Tuesday 28 May 2013

What if we committed to pursuing the responses that pacifism could provide to war?

"While the Allies were at war with Nazi Germany and engaged in a massive military campaign of unprecedented scale against it, they did little if anything to either stop the ongoing slaughter of millions of Jews and other minorities, or to save and absorb refugees." -Wikipedia "International Response to the Holocaust"

"The more I learn about the [2nd world] war, the more I understand that the pacifists were the only ones, during a time of catastrophic violence, who repeatedly put forward proposals that had any chance of saving a threatened people. They weren’t naïve, they weren’t unrealistic—they were psychologically acute realists." -Nicholson Baker, from "Why I’m a Pacifist: The Dangerous Myth of the Good War" in Harper's Magazine, May 2011.

(If you plan on not reading this essay through, then track down and read this article "Why Nicholson Baker is a Pacifist," which inspired it. Baker wrote in Harper's Magazine in May 2011 "Why I'm a Pacifist", and I found the article profoundly validating and reassuring as an emerging Pacifist, or a summary of Baker's key arguments.)

Just as, in our brains, the pathways we have forged are more likely to be used and re-used until another synapses and neural pathways are created, we are apt to choose the paths which are known to be safest-- and if not safest, at least most predictable. History only repeats itself because we weakly and lazily choose to repeat it.

What brought me to this thought?

A few sundays ago I listened to "Cross Country Checkup" while I was driving. The subject was: "Should Canada do something to help Syria?" Should we provide military support, either through sending Canadian troops or supporting the rebels with arms or otherwise? Should we be involved in this civil war somehow?

I can't pretend that I know more than most other Canadians about Syria, Bashar Al-Assad, or this conflict, and I'm not going to propose watertight, carefully thought-out solutions here, but I kept thinking while I was listening "what about Pacifism?" Where in this conversation--which tended often to be a dichotomous argument between war and indifference-- where is the talk of Pacifism?

We've got it in our heads that the only way to deal with tyrants is by meeting them with violence. Consider that pacifism cannot be fair-weather pacifism, opposed to all wars except just ones. When anti-war movements and protests gain traction, I think this usually has to more do with disdain for imperialism than advocacy of peace. We shouldn't confuse these sentiments-- we can end up believing imperialism is ok when war or physical violence isn't involved.

Nicholson Baker's makes some worthwhile points about pacifism-- that Hitler had already used Jews as hostages earlier in the war, and potentially used them as hostages to keep the U.S. from joining the war-- that there was communication which suggested the Nazis were ready to accelerate the Final Solution in response to the Americans getting involved in the war. Among other prominent Jews, American wartime pacifist Abraham Kaufman lobbied the U.S. to negotiate with Hitler in exchange for the lives of Jewish refugees-- that's assuming one of the less anti-semitic Allied countries would agree to receive them.

Separate from our military actions, our Government's policies towards immigration and refugees can do a lot to prevent slaughter, and to prevent tyrants being tyrannical. History only repeats itself because we weakly and lazily choose to repeat it. 

A basic premise of democracy is that solutions only become watertight as the thoughts and intentions of all citizens and experts are hashed out. This starts with intention: if we are going to battle, there are binders full of military strategists who'll sit down and discuss the details and challenge each other's viewpoints. The solutions we employ are products of these private conversations, and of the broader public conversation-- all the thought, debate, information which is shared through media and filters its way into individual conversations in coffeeshops, radio call-in shows, and in newspapers and ultimately the houses of parliament. Which one comes first is a chicken and egg discussion.

What if we committed the public conversation to pursuing the responses that pacifism could provide to war? Maybe the ideas would come into circulation, and maybe some good would come of it.

