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"Sam Harris on Liberal denial of Islamic extremism"

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Blogger AutismNewsBeat said...

Liberals would do themselves a favor by speaking out more forcefully about the illiberal abuses of human rights that are endemic in Islamic societies. Where is the outrage when Iran hangs gay teenagers, for example? Or when Hezballah uses Lebanese civilians as human shields? Yes, Bush is an incompetent buffoon, but it's not enough to just hurl insults. His buffoonery would would be more apparent to more people if liberals, moderates, progressives and other sentient beings showed the country what real leadership looks like, and that means being consistent in our outrage over illiberal social policies, no matter where they occur.

1:07 AM, September 21, 2006

Blogger Zachary Drake said...

Thanks for posting, heraldblog.

Yes, I agree that liberals should attend to the injustices around the world. I think liberals are very wary of criticizing other cultures, especially those of nations poorer or less powerful than ours (which is most of them) for fear of being imperialistic or insensitive or reinforcing American ethnocentrism. And I also feel that our primary responsibility is to correct our own evils rather than try to reform others.

But some shit is just wack, and I don't care how oppressed the people who are doing it are, it's still wack shit. Killing people for being gay, calling for the death of authors, burning down embassies because you're offended by cartoons, etc. is wrong, no matter what you've suffered at the hands of "the West" or "The Zionist Entity".

But on the other hand, I'm not sure the "you're not outraged enough about X" argument is a good one to make. I'm sure there are issues that we're both ignoring that have a good claim on our liberal conscience. Darfur and the civil war in Congo are two that come to mind that I don't spend much time talking about.

While I wish my own personal sense of outrage always varied in direct proportion to the evil of an act committed, I know it doesn't. There are things I pay more attention to than others, people and institutions who piss me off more than others, things that tend to catch my attention (inconsistencies in American foreign policy) and things that don't (the problem of homelessness, which I don't think I've ever addressed). I think we're all like this, and our blogs are bound to reflect it.

However, I do think we should always make an effort to expand our "sphere of moral concern", and I think the real violent, puritanical intolerance that exists in the Middle East might be a good place to go.

9:06 AM, September 21, 2006

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