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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, December 1, 2016
On myths, facts and blogosphere
I know a friend who despises opinion pieces. He is a cynic when it comes
to commentaries and as such, measure commentators (political or
otherwise) on the basis of their fidelity to facts. Now facts, as the
saying goes, are sacred, and comment free, but for all he cares this
friend tends to disparage certain writers based on their lack of regard
for the truth: journalism, for him at least, must be stripped of frill.
The truth and nothing but the truth is what he aspires for in whatever
he reads (barring the occasional novel or comic book, of course). I
can't say I agree with him entirely, but I will say this: I am no fan of
opinion columnists, and going by that logic, at least when it comes to
such columns, I am no fan of writing them either.
At one level I suppose it has to do with the blogosphere. There are so
many writers out there on the net that it's difficult to set some sense
of uniformity. It's difficult to standardize, in other words. Those who
rant and rave, for the lack of a better way of putting it, rant and rave
to their hearts' content, never mind whether or not the extrapolations
they make come close to the truth.
The best columnists, to my mind at least, don't indulge in such rants:
they are careful to support what they write with what they know. There's
a reason, after all, why Keats, despite his saturated paeans and
tributes to love, is definitely not the superior of Pushkin: the former
was young, too young, to talk of what he talked about with any
concreteness.
US foreign policy
All this came to me during the days that followed the American election.
I observed in this column two weeks ago that we shouldn't care about
the results because whoever wins and whoever loses, it's still the same
show when it comes to US foreign policy. There the matter would have
ended, if not for the almost ceaseless barrage of comments and opinion
pieces that Sri Lankans kept on writing. It would be interesting, I
hence thought, to delve into some of these comments and glean from them a
sense of the political that their writers exhibit, and how, at the end
of the day, they congeal to their awareness (or the lack thereof) of the
political in their country.
First and foremost, as Nalaka Gunawardene pointed out in a column last
week, Donald Trump is everything the alt-right (or alternative right)
could have dreamt of: a global warming sceptic, a panderer to hardcore
evangelists and fundamentalists (while being an atheist), and a
pragmatist in the world of business. "We can only hope that Trump's
business pragmatism would prevail over climate action" is a parting shot
Gunawardene takes at the American President. We agree.
In yet another article written before this, he went on to argue that
what we saw was a "largely fact-free election choosing a (mostly)
fact-resistant winner." What of that? To the extent that Trump's
perception as a fact-resistant candidate is based on his crass handling
and distortion of facts, I agree. Malinda Seneviratne, on the other
hand, who is less prone to dichotomies that characterize the American
political scene, argued that it cut both ways: Clinton's bid for the
presidency was defeated because of facts (her past record, her husband's
devious stances on foreign policy, and her economic views), while Trump
worked on the fears of outside invasion which can, as I observed two
weeks ago, congeal into a whole electorate unless they are addressed in
time.
Popular vote
Who won what? As Paul Krugman puts it, "Hillary Clinton won the popular
vote by more than two million, and she would probably be president-elect
if the director of the FBI hadn't laid such a heavy thumb on the
scales, just days before the election." That heavy thumb, to put things
in perspective, just got heavier when Trump supporters whipped up a
campaign against her.
In a context where political preferences are framed by the obsessive need to pick a champion, how is it possible to (de)select candidates based on the (as important) need to choose the lesser of the two evils? It is here, I think, that most commentators are batting for a six and failing miserably, starting with this: dichotomizing candidates based on the perceived lesser evil distorts the truth.
In a context where political preferences are framed by the obsessive need to pick a champion, how is it possible to (de)select candidates based on the (as important) need to choose the lesser of the two evils? It is here, I think, that most commentators are batting for a six and failing miserably, starting with this: dichotomizing candidates based on the perceived lesser evil distorts the truth.
That is why I can't understand why writers (here and elsewhere) consider
gender as the predominant factor in the election. I believe the tussle
between Trump and Clinton was more dependent on perceptions: on who was
standing for the Establishment and who was against it. Democrats who are
whining about the winner losing at the Electoral College (for Trump is
the fifth President to lose the popular vote) should consider the man
they ignored. Gender figured in, but if Democrats are so worried about
gender, one can ask, why did they conveniently throw out Bernie Sanders
(through the flaws of the system) who stood for gender equality in a
less ambivalent way than Clinton?
That's just one fact. Here's another. Unlike in 2000, when Ralph Nader
campaigned as an independent candidate and effectively "robbed" key
votes which would have ensured victory for Al Gore, neither Jill Stein
nor Gary Johnson (the man who did not know what Aleppo was) courted
enough popularity for one to conclude that they did for Clinton what
Nader did for Gore.
Electing a warmonger
The fact is, not enough young people voted for Clinton: they were either
fed up with the system (because of which Sanders was kicked out) or
worried about electing a warmonger for a President (for Clinton, despite
what her supporters can and will say, was the woman who jubilantly
said, "We came, we saw, he died!" of Muammar Gaddafi). They couldn't
vote for Trump because he was far away from their ideals, and because of
their idealism they decided to stay at home. How close was the fight,
then? "If just one in 100 voters changed their votes to Clinton, the
electoral college votes would have been 307 Clinton, 231 Trump. Not much
of a landslide, really" was what a lecturer in Political Science in
Texas observed. True.