4 comments:

  1. dear Steve
    I hope I have not intruded - by reading this blog, and now, by replying to it
    I saw the link to your blog, at the end of your last email to me, and I couldn't help but pursuing it

    first of all, I would like to thank you for creating this blog
    It looks like you put a tremendous amount of time, and energy, into creating each one of these posts
    Each one is carefully thought out, and, if I might say so, brilliant
    also - it seems - to me at least - that you have put a lot of yourself into each one of these posts. Each one is not only well written, but sincere, and profound.
    Thank you

    I couldn't help but reply-
    I was disappointed to see that no one, so far, has replied to any of your posts -
    more surprised than disappointed, actually

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  2. I'm just going to comment sort of off the top of my head:
    it seems you have a few key concepts going here:
    Syria
    The War in Syria
    Pacifism
    Nicholson Baker
    violence vs indifference [vs pacifism]
    WWII
    Hitler
    Nazis
    Jews
    Habit/reused neural pathways/human beings stupidly and lazily repeating history over and over again
    It seems like you are trying to draw a connection between the War in Syria and the WWII of 50 years ago, the atrocities happening in Syria now and the atrocities that happened to the Jews 50 years ago...

    I have the feeling that the issues you bring up in this small and simple post, the connections and questions you raise, have a deep, timeless, universal importance. I feel like you have encapsulated, in this little white sheet of electronic paper, the whole world . (Sounds like bullshit, probably is - but your simple post, in the way you wrote it, and in what you wrote about, has brought back memories, triggered back to me problems that I have been thinking about for years...)

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  3. There are a few quotes I want to zoom in on, as I found them to be very interesting:
    1) You wrote: "Just as, in our brains, the pathways we have forged are more likely to be used and re-used until another synapses and neural pathways are created, we are apt to choose the paths which are known to be safest-- and if not safest, at least most predictable."
    I am curious - what is the main inspiration for most of your thinking? The quote above seems to stem from a biological/scientific inspiration. Do you also draw inspiration from other modes: like the Romantic/artistic or spiritual/mystical traditions/modes, just to name a few?
    I've thought, in the last few years, (and especially when I went on my youth exchange to Kenya!) a lot about human beings, how bounded, and like the bars of a prison wall we are ( and, also, at the same time.. how unbounded, how limitless, .. how free!! ). How driven we are by habit, by circumstance, by strange wires and pulleys and triggers that hover and crouch below the mists of our shifting consciousness. How like machines..
    I wonder if, rather than as you say, that we chose the same path over and over again - because it is safest - because it is most predictable - what if we chose the same path over and over again:.. for no reason at all! Just because

    2) You wrote: "A basic premise of democracy is that ... The solutions we employ are products of these private conversations, and of the broader public conversation-- all the thought, debate, information which is shared through media and filters its way into individual conversations in coffeeshops, radio call-in shows, and ..."
    I really like this, for some reason. Especially, the word "coffeeshops." Not sure why. Maybe I like the idea that chats in coffeeshops could change the world - or that chats in the electronic coffee shop of this blog could change the world..

    And 3) my favourite: You wrote: "What if we committed the public conversation to pursuing the responses that pacifism could provide to war? Maybe the ideas would come into circulation, and maybe some good would come of it."
    This quote seems to me enormously vast, and brilliant.
    It leaves me without words.
    Maybe it's something about "circulation". How you are self-consciously dropping this little post, on pacifism, like a little ship, like a little raindrop of gold, into the ocean - I can almost seeing it growing, and growing, first eddies, then turbulence.. like the butterfly that flaps its wings, and there is a storm on the other side of the world.. and the world is changed.

    Good luck, Steve
    - -

    I wonder, Steve, if you could perhaps tell us the next step in the story...
    When we spoke last, I got the impression that you were wanting to move past pacifism, on to something else...
    anti-pacifism/anarchy/war/violence??

    How well do you feel now
    Is your post on pacifism you now?

    Best wishes,
    and thanks again for everything you have done
    James

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  4. I want to comment on your other posts too, but maybe that can wait for another day -
    (also, I can't read that link you posted - when I click on Nicholson Baker's article, it says I have to pay for it :)

    ReplyDelete