May 10, 2021

Confronting Authoritarians at Home and Globally

 


Wesley K. Clark
April/May/June 2021
Washington Monthly

The approach in the above article is good for the international aspects of authoritarianism. But the greatest threat is from homegrown authoritarians, here and abroad. 

Consumer capitalism’s affordable products and the patriotic drumbeats of our politicians touting nationalism have fueled our aggressive potential such that we can now only think nationally/tribally/racially.

We in the US and the rest of the West are blinded from our better humanitarian brotherly/sisterly nature by shiny stuff and the myths of social Darwinism and human and white exceptionalism.

We want our consumer comforts and privileges now and forever, and will fight and vote in authoritarians to help keep them. Freedom to remain within the comfort of our relative plenty is all that matters. Equality and brother-sisterhood, at home and overseas, are nowhere near as important to us. 

It will take much more than a treaty with the EU and UK to fix this illness that has now overtaken all of humankind. There may not be a reasoned persuasion cure. 

This disease may have to just run its course. That is, until the masses of the world achieve some level of middle class prosperity. A comfort level where the possibility of a better more humane way of being human emerges in their minds and hearts. A more reasonable, practical, and compassionate worldview that replaces the current dog-eat-dog capitalism, nationalism, tribalism, and racism mantra.

After all, it was not until middle class America reached a certain level of prosperity between 1942 and 1972 that we in the US would tolerate and listen to the Civil Rights and hippie movements‘ arguments for a more humane eco-friendly way of living. The persistence of Martin Luther King and warnings of Malcom X helped a lot. Even after that nearly half the people in the US still remain unpersuaded.

The beliefs and values in hearts and minds are hard to change. To reform them toward alignment with the moral arc of the universe toward justice is difficult. It takes reasoning humanistic leadership, hard work, persistence, and sometimes a fight. And time and some luck.

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