Forget all that. I still don't get this gender argument. Trump, so the
conventional wisdom goes, courted the mythmakers, the worst elements of a
society touted as the Land of the Free and Home of the Brave:
homophobes, sexists, and racists. Should we be worried? Of course. But
to argue that gender (or for that matter ethnicity) was all that figured
in the election would be (and I say this at the cost of irking those
arguing otherwise) as reductionist as saying that Trump was an
anti-Establishment candidate (which is, by the way, the most common
observation made by those vouching for the man, even here).
He made some unseemly comments about women that the mainstream media in
the US made use of, only to irk those who supported him even more. But
does this make the other candidate progressive? "Progressivism is a
disease!" is what Glenn Beck loved to shout out. Now Glenn holds the
Founding Fathers in esteem and criticizes if not trashes the likes of
Clinton, but reading his rants against liberal politicos, I questioned
myself, "Who is progressive in this world? Obama? Clinton? Ralph Nader?"
Progressivism
Besides and more importantly, what is progressivism? Is it being soft on
foreign policy, in which case no candidate can be singled out and
commended? Or is it being soft on domestic policies, in which case one
can cut (only) some slack for the Democrats? The truth, as anyone with
any sense of history will tell you, is that the American electoral
system cannot and will not promote the likes of Howard Dean or Bernie
Sanders, by which I am not criticizing it (after all there have been
electoral systems which crowned Hitler and Ferdinand Marcos), but only
commenting. And yes, that was a comment for all those who think that the
United States is capable of electing a Pierre Trudeau.
Just the other day I came across an article that claimed to explain why
so many Sri Lankans (here and there) supported Trump. This article
attempted a miracle: to jump from misogyny in the American system to
misogyny in Sri Lanka's education system to the politicisation of
Buddhism to the chauvinism inculcated in mono-ethnic schools here! Some
points were valid, others were not, but all in all I couldn't help but
think back on that friend I alluded to at the beginning of this piece,
and what he had to tell me at one point: shouldn't such extrapolations
be made with a pinch of salt
Nationalism, some say, is over. Wrong. Nationalism is here to stay. Whether you are from the States or from Sri Lanka, if you are a presidential candidate you cannot, will not, and shall not win or clinch the Presidency if you belittle the fears of the majority. Obama was no saint (who is?) but when it came to the final reckoning, his perceived saintliness ticked off the fundamentalists whose fears were not being addressed. Can one blame them? I for one cannot, even though there is much in them that I oppose and will continue to oppose.
Nationalism, some say, is over. Wrong. Nationalism is here to stay. Whether you are from the States or from Sri Lanka, if you are a presidential candidate you cannot, will not, and shall not win or clinch the Presidency if you belittle the fears of the majority. Obama was no saint (who is?) but when it came to the final reckoning, his perceived saintliness ticked off the fundamentalists whose fears were not being addressed. Can one blame them? I for one cannot, even though there is much in them that I oppose and will continue to oppose.
Common misconception
Going by that, I can with all sincerity say that the most common
misconception made by writers of such opinion pieces as that quoted
above is this: in their bid to champion the lesser of the two evils,
they forget the tendency of the system to twist and contort the most
idealistic candidate.
As Padraig Colman pointed out in a series of perceptive articles on
Trump and Clinton (published in Ceylon Today), neither candidate was
perfect. Well, the truth is that no one is perfect, not you and not me,
but in this rush to commend the less imperfect person we are entranced
by personalities so much that we forget that the mere lack of any
DISCERNIBLE flaws cannot and will not salvage a person from his or her
corruption at the hands of the Establishment. That explains the many
U-turns made by leaders both in America and in this country, U-turns
that seem to get no press and which depress the idealist into thinking
that there's no hope left in a polity.
A prominent political commentator once told me, quite candidly, that
there was nothing black about Obama, only the colour of his skin: a
contention I subscribe to (with some reservation). What Obama did (and
his legacy, whether one likes it or not, is not palatable to the
idealist) was basically conceal the deficiencies of a system that
couldn't be bottled for long.
To add fuel to the proverbial fire, he was offering as his successor a
person who represented everything the American Right wanted in a more
aggressive candidate: pushing for interventionism and championing
unilateral action in a context where R2P (Responsibility to Protect) is
being pointed out as a justifiable alternative to the sovereignty of a
country. In this regard, is it a wonder that Trump won? Not really.
Blue-eyed idealists, however, will have a hard-time swallowing that.
Combating the myths
Fidel Castro died last Saturday. He was 90. He spent the better part of
his life combating the many myths that the West bred and perpetuated
about him. I will not spend time on Castro (I leave that for next week's
column), but I will say this: for a man beset with so many falsities by
the mainstream media, he triumphed and trumped. He never lost. Not
once. It says a lot about perception and reality, when it comes to
politics that is. Commentators who continue to lament the defeat of
'idealistic' candidates, I believe therefore, should spend more time
reading the many op-eds, essays, and articles written on him, mostly by
those who see in him the devil and he (almost) never was.
George Santayana once wrote, "Those who cannot remember the past are
condemned to repeat it." He could have been writing of the voter:
suckered into supporting a candidate who hides behind a veneer of
sophistication and respectability, who upon victory embraces the same
values that same voter opposed. In such a context, whom should we blame?
Naturally, ourselves.
(udakdev1@gmail.com)
(udakdev1@gmail.com)