We tend to think of idealism as a good thing. Idealists want the best for the world and for humanity – or so we assume. Who could possibly object to idealism, then? Yet idealism can be perverted. It can morph into zealotry and fanaticism. People can become so convinced of the correctness of their ideals that they feel able to justify almost any action aimed at fulfilling them.
The first step is to convince oneself that it’s legitimate, indeed
necessary, to impose one’s ideals on others, whether they want them or not, on
the basis that it’s for their own good. That leads to the proposition that the end justifies the
means – in other words, that any action is permissible as long as something
desirable is accomplished at the end of it all. Once that principle is
accepted, almost anything becomes excusable. Left-wing political parties are
particularly prone to idealistic zeal because they are often driven, at least
initially, by visions of a perfect world. In their determination to impose that
perfection, leftist regimes often end up filling prisons with contrary
individuals who insist on exercising their own free will.
Right-wing autocrats, on the other hand, are usually
motivated by nothing more than good old-fashioned greed and lust for power.It's
possible that even Joseph Stalin started out as an idealist, with a vision of a
better existence for the oppressed, starving Russian peasantry, yet millions
died under his rule. The Soviet empire that he extended by force through
Eastern Europe became synonymous with repression and tyranny. All this was justified by the grotesque
fiction that he was liberating the proletariat.
Idealism can also produce hideous, unforeseen
consequences. Mao Zedong’s “Great Leap Forward” in the late 1950s was intended
to transform the Chinese economy – an idealistic goal – but ended in
catastrophe, with tens of millions dead because of grain shortages.Obviously
these are extreme cases of idealism gone wrong, but we don’t have to look far
for examples of how idealists can start out with admirable motives and end up
as self-righteous zealots, blind to the rights of others.
I was reminded of this recently when I listened to a
Radio New Zealand Spectrum documentary about the three peace activists who
broke into the Waihopai spy base near Blenheim in 2010 and caused damage that
the government said cost $1.2 million to repair – money that came out of taxpayers’
pockets.I’m not suggesting that the Waihopai Three were Stalins or Maos in the
making. We must assume they were motivated by a sincere desire for peace. But
they were so convinced of the rightness of their cause, so consumed by
unshakeable moral conviction, that they considered themselves above the law. At
this point, idealism becomes zealotry.
If enough New Zealanders were sufficiently concerned
about the Waihopai base, they could have demanded that the government get rid
of it. But it hasn’t happened, probably because New Zealanders rationalise that
an electronic spying network operated by an alliance of democratic Western
governments is more likely to thwart evil than to promote it.But the Waihopai
Three and their narrow circle of supporters convinced themselves that they knew
better than, and were morally superior to, their fellow citizens. Their
self-righteousness trumped respect for democracy.
Incidentally, the Spectrum documentary (the sympathetic
tone of which did nothing to dispel concern about the political leanings of
some Radio New Zealand journalists) revealed the Waihopai zealots to be
comically incompetent saboteurs. A crucial cellphone message was never received
because one of the three didn’t know what a text message was. Then the saboteurs’
truck slid on a muddy track and ended up on its side in a vineyard – so they
were lousy drivers as well – and someone got lost in the darkness on a bike.
They were comically paranoid, too, imagining themselves
being shadowed at every turn by agents of the state. They thought they were
being spied on when they saw a man in Picton wearing an earphone and appearing
to speak into his sleeve – no doubt some entirely innocent citizen using a
hands-free phone – and freaked out when they happened to read a letter to the
editor of the Marlborough Express inquiring about black SUVs being driven
around Blenheim.No doubt the three attributed the fact that they ultimately
succeeded in their mission, despite all their blunders, as a sign that God
approved. Zealots are rarely troubled by self-doubt.
The documentary concluded with a line about a magnificent
rainbow that appeared as the saboteurs contemplated the results of their
vandalism. Listeners were informed that this was “a sure sign that they were
doing the right thing”. So it wasn’t only God who approved; the Radio New
Zealand reporter did too. For my part, I’m more likely to ask God to protect us
from those who think they know what’s best for us.
