How is it political correctness to think that treating people as interchangeable chattel goods is wrong?Gurachn wrote:In today's atmosphere of political correctness though, slavery is seen as such a horrendous evil that a bit of denial in those proud of their history and culture (even if not of the institution or its related bigotry) is easily understood.
The germ theory of disease is pretty recent too; that doesn't make it wrong. Think about it the other way round. The majority of the population being serfs or slaves, subjects of a hereditary aristocracy that can abuse them with impunity has gone on for a long time, the vast majority of history... but isn't it interesting that we've made so much more progress in the last two centuries of spreading equality and democracy, compared to the dozens of centuries before that time?The degree to which slavery is currently regarded (at least in the west) as such an absolute and self-evident wrong though, does give me some pause, considering the institution's lengthy and almost universal acceptance in the past.
The fact that freedom (defined as non-slave) has only come to be regarded (by some) and an unquestionably inalienable right in the past 1 or 2 percent of human history makes me wonder if its not more of a recent fad than a natural state.
Maybe it works the other way around. 'History' stretches over such a vast span of time because for most of it we were trapped in stasis by poisonous institutions that stunted the growth of the cultures that supported them: diseases in the body politic.
The institutions grew up very naturally, of course, but that doesn't make them good for the cultures that had them.
But is this healthy? In the American South, it's only served to promote and make permanent the idea that it's okay to keep treating blacks as second-class citizens, that there isn't anything fundamentally wrong with race relations in the South, that those damnyankees are just mean for coming in and saying otherwise...Gurachn wrote:I appreciate your sentiments, but am not sure if they are universally applicable. Living in Japan, I can assure you that there does not seem to be a great level shame in the overall populace, or at the government level, over denial for past war wrongs.
There is more of a feeling that, yes, we acknowledge there may have been some unpleasant 'incidents' in the past, but we don't want to rub the noses of our youth in them for fear that it may damage their national pride and confidence.
It breeds a historical sense of resentment, one that has repeatedly served to feed terrorism*, reactionary political movements**, and resentment of the standards of education, culture, and good government found in much of the rest of the country.***
*See the Ku Klux Klan
**See modern American politics
***I can provide examples of this easily enough, but it would need to be a rather long list.
So I think we have a right to ask whether people should be able to deny their history and recast it as a glorious Noble Lost Cause when in fact their ancestors were fighting for the right to make people suffer for their own profit.
This is especially true when ignoring the question of historical injustice lets people get by without reexamining the basic assumptions their culture makes about how to treat people with justice, as we see in both the American South and Japan.