Posted: 25 Aug 2014 08:39 PM PDT
Media conveys
immediacy, but it doesn't convey culture. Its famous flattening effect makes
shoppers at a Staples in D.C. or a Whole Foods in Berkeley feel like they're
right among the toppled buildings of Aleppo or Gaza, without actually giving
them any insight into the motivations of the players.
They're
watching foreign movies in a language that they don't understand and
attributing their own motivations to the main characters. They assume that
the differences are incidental, but if the differences really were
incidental, America would look a lot more like Iraq.
It's been a while since Westerners lived in a society in which human life was
truly worthless, in which no one trusted anyone else and it was easier to
kill than not to kill.
Outside of a few urban centers in the Middle East where the elites start the
revolutions that end up stringing them from the gallows, life is cheap and
worthless. Men kill their wives and daughters over petty suspicions. Clans
murder each other in vicious brawls. Wedding celebrations begin with firing
guns into the air and end with bodies on the ground.
Everything is worth more than people. A camel has value. A pickup truck has
value. A smartphone has value. All these things are hard to make.
People are easy to make.
The birth rates are high. Everywhere there are too many people. Too many sons
to inherit. Too many daughters to marry off.
The UN and a whole bunch of international organizations slop in enough aid to
keep hunger and disease away, but not enough to make life livable or
worthwhile. The wealthy have satellite dishes on which they watch American
reality shows and Turkish soaps. The poor kidnap them and hold them for
ransom. It's not just life in the Middle East. It's the whole Third World
experience.
About the only reliable source of wealth comes out of the ground and the
countries that have it are usually too lazy to get it themselves. That's what
the armies of Western engineers are for. They don't build their own
skyscrapers with the oil money. That's what the disposable Asian workers are
for.
Killing is the easiest solution to most problems. Men kill over honor. Women
kill themselves out of desperation. Children grow up torturing animals.
Clerics settle religious questions with murder. It's just easier that way.
Theological debates are complicated and impossible to settle, but fly the
black flags, seize a village, kill the men and force the women to convert to
the true faith of the machine gun and the sword and the debate is over.
ISIS is how Islam has been settling questions of theology since the 7th
century. Why stop now just because you can order takeout from your
smartphone? Westerners are innately fascinated by new technology. For the
Middle East, technology is a tool for settling medieval disputes. Twitter is
just a way of showing off your latest crop of severed heads. The pickup truck
substitutes for a camel.
Politicians settle political debates with more murders. Elections are
complicated. Democracy is messy. It's easier for a colonel to take everyone
out back and shoot them. And then spend the next twenty years building
palaces with his people's wealth. And the people mostly like it that way too.
The question isn't why should they kill, it's why should they stop? The peace
proposals never get anywhere. If you reward violence with concessions,
there's no reason for it to ever stop. And if you don't, what else is
there to do?
When life is worthless, everyone has a gun and a grudge, it's
easier to kill than not to kill. You can see that phenomenon as readily in
Chicago as in Iraq. Why not shoot the guy next door because he owes you
money, because your daughter looked at him twice, because he's on your turf
or because he's a Kurd.
Or because it's Thursday.
Under crowded conditions, life is cheap but honor is expensive. Fights start
over the pettiest things and escalate into relentless violence. You can see
it in Yemen or in Ferguson. Everyone is just waiting for an excuse to be
angry about something and to take it out on someone else.
The Western Urbanites who helicopter parent their 2.5 children into a Prozac
prescription and lament their disposable society don't understand what a
truly disposable society looks like even though they probably live less than
a mile away from one of those.
In a disposable society, people have no value. Children have no value. Human
labor has no value. If you want something done, you force someone to do it.
If you can't have your own slaves, you can control an extended family. You
don't think in terms of what it costs to make something. The only cost that
matters is the cost of imports. Everything else is inhumanely cheap.
Emotional reactions always trump rational ones. Everyone feels put upon and
slighted from the biggest prince to the lowliest laborer. Everyone is filled
with resentments that they channel through the Koran and the mad preachings
of Islamic clerics promising holy wars and blaming everything on the CIA, the
Freemasons and the Jews.
When it gets hot enough, the killings begin and they usually don't stop until
the weather cools down. The black flags fly. The yellow flags fly. The green
flags fly. And you can either play the game or get beheaded on the evening
news.
Maybe both.
There's no morality out here. The men are careful not to look at a donkey or
a woman while praying to Allah. But they have no sense of ethics. They will
casually kill, steal, rape, break oaths and a commit a hundred other crimes
before breakfast.
If you're not a member of their family, you're fair game. If you are, you had
better know your place and help with the stealing, kidnapping and assorted
economic empowerment projects.
Killing
is easy. Self-control is hard. If there's no accountability, no local bigshot
that wants infidel tourists and their dollars and will make the killer's
family suffer, then he has no reason not to beat you, steal from you or drag
you into a home in some slum somewhere and wait for the fabled wealthy
infidels to pay him a king's ransom.
If not he always cut off your head to raise the price on the next one.
His life is cheap, but yours is even cheaper.
It's best to understand that we are not dealing with a moral code that looks
anything like our own. The nastier qualities of human nature, deceit,
violence and greed, are practically virtues. Especially if they are directed
at the right targets.
There's a reason that Islam was born here. There's a reason that it still
thrives here largely in its unaltered form. There is no civilization where
the black flags fly.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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