belligerencenoun: an aggressive or truculent
attitude, atmosphere, or disposition (Merriam-Webster)
intelligencenoun: the ability to learn or understand
or to deal with new or trying situations; … the ability to apply knowledge to
manipulate one’s environment or to think abstractly as measured by objective
criteria (as tests); … mental acuteness; …information concerning an enemy or
possible enemy or an area. (Merriam-Webster)
belligencenoun: an intelligence or shrewdness that
involves an aggressive attitude or truculent words and deeds; adjective: belligent. (Mitchell-Aboulafia)
belligentnoun: a shrewd individual whose behavior
is marked by aggressive words or deeds; a clever person for whom winning and
losing is the sole criteria for success. (Mitchell-Aboulafia)
We live in belligent times that try
our souls. But we are unwilling to confront this fact. Take the recent
election: We dance around the phenomenon by complaining about how mean-spirited
and nasty candidates have become, even as we avoid tackling the problem of
belligence directly.
I know. Some of you will complain
that I am accusing you unfairly. You will say that you have never heard of belligence. You will ask how you could
have done anything about it since you never heard of it. Fair enough. I accept
your objection and hold myself responsible. I should have shared this word with
the world years ago. The recent election has moved me to rectify the situation.
Allow me to clarify its meaning before applying it to our times.
Belligent individuals seek to
undermine or injure those who might simply disagree with them. Their goal is
not to understand the words or actions of others. It is to defeat them.
Belligent individuals may be said to have many chips on their shoulders, which
they carry into a variety of contexts. Their hostility to others appears
unwarranted to impartial observers. They see life as an endless series of
competitions in which there are only winners and losers. They are more cunning
and shrewd than thoughtful as they pursue victory. And they plan and expect to
be winners. Examples will prove helpful. Superman’s archenemy, Lex Luthor,
possessed (or was possessed by) belligence, as was Batman’s nemesis the Joker.
Rush Limbaugh is a belligent. Katie Couric is not. Stephen Colbert’s TV persona
is belligent. Jon Stewart’s usually is not. In politics both major parties have
belligent members. Lyndon Johnson certainly had his belligent moments. The
Nixon who was responsible for Watergate and the “enemies list” was belligent.
The one who went to China was not. Women can certainly be belligents. In our
own day there is Sarah Palin, but Laura Bush is probably the antithesis of a
belligent. It should be emphasized that although we might agree with the
specific goals of a belligent, this doesn’t make him or her any less belligent.
So what has this to do with politics and elections? After all, who doesn’t want
to be a winner?
I worry a lot about politics in
America. We often view politics as a nuisance or as a sport. (My team
wins.
Yours loses.) Politics is not sport. We don’t appear to understand what
it
means to be a political animal, as Aristotle famously called us. For
him, we
are by nature gregarious and social creatures. Following his lead,
Hannah
Arendt tells us that the essence of politics is discussion and debate,
which
the ancient Greeks clearly understood. No doubt the Greeks were highly
competitive but they didn’t confuse politics with sport. Although
political
debate involves an agon—a contest or struggle—it is not simply about
winning.
It is about public discussion. Your views and mine are aired in the
world. For
the Greeks important discussion took place in the agora (marketplace or
gathering place). It was where you would take a stand, others would
notice that you
had taken a stand, and everyone (well, in ancient Greece every free male
citizen) could engage in discussion and debate, which are alternatives
to
violence. In The Human Condition
Arendt tells us that in the Greek city-state,
To be political, to live in a polis,
meant that everything was decided through words and persuasion and not through
force and violence. In Greek self-understanding, to force people by violence,
to command rather than persuade, were prepolitical ways to deal with people characteristic
of life outside the polis.
Perhaps Arendt romanticizes ancient
Greece and is really speaking more of Athens than other cities. This is not our
concern. What is our concern is
whether she is saying something important about the ways in which healthy
communities should function. For a community to flourish, its members must
understand that they are unique. Each has a different perspective to offer on a
common world. And they should share these perspectives with others in a public
or political forum.
The reality of the public realm
relies on the simultaneous presence of innumerable perspectives and aspects in
which the common world presents itself and for which no common measurement or
denominator can ever be devised…. Being seen and being heard by others derive
their significance from the fact that everybody sees and hears from a different
position. This is the meaning of public life, compared to which even the
richest and most satisfying family life can offer only the prolongation or
multiplication of one’s own position…. [In tyrannies and in mass hysteria] men
become entirely private, that is, they have been deprived of seeing and hearing
others, of being seen and being heard by them.
Arendt is not claiming that family
life is unimportant. She is claiming that it has limitations. Those within a
family often have views that are too similar to be political. And even when
members differ, they are private disagreements, best kept within the family. Although
privacy is vital for human flourishing, some forms of human interaction must
not be kept private. Privacy undermines their value. In this respect the secret
ballot, while a necessary feature of a healthy democracy, has misled us. It has
left us with the impression that politics is private. We often hide our
political views as we hide our salaries, feeling that they are none of anyone
else’s business. But our political views should be public.
The belligent individual doesn’t
seek discussion, debate, or dialogue. He or she seeks to win. And to win one
doesn’t have to be thoughtful or deliberative or engage in discussion. To win
elections, for example, one merely needs to be cunning or employ cunning
people. In America this often means converting others through clever language
and advertising. But the substitution of advertising or clever monologues for
genuine debate and discussion turns elections into theater. And the leading
actors are either belligents or controlled by them. We the people are consigned
to the audience, in which we allow ourselves to be entertained by belligents,
fearful that if we share our views, trouble will follow or we will waste
valuable time.
Americans can rail about how awful
the world of politics is, but as long as we remain preoccupied with our private
worlds—careers, family matters, net worth, etc.—to the exclusion of active
discussion and debate, there won’t be any change. We don’t all have to become
political activists. We do have to recognize that the more we shy away from
discussion and debate about our common world, the more we stay in the audience,
the more we then cede control of our nation to belligents, because they have
the savvy and assertiveness to control the agenda.
Mitchell Aboulafia is the director of the Liberal Arts Department.
Faculty Forum is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of The Juilliard School.