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May 4, 2009
Is
Political Correctness Deadly to Africa?
by Kyle Mills
Author of Lords of
Corruption
First of all, I don't want to be misunderstood
here. I have nothing against a healthy amount of
sensitively with regard to the subject of race. In
the U.S., increased empathy has gone a long way to
clearing out the obnoxious and destructive behavior
left over from a time that is thankfully becoming
history. In fact, I'd never given the PC movement
much thought at all until I moved to Africa to
research a book.
In many ways, political correctness is just
another luxury made possible by America's wealth
and stability. Obsessive self-censoring and
blinding ideology is little more than an
inconvenience to most Americans, with no potential
to cause a child to starve, die of disease, or be
killed in an endless civil war. Of course, the
reluctance of the media and organizations like the
NAACP to frankly discuss the problems plaguing
African-Americans may contribute to the persistence
of those problems, but that's another article.
Africa is in trouble. After more than fifty
years of aid totaling over two trillion dollars,
the continent may actually be worse off than it was
before. One might think that this history of
failure, combined with the incredibly dire
circumstances many Africans find themselves in,
would create a massive push for change in the way
the West approaches aid. Amazingly, this doesn't
seem to be happening. If anything, the philosophy
of "if it's not working, do more of it" is
gaining strength, advocated by economist
Jeffrey Sachs and his cadre of A-list
celebrities.
Sachs's strongest focus is the treatment of AIDS
in Africa, though he's quick to point out that he
has no idea why the disease spreads so quickly
there. What's interesting about this isn't that he
doesn't know, but that he doesn't seem particularly
interested in finding out. Could this be because
he's afraid he might discover something that could
cause him to be shunned by his fellow academics, a
group which enforces political correctness with the
zeal of the Spanish Inquisition?
What if he were to discover that Yakubu Usman
Abubakar, a Nigerian AIDS worker, was on the right
track when he said, "We live in a polygamous
society where divorce is common and condom use is
low?" Or even worse, what if Sachs found that black
people are genetically more susceptible to the
disease, thus running afoul of the great pillar of
political correctness: Race is a purely social
construct.
I suspect that would be the last time he ever
got a ride on Bono's private jet. On the other
hand, with real-world information on transmission
dynamics, he might be able to actually do
something about one of the most devastating
humanitarian disasters in history.
Another, perhaps even more corrosive, aspect of
political correctness is the tendency to conflate
the criticism of black people with racism. This
increasingly common error has made it impossible to
paint the Africans as anything but victims of
circumstances beyond their control. So we end up
with a litany of explanations for the problems in
Africa that wouldn't pass muster in a seventh-grade
term paper. Consider two perennial favorites:
Tribal animosity is the result of
colonialists carving up the continent with no
thought to demographics. Once again, we
find the Africans helpless -- this time when faced
with their own bigotry -- and suggest that they
should have been separated. Interestingly, the
South Africans came to the same conclusion many
years ago. The Afrikaans word for segregation is
apartheid and it wasn't any more just there than it
was in the U.S.
Violence is the result of poverty.
Of course, it's almost comically simple to find
examples of poor countries that aren't violent at
all. In fact, you don't have to go any farther than
Botswana. Or, if you prefer to travel through time
instead of overland, we could just turn the clock
back a few hundred years to a time when almost
everyone was uneducated, living in poverty, and
lacked access to even rudimentary medical care.
How do you resolve a problem if you don't have
the courage to realistically define it? How will
the Africans find the momentum to create solutions
for themselves if they're constantly being told
that they're too poor and uneducated to make
intelligent choices?
Foreign aid could be a powerful force for good
and we should remain committed to it. But the
West's increasing comfort with avoiding tough
questions has the potential to doom Africa to
another century of crushing poverty, disease, and
war. It's time to take a hard look at what's
causing the continent's problems and why our
efforts to fix them have gone nowhere. I won't lie
to you. In the beginning, it will be a frightening,
lonely, and fruitless task. Those first brave souls
will be painted as racists. They'll be endlessly
ridiculed. And they'll no longer be invited to sit
around plush Nairobi hotel lobbies pontificating
about the plight of Africans.
But does fundamental change ever come without
courage? Without hardship? Without resistance?
What if donors extended their incredible
generosity to include spending the time it takes to
understand the situations they're providing the
money to fix? What if they traveled to Africa and
looked around for themselves? And what if they
demanded the same level of efficiency and
verifiable results that made them wealthy enough to
write those checks in the first place?
Africa is waiting.
Copyright
© 2009 Kyle Mills. Published with
permission.
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Kyle Mills, author of Lords
of Corruption, is the
New York Times bestselling author
of nine books, including Darkness
Falls and The Second Horseman.
Growing up in Oregon as a Bureau Kid, Kyle
absorbed an enormous amount of information
about the FBI, which he incorporates into
his novels. He and his wife live in
Wyoming and enjoy rock climbing. To learn
more about Lords of Corruption
please visit www.lordsofcorruptionbook.com.
Visit Kyle Mills at www.kylemills.com.
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