Philosopher King-Hit: Jamie Whyte used the behaviour of his 11-year-old daughter to explain the motivations of the Jihadi assassins who massacred the staff of Charlie Hebdo. Upon examination, however, Whyte's daughter's grasp of basic ethics turns out to be a lot stronger than her dad's!
IN YESTERDAY’S HERALD
(20/1/15) the former leader of the Act Party, Jamie Whyte, offered the
behaviour of his 11-year-old daughter as a useful guide to the thinking of the
Jihadis responsible for the Charlie Hebdo
massacre.
Wow! That’s not a context into which I would want to plunge
my daughter, but then, I’m not a Cambridge-educated philosopher.
Jamie’s daughter’s deadly act of extremism, as elaborated by
her father, was (by Jihadi standards) pretty mild. “She took the cigarettes of
one of our dinner guests and threw them into our back hedge.”
Gosh! That’s pretty bloody hard to equate with the bloodbath
at the offices of Charlie Hebdo, but,
okay, let’s follow Jamie’s argument all the way to its conclusion.
En route to that
conclusion, thankfully, Jamie does pause to observe, generously:
“Of course, my daughter and her moral tutors do not want to
slaughter smokers or satirists. They are not as angry or bleak or deranged as
the Parisian killers and the others who have committed ideologically motivated
atrocities.”
Whew! That was good to hear! Even if, as I was reading
Jamie’s exculpatory aside, the word “but” was already taking shape in my mind.
And, just as I feared, there it was, right at the beginning of the next
paragraph:
“But they have the same basic urge – to compel, to dominate.
And they seek justification for it in the supposed vices of their victims.”
Well, yes, that’s right Jamie, they do. Just as the members
of the Act Party offer up their unwillingness to be subjected to the vices of
others (taxation, regulation, collectivism) as justification for their attempts
to impose their own frankly bizarre social, economic and political beliefs upon
the rest of us. Indeed, when it comes to compelling and dominating, the Act
Party is pretty hard to beat. (How else to explain David Seymour’s willingness
to exercise what is, in effect, Act’s casting parliamentary vote on the
strength of just 16,689 Party Votes!)
Except, of course, I would delete such sententious words as
“compel”, “dominate”, “vices” and “victims” from Jamie’s description of his
daughter’s motivation. That’s because his daughter’s behaviour is entirely
consistent with the highest moral conduct.
Not even Jamie, I trust, would argue that it is the right of
every individual to inflict actual physical harm upon individuals who are
inflicting no actual physical harm upon him. Indeed, I would expect him to
argue that human-beings, both individually and collectively, have the right
(even, some would argue, the duty) to
prevent the unjustified infliction of actual physical harm upon other people.
Certainly, by throwing her father’s dinner guest’s
cigarettes in the hedge, Jamie’s daughter was doing exactly that. Having
learned from her teachers that the passive inhalation of tobacco smoke is every
bit as dangerous as its deliberate inhalation, she was well aware that there
was no “safe” way the guest’s cigarettes could be consumed. Though she was only
11, she also appears to have shrewdly calculated that the other people present
were quite capable of endangering her own and her loved ones’ health out of a
misguided respect for the norms of social etiquette. Her unilateral decision to
steal the cigarettes and ditch them in the hedge was, thus, no more worthy of
her father’s condemnation than another person’s decision to deprive a drunken
guest of his or her car keys.
The actual or potential threat to the rights of other
human-beings always trumps the right of an individual to indulge in behaviour
that puts those rights in jeopardy.
Not that Jamie gets this – no siree Bob! After a perfectly
reasonable critique of American drug laws, the father of the person he
describes as his “sanctimonious, bullying daughter” goes on to state that:
“Decisions Western governments do not leave to you and the
adults you freely deal with include: how much money you work for, what you wear
on your head when cycling, the quality of your house, what you eat, the race of
the people you employ, the ways you kill yourself.”
Decoded, this sentence tells us that Jamie is opposed to the
minimum wage, basic health and safety regulations, anti-discrimination laws,
and the State’s not unreasonable refusal to countenance you dynamiting yourself
in a crowded street as a means of committing suicide.
It also tells us that Jamie’s “philosophy” is blissfully
unaware of the fact that the consequences of one’s individual actions radiate
out through society in ways that are
all-too-frequently extremely damaging to other individuals and groups.
