I and my family were
driving somewhere through downtown Baltimore when we spotted a man viciously
beating a woman on one of the side streets.
What were we to do? We hesitated only a second. Stopping the car, my teenage son and I got
out and approached the scene. First
motioning my son back out of reach, I walked up and told the man to stop. Surprisingly, he was cowed by my appearance,
stopped the beating, muttered an apology and, along with the woman, quickly
disappeared down an alley. Then a man
got out of a car parked down the street and came over to thank me for what I’d
done. He said he’d been there since
before we arrived and had been sitting there wondering what to do. He had wanted to call the police, but they
could not have arrived in time to make any difference.
It was only afterwards
that I thought how foolish I’d been. I
was unarmed, the man doing the beating possibly, even probably, armed and
violent. My family was jeopardized. I didn’t know, and never would, the
circumstances – was it a domestic quarrel, a pimp beating a prostitute for
withholding her earnings, a drug incident, or what? I knew only that it was a morally repugnant
act that must be stopped, and I was the only one capable of acting to do
so. It was totally foolish on my part, but
I felt then and I still feel that the world was a minutely better place for what
I had done.
I had acted while the
man down the street simply observed because I hadn’t stopped to think. We used to talk in the office of “paralysis
by analysis.” Too often we get so caught
up in the pros and cons of complex issues that we never get around to acting on
them. Syria is that kind of issue, and
we and the media are in danger of getting caught up in that kind of
paralysis. We know chemical warfare,
especially against your own innocent civilians, is morally abhorrent; it has
been declared so twice by international conventions, and we have only to look
at pictures from WWI, and Syria, to understand why. We know that, unrestrained, it is a practice
that will spread. We know other morally
abhorrent acts have occurred in the past without action. We know the “police” are not available, that
there is no useful international law to
invoke and that if meaningful action to stop it is to occur, it falls on us,
like it or not. And we know there may
well be subsequent undesirable consequences.
The real question is, will the world be a better place if we act? All the rest is paralysis by analysis.
It is not a new
question, as my Baltimore street incident illustrates. Albert Camus addressed it in La Chute, a novel in which a
champion swimmer fails to rescue a man drowning in the Seine because he’s on
the way to a party, the night is cold, and, you know. The rest of his life is a fall dominated by
his sense of moral failure. Much further
back, it is the story of The Good Samaritan, and what might have been had the
Samaritan not stopped. We as a nation
have failed enough so that we undoubtedly could shrug off inaction on Syria as
just another case of choices too complex to bother about. But we shouldn’t. Sometimes the moral choices are the really important
ones.
2 comments:
Joe, you are correct on many counts. But I have to agree with Jim Wallis and others who say it is a moral mistake to be the total authority on morality. We certainly as a nation looked the other way when Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons.Yet you are correct that we as a nation have failed enough - we have failed the past two years in ignoring Syria, plus we have not used our moral fiber enough to deal with other nations to show compassion for the refugee issue. Moral leadership as far as I am concerned deals with political courage and guts to know the difference between power and the abuse of power. We must used every means at our disposal to tell Syria and the world that the slaughter must cease and negotiations and talks to bring about an end to what is a civil war with terrible consequences for the Middle East. Yes, the moral choice are important and that is why I would say that being the good Samaritan for me means "leadership" morally and political to end the conflict and bring the sides to a cease fire and "leadership" morally from a humanitarian point of view, not throwing a few missiles at some limited military targets- that is not moral leadership, it is an abdication of leadership.
Ray, the problem is that of the real choices available, those that are most desirable are not likely to be effective (like calling for the police when there are none) and those that could be effective are not likely to be desirable. Yet moral leadership involves more than wringing our hands. But moral leadership implies some action, and actions we know to be futile, like calling for negotiations with a cornered rat using every weapon at his disposal, are not leadership, unless we first get his attention. As for being total moral authorities, when there is no agreed upon moral authority, you nevertheless have to act. Otherwise, paralysis sets in.
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