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Doug1943's avatar

Excellent!

It's very hard, if not impossible, to "get out of one's own skin" and try to view society/history 'objectively'. I recall how startled I was when someone casually noted -- with respect to militant Indian nationalists allying with the Nazis -- that WWII was, from a colonized Asian's perspective, simply "a war between white people on a peninsula of Asia". Of course it was, but it was also a war in which the victory of the Axis forces, perhaps giving India new masters, might have been the greater evil.

The world-view of many American progressives was shaped by the events of the 1960s -- the Civil Rights movement in the South and, even more, by Vietnam. Those of us who grew up in the 1950s and believed what we were taught in school -- America-the-Good-and-Pure -- were shocked into cynicism, and later transmitted our altered worldview to succeeding generations.

And yet reality has turned out to be more complex than either the 'America-the-Good' or 'American-the-Evil' worldviews admitted of. So ... South Korea was a nasty military dictatorship for a long time ... but has evolved into a democracy, whereas North Korea remains a nightmare country. Had we succeeded in defending South Vietnam, would the same transition have taken place? If we had let Mossadeq continue to rule in Iran, would the Islamic Revolution still have occurred?

Those of us who want to see the whole world evolve towards liberal democracy, and who, as Americans, are citizens of a still-powerful nation whose actions can help or hinder that process, are like people in a dense jungle, trying to move towards a distant goal. We have a compass, but not a map.

So we just have to do the best we can, knowing that the leaders of all nations, including our own, are motivated mainly by national self-interest, which sometimes coincides with progress. (Today's "military-industiral complex" was yesterday's "arsenal of democracy".)

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