What he obviously believes to be the entirely harmless act
of agreeing to work for a pittance, if repeated often enough by other
like-minded individuals, will depress the incomes of people who have entered
into no such voluntary agreement to work for less than they are worth.
Likewise, Jamie sees nothing wrong in allowing individuals
to refuse to follow sensible safety precautions – thereby imposing the costs of
any accidental injuries upon the rest of us.
And is he fazed by the billion-dollar consequences of the
leaky homes scandal? Not one bit!
The former Act leader is able to articulate such absurdities
because, like so many others on the Right, he really does believe that Margaret
Thatcher was correct when she announced that “there is no such thing as
society”.
And that’s a perfectly understandable position to take if
it’s one’s intention to empower a tiny minority at the expense of the
overwhelming majority of one’s fellow citizens. Indeed, taking any other
position must, in the end, open the right-winger to social, economic and
political claims that he or she is personally loathe to acknowledge. The fact
that such untrammelled individualism is philosophical twaddle is neither here
nor there. As Humpty-Dumpty informs Alice in Through The Looking Glass: “The question is, which is to be master
– that’s all.”
Questions of political mastery aside, it would be wrong to
end these observations without acknowledging that, in spite of his absurd
philosophy, Jamie has clearly succeeded in raising an intelligent, daring and,
ethically-speaking, disarmingly mature daughter. To whom I can only say: “Good
on ya luv! A ‘little thuggery’ in defence of other people’s rights is no vice.”
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Wednesday, 22 January 2015.
10 comments:
I agree that Jamie is to be congratulated on his daughter.
But even better than "thuggery" would have been "moral suasion".
Next time around, I suggest that Ms Whyte requests the right to place leaflets and posters concerning the dangers of passive smoking at (several)strategic points of the house's dining area.
This might help us gauge whether her father's commitment to free speech was as great as his concern for the quotidian dross of social mores.
Moral absolutism - that's kids and fundies for you.
If we just talking about Jamie's daughter, rather than society – what she should have done was waited till they started to smoke, extract the cigarette from their mouth, stub it out on their leg, and scream "You're endangering my young life you evil sonofabitch." As it was she was quite rude.
No one is endangered until the person starts smoking. And politeness dictates that you don't act this way with guests anyway. I presume that perhaps Jamie has forbidden them to smoke in his house? Who knows, perhaps he takes is individual decision-making further than one would think.
Now if we're talking about society, I've often heard people talking about the relationship between the boss and the worker as if it were equal. "Don't like your job? Get another one." As if they're everywhere. "Don't like your conditions of work? Negotiate with your boss." Now there speaks someone who's never worked at the lower end of the job market. Because if you try to do that you'll probably get fired. So join a fucking union. Bosses often don't like unions, but that's only because they can simply impose conditions and wages upon large groups of people without individual negotiations. If they really had to undertake significant and meaningful individual negotiations they'd be screaming blue murder. The problem is people like Jamie have generally worked at the top end of the market where you can individually negotiate, because you have a certain amount of power. The rest is bullshit.
Thank you Chris for shining the light on Whyte's logic.
During the election campaign i actually enjoyed listening to Whyte's ever so 'logical' arguments like sitting in a philosophy class. It is like playing in a sandpit having great fun building wonderful structures, which in order to stand up follow their own internal 'logic'.
However we get into real trouble when we forget that the sandpit is not the real world.
Unless of course you live on planet ACT or Key for that matter.
Hans from
www.ZealandiaBlog.net.nz
What on earth have I stumbled into? Some Calvinistic bunch of puritans who don't even believe in someones right to have a ciggie?
Any danger of second hand smoke inhalation can be fixed by going outside for your smoke.
You can argue all sorts of personal choices affect other people, but society would be pretty restrictive if we used that as a basis to ban such things.
I really expected more enlightened indulgence from you Chris, with your high regard for the European way of life.
Well said!
Greg
Throwing a packet of cigarettes into the bushes is a blatant act of littering. This kid deserves a damn good spanking...
One brand of mindless extremism seems to beget another.
lol....how many interest groups have you upset with those two short sentences FT?...well done that man
That's quite funny. I meant that Jamie Whyte's Crowleyan fundamentalist nihilism begets authoritarian moral puritanism in his young daughter. But it looks like that, in turn, has begotten 19th century public school disciplinarianism in FT.
In response I am off to start a genderless postmodern commune in the wastelands of Kamchatka.
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