FINALLY: A FEW WINS FOR THE MIDDLE GROUND
History has shown, repeatedly, that the best the extreme left or right can manage is a revolution, which in the end eats itself and accomplishes little of lasting value. Three events this week prove the point that extreme views can be catalysts for debate, but casting change and progress comes from when the two meet in the middle.
The protests on U.S. university campuses over Gaza have faint too hope of achieving their high-flown goals, but they have already shattered the facile view that campuses must above all provide “:safe spaces” where students feel “comfortable” and intellectual challenges are classed as “micro-aggressions”.
The most cogent summation of that I’ve seen was from Mariam Jallow, a 21-yearb old who will be next year’s student body president at Columbia University: “We came to college not exactly with this experience in mind, but definitely expecting difficult conversations and difficult growth. I came here for an education, and I’ve gotten a great one in the last few weeks.”
That it took mass destruction and slaughter of the innocent to make students pay serious attention to the plight of the Palestinians is shameful evidence of how limited their education has been when it comes to world affairs,
The chant “From the river to the sea…” ignores the fact that Palestinians and Israelis accepted the concept a “two state solution” under the Oslo Accords of 1993. And even if they no longer like it or agree, only Hamas thinks the Israeli part can be rendered non-existent.
But that’s only slightly more fanciful than the politicians who think that ordering student protestors to abandon an anti-war crusade and go back to class will have any effect whatsoever. As for threatening and then taking harsher action, maybe take a quick look back at the anti-Viet Nam war period.
Equally, protest leaders and participants would do well to take a hard look at the segment of their compatriots who seem to believe being pro-Palestinian needs to equate to anti-Semitism, and how they propose to deal with the many Jews, both in the diaspora and Israel itself, who oppose the conduct of the war and see the Netanyahu government’s Palestinian policies as unjust.
The danger in the growth and tolerance of the one-sided point of view was summed up in a recent article by British author and journalist Howard Jacobson: “Voice for voice, the educated out-sang the ignorant in bigotry and bloodlust.”
The “educated” more often than not defend whatever position they choose by shouting “free speech”. As a journalist, that’s a right I am genetically predisposed to worship and defend.
However, I am also inclined to the view that just as patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel, defending one’s every utterance, no matter how inane, hurtful or simply self-serving as “free speech”, is the last bolt hole of the unprincipled and the greedy.
Which brings us to Elon Musk.
In a rant against an Australian court injunction ordering his social media platform “X” to removed graphic videos of a teenager stabbing a bishop in a church, Musk tested: “Our concern is that if ANY country is allowed to censor content for ALL countries…then what is to stop any country from controlling the entire Internet?”
The question is valid, up to a point. The point Musk is missing is that Australian court would have neither excuse nor grounds for intervention if the platform he controls had standards that can differentiate between free speech and violence voyeurism.
SCIENCE OVER SNAKE OIL
And then there are those who cannot seem to distinguish between evidence and ignorance.
This year marked the 50th anniversary of the World Health Organization (WHO) Expanded Programme on Immunization.
So far, the programme has saved at least 154 million lives, 16 nillion of them children under the age of five, from 14 diseases, including: measles, meningitis, polio, tetanus, tuberculosis and yellow fever.. There are now also vaccines against, cervical cancer and malaria.
And yet. according to the authoritative British medical journal The Lancet, “vaccine deniers have evolved from a fringe subculture to an increasingly well organised, networked movement.”
As someone who has gone through the uncontrollable complete body shaking, sheet-soaking sweats and wild hallucinations of a malarial fever, I suggest anyone who thinks a vaccine that will prevent the disease is a bad idea make friends with a female Anopheles mosquito.
That includes, in no order of preference, Novak Djokovic and the seventeen “celebrity” anti-vaxxers listed by Rolling Stone magazine which includes Donald Trump (who as we know prefers bleach),.
The 17th century French writer and philosopher summed up Englishmen as being ”like their own beer: Frothy on top, dregs on the bottom, the middle excellent.”
I leave it up to you to decide in which level of that delightful scale each of the foregoing fit.
Comments are welcomed. Click CONTACT on the site header.
To receive e‑mail alerts to new posts, Click SIGN-UP on the header.
2 thoughts on “FINALLY: A FEW WINS FOR THE MIDDLE GROUND”
Brilliant — as usual Piz
Too kind. Grazie