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Politics and the Garden of Eden by Bob Wallace The
only religious joke I tell is one I made up: the human race has Fallen and
can't get up. Okay, so it's
not very good, even for one of my always-bad puns.
But as bad as it is, I think it is a true statement. Even a bad
joke often has truth in it. The
idea that the human race is "fallen," that is, imperfect, exists
in all religions. In the
Western world, it's because we were, whether figuratively or literally,
kicked out of the Garden of Eden. The
story of the Garden of Eden is one of my favorite myths.
When I say "myth," I don't mean it's untrue.
Instead I mean that it is universally applicable to all people, in
all places, at all times. A
myth doesn't last for thousands of years unless it is true. I've
run across various interpretations of the myth.
The one that always struck a chord with me is that evil came into
the world through scapegoating: Adam blames Eve and Eve blames the
serpent, a symbol of envy. As
the psychiatrist M. Scott Peck has pointed out, "Scapegoating is the
genesis of human evil." Being
a symbol of envy, the serpent is also a symbol of hate.
Envy and hate are two sides of the same coin. The myth tells us
that people often blame their problems on other people because of envy and
hate. If there is one sentence
that describes the biggest problem with humanity, that is it. Refusal
to take responsibility for one's actions, projecting one's problems onto
others, refusing to forgive people when they're innocent (did Adam forgive
Eve?), hate and envy: those traits are responsible for more evil in the
world than anything else. And
all of it in one short-short story. Still,
I think, there's more to the story than the above.
What has been puzzling me recently is the part about Adam and Eve
being naked but not ashamed. Then,
when they realize they are naked, Adam becomes afraid and hides.
The implication is they become ashamed because of their nudity.
Not guilty, but ashamed. Fear
and shame. What
does it mean? Some have
claimed it's about young children, who have a tendency to run around naked
until the day they realize they're not supposed to.
There's truth in that view, but I think there's more.
That "more" is the fact they feel shame, but not guilt. Shame
is based on what you believe people think of you.
That's why Adam is afraid; he's concerned about what God will
think. Guilt, on the other
hand, is about the violation of an internal standard.
Adam and Eve have no guilt; instead they feel shame. There
is not one word in the story of the Garden of Eden about guilt,
only ones about shame. When
you have a person who has no guilt, but instead only shame, that person is
known as a psychopath. A
psychopath is in many ways a two-year-old in an adult body.
They have no internal standards--no guilt--to guide them.
They have no conscience. They are instead excruciatingly sensitive
to others' opinions of them, even if they deny it.
They are instead ruled by shame, embarrassment and humiliation, all
of which are related to each other. Not
surprisingly, they blame their problems on other people. What
the story of the Garden of Eden is saying is that there are relationships
among shame, fear, hate, envy and scapegoating.
People who are ruled by shame are always afraid of what others
think. They think others are
responsible for how they feel. As
such, they project their problems on others and scapegoat them. Those
relationships can lead to violence towards others, sometimes mass
violence, as in the case of the Nazis and Communists.
Guilt tends toward self-punishment, as Dimmesdale did in The
Scarlet Letter when he branded himself.
Shame tends toward punishment of others, even if they're
innocent. Not that any
scapegoater thinks they're ever innocent. How
does all of the aforementioned apply to politics?
Most--all?--politicians are not ruled by guilt.
They're ruled by what others think of them--by shame,
embarrassment, humiliation. Isn't
one of the main reasons they go into politics is because they're desperate
for attention--to convince others to think well of them? I
have not seen George Bush show one iota of guilt about what's he done in
starting a war under false pretenses.
Since he's not ruled by guilt, then he must be ruled by shame,
which he hides under arrogance and conceit--hubris.
Pride on top, shame underneath.
I've heard that saying many times. Has
Bush ever been ashamed about being an alcoholic, ne’er-do-well son who
failed at every job handed to him on a golden platter?
I think he has. I think
he's now covering it up with his belief that God not only chose him to be
President, but also talks to him. Is
he touchy and prone to feeling humiliated?
If he isn't, then why did he explode at a reporter when the
reporter spoke French in front of him? What
about the (late?) Osama bin Laden? He,
too, has shown no guilt over what he has done.
He, too, comes across as arrogant.
Does he use that arrogance to cover his shame and envy? His shame
that the Islamic world is a thousand years behind the West?
His envy of that world, so far ahead of his? I
think one of the reasons the Do
any politicians ever feel guilt?
Robert McNamara, who was one of the architects of the Rumsfeld
is another one who comes across as arrogant and lacking in guilt,
especially when he told a soldier who asked about the lack of armor for
Humvees, "You go to war with the army you have."
Truly, spoken like a man who was a flight instructor and never saw
a second's combat in his life. Perhaps
that's the main problem with politicians: instead of feeling guilt, they
are ruled only by the potential of being humiliated.
When I saw Bill A
theory I've read--several times--is that some cultures, generally Eastern
ones such as Doesn't
nearly every tribe in the world--whether primitive "ones" or
modern-day "ethnic groups"--teach its members not to feel guilt
for what they do to those outside the tribe?
That those outside the tribe are considered less than human?
Yet, these people can often be mocked and humiliated.
Perhaps shame comes before guilt in the developing conscience. I
am reminded of a story by Alexander Cockburn about Norman Podhoretz.
". . . back in the days
of Camelot, [Podhoretz] conceived a passion for Jackie Kennedy and came to
believe that somehow, against all the odds, she secretly reciprocated his
yearning. Eventually, at some
cocktail party he cornered her and pressed his suit.
She gazed at him as though he was a centipede on her sleeve, and
said icily, 'Why, Mr. Podhoretz, just who do you think you are?'
Not long thereafter the jilted Poddy began his long trek to the
right." Podhoretz,
like his son William, is a warmonger who believes in sacrificing any
number of innocent Americans in wars they support. They have no guilt, but
they can be shamed and humiliated, as Some
years ago I saw one of Hitler's uniforms.
I remember two things: It was on sale for $20,000, and that Hitler
was a short, thin, frail man. Rumor
has it he had only one testicle. How
did those things make him feel? Ashamed,
fearful of being exposed--of being naked?
Envious and hate-filled? Blaming
his problems on others? Of
wanting to remake society and make everyone equal, so he would never feel
inferior and humiliated anymore? I
think the answer is more than "perhaps." Erik
von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, in Leftism Revisited, perceptively wrote that
Hitler was tortured by inferiority complexes and easily offended.
Obviously he had a terror of being humiliated, of being shamed.
But did that terror extend to feeling guilty?
There is no evidence that it did. Stalin
had even more problems than Hitler. He,
too, was short and frail, in addition to being badly pockmarked, with a
withered arm and fused toes on one foot.
When he gained political power, did he, like Hitler, use it to
overcome his fear, his humiliation, his hate, and his envy?
Pride on top, covering all those unbearable feelings underneath? The story of the Garden of Eden is telling us we must always be on the lookout for someone who has little or no guilt, and is instead ruled by fear and shame, envy and hate. By someone who will not forgive, ever, who wants revenge, and who blames their problems on others. Those traits, covered by hubris, are characteristic of those who seek political power, to the detriment of the entire world. discuss this column in the forum Bob Wallace has a degree in Journalism, is a former reporter and editor, and has been published at LewRockwell.com, Sierra Times, and The Libertarian Enterprise. |