Re: Re: Muslims, Bernard Lewis, and the press
Trying to pit Lewis and Said against one another could get long and involved...they temsleves had horrible personal disputes that go beyond their scholarship. I just wanted to make the point that while Lewis as a scholar of Islam makes conclusions that support the current powers in Washington, his is not the most authoritative nor sole voice on the matter. People should read critiques and counter-critiques then decide for themselves.
But on this point of freedom as the solution is simply utopian and too simplistic for a region that Lewis himself acknowledges is the product of complex historical, political, and economic factors.
[BTW, it is certainly not a sound reason to invade Iraq based on the guess that the Iraqi people would never overthrow Saddam. Many in the 1970s believed the same about the Shah of Iran.]
More to the point: how do you define freedom? Is freedom the lack of obstacles to action? Or is freedom the capacity to be free? Two totally different conceptions that require different means to realize. What is ending Baath party rule suppose to do in Iraq? Freedom to do what? Have a civil war might be one option. Divide itself up into more radical states? Become a religious dictatorship? All of these outcomes are, at the moment, more likely than democracy in any form. Again, the question is not whether or not the West should be doing something about the region's problems, the question is whether invading and occupying Iraq is the best means toward the end. If the end is really democracy then the ship is headed in the wrong direction. And guess who will be blamed? (right or wrong)
BTW, since we are citing experts and information on all this...how about analysis from scholars who really know Iraq, have lived in the region, and speak the language (Lewis really only qualifies in one of those catagories). I submit two:
http://www.juancole.com/
http://abuaardvark.typepad.com/
Originally posted by CaptRenault
So in sum, Lewis rightly says the problem is "lack of freedom." His prescription in a couple words: "more freedom"
It is conceievable that you could use Lewis' analysis to support going to war or to not support not going to war. Lewis himself is on the record supporting the war, because he feels that Saddam's tyranny could not and would not be overthrown by the Iraqi people. So it is a first step on the road to freedom. I agree.
Trying to pit Lewis and Said against one another could get long and involved...they temsleves had horrible personal disputes that go beyond their scholarship. I just wanted to make the point that while Lewis as a scholar of Islam makes conclusions that support the current powers in Washington, his is not the most authoritative nor sole voice on the matter. People should read critiques and counter-critiques then decide for themselves.
But on this point of freedom as the solution is simply utopian and too simplistic for a region that Lewis himself acknowledges is the product of complex historical, political, and economic factors.
[BTW, it is certainly not a sound reason to invade Iraq based on the guess that the Iraqi people would never overthrow Saddam. Many in the 1970s believed the same about the Shah of Iran.]
More to the point: how do you define freedom? Is freedom the lack of obstacles to action? Or is freedom the capacity to be free? Two totally different conceptions that require different means to realize. What is ending Baath party rule suppose to do in Iraq? Freedom to do what? Have a civil war might be one option. Divide itself up into more radical states? Become a religious dictatorship? All of these outcomes are, at the moment, more likely than democracy in any form. Again, the question is not whether or not the West should be doing something about the region's problems, the question is whether invading and occupying Iraq is the best means toward the end. If the end is really democracy then the ship is headed in the wrong direction. And guess who will be blamed? (right or wrong)
BTW, since we are citing experts and information on all this...how about analysis from scholars who really know Iraq, have lived in the region, and speak the language (Lewis really only qualifies in one of those catagories). I submit two:
http://www.juancole.com/
http://abuaardvark.typepad.com/