Sunday, October 19, 2008

Joie de vive

I had not read Dalrymple's review of La stratégie des antilopes before posting my definition of politics, but it is very much on point and as always with him well worth reading. In talking only of the irritation of community, I failed to include the positive joy that man has in destroying other men. It is hardly news to me but still a natural omission, since I tend much, much more to irritation than joy in destruction. However alien it seems to me, history and the daily newspaper show that some large part of mankind rejoices in violence for its own sake. Politics has to constrain that impulse as well, and while it does not explain the genocide, it is still noteworthy that politics had completely broken down long before the genocide. There is no polity when some men think other men are lower than roaches.

The idea that other men do wrong by existing shows up here:
Rwandan Prime Minister Jean Kambanda revealed, in his testimony before the International Criminal Tribunal, that the genocide was openly discussed in cabinet meetings and that "one cabinet minister said she was personally in favor of getting rid of all Tutsi; without the Tutsi, she told ministers, all of Rwanda's problems would be over."
Had the Hutu succeeded and been left without any foreign interference afterward, that minister would have discovered soon enough, as Stalin and Hitler did, that no matter how many groups you kill there is always another group of people who are the source of all problems.

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