MORAL EQUIVALENCE
The "we are just as bad as… or worse than them" mentality
A pervasive argument appearing in the post-colonial
paradigm is that of "Moral Equivalence." In the
case of Islamic terrorism the dynamics of moral equivalence can
be seen among some figures of the western intelligentsia in their
vociferous moral indignation at the behavior of Western nations
that, they allege, led to acts of terror, and their understanding
attitude towards the terrorist acts themselves (HRC).
Even if they do not intentionally excuse terrorism, such writers
produce the unhappy consequence of explaining Islamic terrorism
in terms of "Western misdeeds and faults," and of framing
the debate in terms of "what the West did to deserve such
attacks" and, therefore, reverse the moral equation. The
West’s “wrongs” come to be seen as more reprehensible than the
"reaction" (however “harsh” and "inexcusable")
by terrorists. The easy moral challenge is: “Are we not hypocrites,
when we do the same thing?”
At some level, this is a pathology of self-criticism (MOS)
– it is all our fault, and if we were better, then we could fix
everything. Meanwhile, while we demand the highest standards of
ourselves, we treat the terrorists as morally challenged, who
can’t even understand the questions of intention and cannot be
expected to self-criticize. We become incapable of making the
distinction between victims and perpetrators, and end up blaming
the victim.
Since the beginning of this century three major international
events epitomize the way that moral equivalence in its extreme
forms (HRC
and MOS)
have led some Western intellectuals to moral folly:
SEPTEMBER 30, 2000 – THE BEGINNING OF
THE SECOND INTIFADA
than suicide bombers. Israel's policies in the Gaza strip and
the West bank are described as "state terrorism". Therefore,
not only both the Palestinians and Israel are guilty of terrorism,
but Palestinian terrorist acts are understood as a reaction of
a defenseless people – "their only weapon" – against
a far more powerful force. “What choice do they have?” “If I had
so little hope, I too might feel that way.” See, for example Cherie
Blair's comment. The idea that the Israelis deserved what
they were getting, which underlay much of this widespread reaction
to the assault of suicide terrorism, explains why the British
were so surprised by 7-7… they thought this only happened with
good cause (LCE),
with no idea of the
“moral” universe that motivates such violence.
AUGUST – SEPTEMBER 2001 – WORLD CONFERENCE AGAINST RACISM
(WCAR)
For ten days, representatives from NGOs the world over met in
Durban South Africa to discuss racism and how to fight it during
this new century. Since racism is one of the most endemic traits
of human societies, with prejudice based solely on physical differences
like the color of one’s skin, so widespread in cultures around
the world, one would have expected wide scope and much introspection
on the part of participants. Instead the conference, like so many
other venues at the UN, spent its time reviling Israel, a country
integrating a population with the most varied racial types, and
no time on the Arab world, where slave trading and massacring
black Africans still goes on (Mauritania,
Middle
East, Sudan).
Instead, recognizing that slave trading was one of the ugliest
manifestations of racism, the congress condemned
Western slave trade, discontinued over a century and a half
ago.
SEPTEMBER 11, 2001: THE WTC AND PENTAGON ATTACKS
The moral equivalence orthodoxy interprets the terrorist attacks
of September 11 as a specific reaction against an imperialistic
US foreign policy. In short, "America
had it coming". In the aftermath of September 11 Noam
Chomsky, one of the main contemporary creators of moral equivalence
narratives, described the US led "war on terror" as
contradictory, because the US has been guilty of state terror
for decades and to him terror was overwhelmingly the weapon of
the strong, not the weak (See here
and here).
In this narrative both US led wars against Afghanistan and Iraq
are substantially worse than the terrorist attacks of September
11 or the rule of Saddam or the Taliban, and US President George
W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair as war criminals,
on a par with Bin Laden Critics of the Iraq war tend to give the
moral ground to the "rebels," described by filmmaker
Michael Moore as "the
revolution, the minutemen.”
IN ORDER TO FULLY UNDERSTAND the dynamics and
consequences of moral equivalence one has to be able to identify
and understand its main features:
EVEN-HANDEDNESS: This refers to the prevalent
tendency in Western media to adopt an "objective, impartial"
even-handed approach to situations and conflicts where open civil
societies face their enemies, such as Islamists. Major news corporations
such as the BBC,
Reuters
(see also here),
and the Boston
Globe, for example, refuse to label deliberate attacks against
civilians as "terrorism", because, according to the
editorial guidelines of the BBC the "word 'terrorist' can
be a barrier rather than an aid to understanding." Therefore
according to Western journalistic standards of objectivity, in
order not to "obscure understanding," suicide bombers
targeting Israeli civilians are invariably described as "militants"
or "activists," and Iraqi groups who indiscriminately
kill fellow Muslims civilians – as "rebels" or “insurgents.”
