I was emailed earlier today by a reader that admonished me for what they viewed as my lack of understanding about the realities of terrorism and the reasons why the Arab world is rife with anti-Western sentiment. Human rights, claimed the email, have been denied so many in the Middle East that it is the duty of Western counties to work to influence change, even if it means the use of military force.
Rather than respond to the email privately, I thought I would do it here, so hopefully its author will read this.
First, let me say that we should peacefully work to influence change in the Middle East with regards to human rights standards. It is precisely our support for those government that deny their citizens proper rights that fuels anti-Western sentiment and protects the status quo. Given the inseparability of culture and religion in the region, including political culture, it is to be expected that, at some point, spirituality will be radicalized and co-opted by those that would use violent means to counteract what they view as the diminishment of their rights, culture, and religion by both foreign influences and those that are supported by foreign powers. If the region’s history did not paint such a blatant picture of Western exploitation, perhaps that wouldn’t be the case.
If the majority of those that visit this website lived in a county in which they were denied a wide variety of rights, rights that most of us take for granted, how would they view those foreign powers that supported the very government that denied them those rights? Even more, when those foreign interests claim liberty and justice among their most precious virtues? Because that is precisely what numerous Western governments are guilty of, Canada included. The reason? Because economic and military considerations are more important to the industrialized world than human rights.
Be it Western support for Saudi Arabia’s corrupt regime, or turning a blind eye to the criminality of governments with control over potentially exploitable resources (such as Sudan), when it comes down to the choice between the economics of oil, for example, and human rights, human rights lose. And that reality has been made possible by the very nations that claim human rights paramount.
So how should the majority in the Middle East react to the hypocrisy of foreign powers that claim to stand for equality, liberty, and the rule of law, yet support the very governments that deny their citizens proper rights? How would you? It’s not enough to say that things will change but that right now the fuel needs of soccer moms in North America are worth supporting regimes that willfully deny their citizens rights. While the United States condemns Syria, it supports Saudi Arabia. While it condemns Iran, it trades nuclear technologies with India, a country that hasn’t signed the Non Proliferation Treaty. Business is business, and human rights are bad for business. And until the people of the United States, of Canada and Great Britain, among many others, wake up to that fact, then nothing is going to change, be there military action or not.
With a federal election looming, this is precisely what Canadians should be thinking about, not lower taxes, and not the falsehoods of men that, when in power, will do nothing to realistically address it. Mr. Martin’s government certainly did not, and I can assure you that there will be Canadian combat troops in Iraq long before any government led by Mr. Harper even dares dream about it. We, as a people, must choose how we wish to represent ourselves to those that have lost faith in us, and for good reason. If we choose to continue this love affair with apathic resigntaion then we cannot claim ourselves shocked if, and when, the sky falls.
It falls to us to bridge the gap, to show those half a world away that we, like them, are not willing to put up with such a disastrous double standard. Call me crazy, but I was raised to believe that in a civilized society people treat others as they, themselves, expect to be treated. Thus, given the evidence, I can only proclaim us Neanderthals, and look to the hopeful possibility of evolution to translate the difference.