting a good idea of what’s going on in the world by watching a whether girl dressed like a stripper and two news anchors whose only real talent in life is pretending to be smart.

Society has dictated a symbiotic relationship between public intellectuals and the average man that has broken down over time in America. The public intellectuals give the people the facts and the average man decides, in utilitarian fashion, what to do based on those facts. However, both parties have broken their contractual agreement to the other. The average American is not educating himself enough to be able to comprehend even the simplest of concepts and consequentially the public intellectual, in his impatience, has resolved to just being an intellectual. That is, he no longer tries to explain himself to a population lacking the expertise that he has.

The Average American is grossly undereducated considering the resources available to him regardless of his socioeconomic class. The national graduation rate for high schools is 71% in the US. California specifically, which holds the most electoral votes and most seats in the house, has a 64% graduation rate. Take that statistic and then consider how horrible our schools are in relation to the rest of the first world. We ranked 19 and 20th in math and science respectively among 36 countries (side note: this test was done later with both first and third world countries – we were beat by a couple of the third world countries so our ranking went even lower). To put this in perspective for you, when I taught IR to a few LA public high schools HONORS classes I was unable to find a single student who could explain to me what capitalism was. To give another anecdote - I attended my little sister’s high school homecoming game a few months back in the suburbs. The homecoming princesses were supposed to be the smartest and prettiest girls in the senior class. Only one out of five of them had any aspirations for attending college. The other four said, “I would like to get married and start a family after graduating from high school.” The college bound teen did not win the crown…Ladies and Gentlemen; these are your future voter.

Given that your audience doesn’t understand capitalism, how far can you really dumb down the material in order to explain why their jobs are going overseas? I sympathize with public intellectuals – I really do. However, walking away from the masses by locking yourself in an ivory tower does not bring meaning to your work anymore than discovering the cure for cancer and then keeping it a secret, does. Stephen Mack is absolutely right when he talks about the supposed “conflict” between intellects and anti-intellectualism in America:

[The “conflict”] is both wrong and wrong-headed. It is wrong in the sense that it traffics in the self-serving fiction of American anti-intellectualism. And it is wrong-headed in the sense that it undermines the value of citizen responsibility by subordinating it unnecessarily to the most elitist argument for the public intellectual, the one grounded in the myth of an aristocracy of experts.

It is not an American tradition to be anti-intellectual and believing that it is only further separates the intellectuals from the people they are supposed to be trying help, by excluding them from the problem solving process.

There’s an obvious disconnect in this country between intellects and the masses. Both parties have turned their backs on each other in distrust leaving a vacuum that’s filled by mindless media dribble and misleading politicians. Both sides need to reach out to each other in order to become the body of criticism that’s needed to turn the wheels of democracy. Our country’s system of governance ultimately relies on the watchful eye of the people to administer justice and make changes in the system where need. The status quo would suggest that a bank robber just walked out with the cash and the security guard shook his hand. The US would do well to take a page out of the book of other countries. Pakistan is in horrible condition right now but it’s most recent election results would suggest that they know a corrupt dictatorship when they see one.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Religion: The New Scarlet Letter

"Lighthouses are more useful than Churches"
-Benjamin Franklin


Stephen Mack posted a piece that argues that "dialogic neutrality," or the elimination of religious dialogue in politics is infeasible in the United States given a.) our liberal history – from abolition to labor movements – is entangled in religion and b.) it’s intrinsically unfair, “to ask religious intellectuals to disarm their political speech of its fundamental moral rationale." Furthermore, Mack posits that religion offers a unifying identity or “sense of belonging” which without, democracy cannot sustain itself. He ultimately concludes that we shouldn’t be worrying about the existence of religion in politics but rather the way in which it is used. Mack certainly is not the only proponent of arguments like this and I would feign suggest he is on the far right of this argument. However, there seems to be this unquestioned mentality at every point in the spectrum that feels religion is super-glued to our government - you can work around it or through it, but it's there to stay.

I take issue with this argument for two reasons. First, the use of religion, at least for just causes, in modern democracies is an antiquated tool. There are strong alternatives for social unity that don’t utilize religion. Second, our roots in religion are not justification enough to suggest that we cannot and should not disassociate our government from religion. The principles and values on which our country was founded are no longer validated by religious authority. They are in themselves sacred because our citizens have chosen to promote and preserve them. Furthermore, some of the worst atrocities have been done in the name of God. Man has proven time and time again that he’s not responsible enough to wield the infallible power that religious zeal yields. This power often leads to a horribly destructive group think mentality which, in lieu of a check on religious fervor and given alternative unifying indentities, means we shouldn’t use it at all.