INFLATED RHETORIC: The mistakes/flaws of western
democracies, Israel and their leaders are invariably described
in an exaggerated manner. Many times the rhetoric acquires a virulence
that should disquiet any sober person:
- When Guantanamo
Bay is compared with the Gulag by Amnesty International.
- When George
W. Bush was described by the mayor of London as "the greatest
threat to life on earth."
- When
Nobel literature laureate José Saramago compared Israel
to Nazi Germany and the territories to Auschwitz.
SIMPLISTIC AND INDISCRIMINATE ANALOGIES: In
this case the tendency is to equate a negative example of behavior
of Westerners with the worse kind of atrocity perpetrated by others.
In the world of moral equivalence, for example, Israeli policies
regarding the Palestinians are compared to what the Nazis did,
US president George W Bush and neo-conservatives are seen as "extremists"
and as fundamentalist as Islamists, and the American
abuses at Abu Ghraib are somehow equivalent to torture under Saddam
(see also here).
The following cartoon published in a mainstream UK newspaper
provides a telling visual example of such a simplistic analogy:
It’s clearly tempting to see the parallels, and feel infinitely
morally superior to both. But if you can’t see the differences...
what do you think brings you the culture in which you can so freely
indulge in moral narcissism and so violently attack your own government?
How long do you think you’d last in the culture that produces
the fellow on the left above.
MORAL SELF-FLAGELLATION: Moral equivalent proponents
habitually blur the boundaries between useful self-criticism,
essential and vital to any healthy civil society, and a moral
self-flagellation, that maximizes "our flaws" and minimize
"their" flaws, even when they represent a far greater
danger and, as in the case of Jihad, an existential threat. If
moral equivalence thinkers, for example, applied to the Arab world
the same finely tuned moral criteria they apply to their own societies
(roadblocks and barriers to protect against suicide terrorism
as apartheid racism), their "moral radar" would be instantly
overwhelmed by the violence and violation of human rights (honor
killings, summary execution of “collaborators”). By contrast,
if we gave ourselves half the moral “breaks” we give to the underdogs
out there, most of our “sins” wouldn’t register.
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT TO PROVIDE A SOLID COUNTER ARGUMENT
TO MORAL EQUIVALENCE:
In an interview to BBC in May 2004 Noam
Chomsky declared that the term "moral equivalence"
is used as a weapon in the hands of those who want to supress
free speech: "The term moral equivalence is an interesting
one, it was invented I think by Jeanne Kirkpatrick as a method
of trying to prevent criticism of foreign policy and state decisions.
It is a meaningless notion, there is no moral equivalence whatsoever."
Aside from the near incoherence of the passage (JK invented the
term to denounce the phenomenon), the final line seems incomprehensible:
isn’t that just what Kirkpatrick meant – that there were no moral
equivalences between the US and the USSR? But the overall message
is clear: by refusing to accept wild moral equivalences between
the misdeeds of civil societies committed, however imperfectly,
to defending human rights, with the behavior of totalitarian regimes,
we somehow throttle any criticism… as if rejecting grotesquely
inflated criticism were the equivalent of rejecting all criticism.
In an interview to Der Spiegel, German's magazine of reference,
in June 2005, filmmaker Woody
Allen dismissed the events of September 11 in the following
manner: "The history of the world is like: He kills me, I
kill him, only with different cosmetics and different castings.
So in 2001, some fanatics killed some Americans, and now some
Americans are killing some Iraqis. And in my childhood, some Nazis
killed Jews. And now, some Jewish people and some Palestinians
are killing each other. Political questions, if you go back thousands
of years, are ephemeral - not important."
Allen, unwittingly perhaps, has repeated the “dominating
imperative” that the Athenians called up to justify killing
the Melian
men and selling their wives and children into slavery. Now Allen
wouldn’t use the idea to justify such horrors. He’s too civilized.
He’s so self-critical that he can’t (or won’t) see the difference
between some Nazis killing Jews on the one hand, and some Jewish
people and some Palestinians killing each other on the other.
Apparently he is not aware that the move to civil society that
made someone like Woody Allen possible, came from trying, however
imperfectly, to overcome this dominating imperative. In lumping
everything into this crude political calculus, he strengthens
the hand of people who really do want to slaughter the men and
sell the women and children into slavery. They’re doing it right
now (Sudan).
We believe civil society demands a different approach – one that
avoids the traps, dangers and relativism of moral equivalence.
There is something different and precious about the society of
tolerance and human freedom that we are trying to build. We believe
that recent events and dynamics described in this page are not
unimportant or "ephemeral," but fundamental errors that
demand our reflection, and the creation of mechanisms to protect
civil societies from real dangers and threats. We welcome contributions
and examples of moral equivalence discourses. We will try to be,
(dare we say it?), even-handed, and we will post any intelligent
discussion on this issue, no matter how strongly we may disagree.
Let the dialogue begin.
SEE ALSO:
Liberal Cognitive Egocentrism
Civil Society