The same fundamental impulse that motivated the Waihopai Three
– namely, the desire for a better world – also seems to be behind the promotion
of a new test that will enable pregnant women to determine whether their baby
has Down Syndrome.Unlike the established amniocentesis procedure, the new test
is non-invasive. If it’s widely adopted, as the test’s backers hope, the almost
inevitable outcome is that more women will choose to have an abortion.
Proponents of the test are doubtless driven by the
conviction that they are doing the right thing. It’s that vision of the perfect
society again; in this case, one where no one will have to suffer the
inconvenience of bringing an imperfect human being into the world. But
virtually everyone with first-hand experience of people with Down Syndrome says
they enjoy life to the full and enrich the lives of those around them.
Wellington’s Dominion Post recently published a charming photo of three young
people with Down Syndrome – one a skier, another a swimmer and the third a
dancer – joyfully celebrating after being presented with national achievement
awards by governor-general Sir Jerry Mateparae.
If the pregnancy test now being promoted had existed 30
years ago, these three might not have survived the womb. Is this another case,
and a particularly chilling one, of misguided idealism producing a grotesquely
anti-human outcome?
Karl blogs at http://www.karldufresne.blogspot.co.nz.. This article was first published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, April 10.
2 comments:
The idea of idealism resonates in our history books, it is a wonderful theory, which when practiced by humans ends mostly in disaster. Not because of the effort, but because regretfully we are merely human beings with all our failures.
The Enlightenment movement was caught up with Idealism, probably due to Rousseau’s heartfelt appeal “Man is born free and is everywhere in chains”, plus the poet Robbie Burns famous lines
“A man’s a man for a’ that” better expressed in the final lines:-
“It’s coming yet, for a’ that, that man to man the world o’er shall brothers be for a’ that.
Idealism can justify just about anything, which makes it just about the most dangerous “ism” on this planet.
Anyone knowing anything about history, cannot but recall how Idealism came bitterly to grief in 1792, when the revolutionary fervour resulted not in a France freed from a tyranny, but engulfed in a bloodier and more despotic political system. It was followed with even more savagery in Russia (1917) by the advent of Communism.
Yet with this idealism comes another side, that of the necessity for change, for movement, for mankind to aspire and grasp at the future; especially so in the field of Art, (The picture by David of “Napoleon crossing the Alps”. Certainly a man of his time? This cannot but stir the imagination as with that greatest of all nationalistic songs “The Marseillaise”). All part one has to admit, of the Romantic Movement; which, despite the Revolution and Napoleonic adventure did inspire and nurture the idea of freedom, if not the reality.
Idealism will always be with us in one form or another, we must try to ensure that in its euphoria we can exploit it values in practical terms.
Brian
Socialism, wherever it has been tried, has led to mass murder and economic privation (except, of course for the governing classes).
The full title of the Nazi Party was the National SOCIALIST German Workers Party. We hear a lot of bull about how Hitler was "right wing" but Hitler, too, was a left wing socialist.
Indeed, the Nazis and Communists competed in the 1920s for the same kinds of minds.
Marx said "The bourgeoisie as a class must be made impossible.
Lenin said: "We will ask the man whether he is for or against [communist] revolution. If he's against it we will put him up against the wall."
Communists regard the property owning classes as "diseased" and needing to be eradicated for the good of society.
A good analogy is a farmer with a herd of cattle, some of whom have foot and mouth disease. A large number of these will need to be killed, lest they infect the healthy animals. Some can get well with the proper treatment, such as a "tenner" in a labour camp learning to work 'unselfishly' without reward for the benefit of society.
Communists are responsible for (at a conservative estimate) the deaths of more than 100 million people.
This staggering death tool dwarfs Hitlers 6 million. Yet that's all we get to hear about from Hollywood, many of whose movers and shakers were cheerleaders for murderous communist regimes from inside a free society.
One example is the movie The Killing Fields, which managed to show the mass murder of Cambodians by Pol Pot, while making not a single reference to the Communist ideology that inspired it.
Communists/socialists/social democrats/progressives (whatever they want to call themselves) are cockroaches, who should be ruthless stamped up wherever they are found!
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