The religious man may have played a prominent role in politics in recent years but, leave no doubt, he’s a dying breed. No one can argue that religion, at least in the Western world, has lost its power status throughout the past millennia. Kings no longer bow to the pope and bribes are still paid to a big man, but he isn’t “god” and he doesn’t wear a funny hat. Perhaps the elderly still hold religion dear and they certainly vote more than any other group but when they’ve left this earth they will leave behind a more secular generation. Surely when today’s youth takes over with their “godless” pop culture – religion will take yet another hit. People are finding other social cleavages to align themselves with. Low-income blacks unite over policy issues just as much as white Christians do. Hispanics in LA didn’t vote for Villaraigosa because he was catholic but because he was Mexican. Women are uniting behind Hillary Clinton because they feel she will promote equality between sexes in the work place. Blacks are uniting behind Obama because they believe he will represent them better than a white politician. Their religion is a moot issue in the election. James Skillen best depicts what truly is at stake in politics today:

This country's increasingly diverse society, culturally speaking, can live comfortably enough with religious diversity in private. What Americans do not yet accept or know how to establish, however, is religious diversity in public--in politics and in government because the old-time civil religion demands an America whole and undivided. Consequently, the real political fights and culture wars are not over differences in private faiths but over the principles of political faith that should define the American way of life as a whole. The contest over the right to define those principles is the contest for majority control of Congress, the White House, and the courts--and the winner takes all. Those who disagree with the majority will still have every right to hold their private convictions, but they will not have authority to exert any public control. What would be most helpful, then, is a probing examination of where candidates stand with respect to the American civil religion, and that requires dealing with the truly relevant questions of political religion.

Religion is not at the heart of political tension any more. There are values associated with what Skillen phrases as a “civil religion," unattached from God or a god. These values are more of policies and ideologies than religious creed backed by a deity. The political landscape is no longer one of ontological banter but rather deontological debates. Rights and wrongs are judged and decided on an individual level not taken at face value from a book. Religion is one method for identifying one’s civil religion but it is far from the only alternative. I am an upper class white male but I am not “Christian.”

Just as it's important to analyze religion's role in modern day America, it's also important to study the empirical role it has played in politics. Anyone who attended grade school in the US is taught about the Puritans who came to America to escape religious persecution. America like all countries is proud of its roots and like most countries we find out cradle more so in a church than a public forum. However, to suggest that we're the same country today that we were almost 400 years ago is like saying Marvin Gaye and today's rap artists are the same because they found their roots in jazz/blues. It’s fun to talk about the Puritan leader, John Winthrop, and his vision of “a city upon a hill,” but there’s a black sheep in that story that gets locked away and never talked about. Winthrop was eventually thrown out of office because he fervently refused to form a general assembly which would give a voice to the people. Now explain to me how that aligns itself with the democratic society we’ve built today. Few would argue that Ben Franklin wasn’t an integral figurehead of the constitution and he surely saw the need for separation of church and state long before America was diversified religiously (see quote at top). In just under a hundred years then we see at least some of our leaders - from Winthrop to Franklin - beginning to change their opinion about the role of religion in government.

Herein lies the hallmark of American government: its ability to innovate and adapt to the needs of its people without a violent revolution or a struggle for power. Part of this innovation has been the ability to govern a diverse group of people fairly and justly regardless of their religion BECAUSE we have downplayed the role of religion in society. The constitutional rights afforded to citizens in the 21st century are rarely venerated because they are “God-given rights,” but rather because they are “American rights.” They stand for freedom and tolerance for all because Americans, as a country, decided to preserve them. A Buddhist or a Hindu doesn’t believe his fourth amendment rights are a result of a higher being but rather because the US as a liberal society decided to value them. Similarly, I don’t think you would find a Buddhist or a Hindu would suggest that these are bad rights because their religious idols didn’t stress them. These rights have been around long enough that they validate themselves without the “hand of god.” American politics may find its roots entrenched in religion but this does not necessitate identification along religious lines.

The obvious flaw in my argument is that religion was still responsible for the ultimate creation of the US and it was still the reason for many other civil rights movements. In essence, there is an undeniable good that religion is responsible for. My counter to this is that for every instance of good that has been done in the name of God, a horrible act was done in the same manner. Martin Luther King Jr. was a minister who fought for the equal rights of all and he did so on the basis that God created all men equally. However, wasn’t that same god used to justify the slavery of African’s in the first place or the god that the KKK worked for? Wasn’t that the same god that gave a man the right to control his wife however he chose? More pertinent, isn’t that the same god that’s being used now to deny gays their equal rights? Look at the neo-conservatives who recently had control of office with the support of evangelical Christians. The US experienced one of the largest and most catastrophic group think movements in world history. We went to war with less than credible intelligence. No one in congress stopped to think about whether faulty data was a possibility and no one stopped to consider if sending less than half the recommended troops to Iraq was a good idea and certainly, no one paid any attention to the anti-war rallies. All the while George W. Bush rallied the religious right “with God on our side” and less oversight than even Nixon.

