Wednesday, February 23, 2011

An end to this soft bigotry against the Arab world

The west must revise its low expectations as Moroccans and other Arab peoples speak their minds
  • issandr
  • Morocco protest flag Casablanca
    Protesters hold the Moroccan flag during a demonstration in Casablanca, Morocco. Photograph: Thibault Camus

    There is a phrase coined in 2004 by Michael Gerson, a speechwriter for George W Bush best-known for having come up with "axis of evil", that I've always liked. In a speech about education, he bemoaned "the soft bigotry of lowered expectations" that he believed existed against disadvantaged children.

    For several decades, there has been a soft bigotry of lowered expectations in the west and among Arab elites about the Arab world. The prevalent thinking about this region of over 300 million souls is that it offered no fertile ground for democracy, either because democracy risked bringing political forces hostile to western interests or because democracy is not a value that has much currency in the region. Many regimes understood this, and played a double game of decrying their societies' "immaturity" while encouraging anti-democratic tendencies such as populism and, at times, a reactionary social conservatism. After the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, no one will buy this any more – and nor should they about two more north African countries: Libya and Morocco.

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    (Thanks vza)

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