This is the very wicked paradox that Mack discusses. Religion can rally the righteous troops, but politics ultimately guides them to a corrupt end. I agree with Stephen Mack and religious conservatives insofar as they argue that religion can unite people under one banner and can be used for honest objectives. However, I disagree with those who posit that "can" and "must" are the same thing. Given that there are alternative means of uniting people in today’s society, it seems that it is empirically unwise to trust anyone with the unchecked power of religious zeal. Mack and others say we should try to guard against this unchecked form of religious zeal. I would argue that the nature of the beast lends itself to raw, unbridled power and thus should never be used. I would not readily be a US citizen if any given branch of government had unbridled power. Equally, I refuse to allow a religious majority to take charge of America’s reins without ditching the bible first. Ask Indiana Jones what happens when we open the Ark of the Covenant. God’s power is too much responsibility for man. Let’s close our eyes and lock the Ark up in the cellar of the old government.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Conspiracy? No, just Pakistani politics...


It's hard to open a Pakistani newspaper these days without seeing the name Benazir Bhutto. For most Americans this name means little more than an unpronounceable mouthful of syllables and another excuse to ditch the world news section for the sports page. However, for many Pakistanis she represented the hope for a new government independent of the military. She (yes, a woman - can you believe it?) served as prime minister for a number of years before being exiled to Dubai in 1998 as a result of false allegations of corruption. She was finally allowed back into the country in October of last year after reaching an "understanding" with current president and former chief of army staff, Pervez Musharraf. At the time of her homecoming, Pakistan was under military rule pending the upcoming elections where she was the opposition frontrunner as chairman of the Pakistani People's Party (PPP). Anyone who’s ever opened a history book can see where this is going - an anti-military politician going into the elections against the former head military general who was undemocratically appointed... As you guessed it, she was assassinated by a suicide bomber on December 27th, 2007 just two weeks before elections.

Granted, she was assassinated by Al-Qaeda operatives due to her “crackdown-on terrorists” platform but there are still strong undercurrents of corruption in this story that have nothing to do with Bin Laden and his cronies. Let’s analyze the facts here:

· After multiple public death threats from terrorist leaders AND an assassination attempt at her homecoming rally, she requested body guards from a government agency similar to the US’ Secret Service. None was provided for her.
· Bhutto requested security from Senator John Kerry who then requested security on her behalf from Condi Rice. His request was ignored.
· Even though she was in a bomb-proof and bullet-proof limo at the time of the explosion she still managed to die even though none of her passengers sustained any injuries.
· The initial autopsy report said she was killed from bullet wounds to the head. Upon further inquiry, this was changed to a head wound suffered when her head hit the car door handle in the explosion. No blood was found on the car doors.
· When Scotland Yard was called in to conduct a neutral, third party investigation into the matter, the Pakistani police limited them to only discovering the cause of death (which is what lead to the change in cause of death).

I know what you’re thinking, sounds like a story out of a Tom Clancy book, right? As much as I’d love to stroke my ego and declare my investigatory-scandal-skills supreme, my observation is far from original. Pakistani newspapers know better than to tattle on the government and US newspapers are more interested in proclaiming the atrocities of Al-Qaeda than investigating a conspiracy, but the Pakistani people aren’t stupid. A PPP leader was quoted as saying, "We will go out with a pledge to fight those who snatched away our leader. We will defeat them. We will vote them out." There are also many people pointing fingers at Washington, wondering why they weren’t being very good watch dogs in a country supposedly so important for national security. The easy answer is: Bush’s administration is incompetent. The better answer is: the US didn’t want a leader who wasn’t willing to put border patrol at a higher priority than the needs of her people. God forbid the US ever covertly supported a military dictator over a more representative, albeit, US-critical government. *cough* Saddam *cough*.

The elections are in total disarray at this point as the PPP has yet to appoint anyone besides Bhutto’s 19 year old son and the corrupt business industrialist, his father, as president and acting president respectively. The name “Pakistan” is translated to mean “land of the pure.” Sad to say, the people who reside in the country are at odds with its name. On a high note, at least all of Pakistan’s WMDs are safe!