An Occasion of Sen
by
Sean Corrigan
by Sean Corrigan
Out
here in Houston, a friend decided it would be nice to take me to
hear a lecture given by 1998 Nobel Prizewinner and Master of Trinity
College, Cambridge, Amartya Sen, on the topic of "Democracy
and Globalization."
Oh
dear! I thought, but, not wishing to offend, I accepted graciously
and was ready – suited and booted – when the time arrived for him
to pick me up.
The
address was to be given at one of those vanity projects for retired
public "servants," the Rice University’s "James A.
Baker III Institute for Public Policy" – grandiose slogan:
"A bridge between the world of ideas and the world of action";
cost: $60 million and counting – the Carlyle Group, Kenneth Lay,
and numerous Arab gentlemen, among many others, our thanks.
Sen’s
speech, it turned out, contained little enough about "globalization,"
apart from a few platitudes about how both its opponents and proponents
had it all wrong, in the professor’s humble opinion, while his insights
on "Democracy" (suitably and reverentially capitalized)
were of the order that that we were all guilty of intellectual "racism"
to think we Europeans had been largely responsible for spreading
the worship of that great secular god around the globe, since –
quote – "the Visigoths who gave rise to the Germans' knew nothing
at all of 5th century BC Athens....!"
Pots
and kettles sprang to mind on that score, especially since his charge
that we Westerners routinely ignore the rich history of the East
was mirrored in his own myopic focus only on the world of Greece
and Rome, as if our Antiquity was confined to a bunch of olive-eating
imperialists huddled around the shores of the Mediterranean!
Incidentally,
the Celts were at least as democratic as anything seen in Socrates’
Athens. Though chosen from among the more eminent families, their
leaders were only primus inter pares and had to reflect the
views of those qualified to express one in the polity, or risk instant
expulsion – a fact which drove Caesar to distraction when the free
peoples of Gaul and Britain routinely refused to do the pro-Roman
bidding of the Chalabis and Karzais he tried to install at their
head, as even a cursory reading of his Commentaries will reveal.
But
I am getting ahead of myself.
Though
Sen himself seemed personable enough, it did worry me slightly when
the speech was introduced by one of the University's Cultural Marxists,
the editor of some hotbed of facile polylogism called "the
Journal of Feminist Economics" [sic!] and when it was prefaced
by the proud announcement that the school was setting up a Department
of Culturally-Sensitive Gender Studies (not much call for my repertoire
of jokes about Welsh mothers-in-law there, I fear!)...
Among
Sen's few memorable words – ones which give a flavour of the woolly-headed
leftism on offer was the idea that when Ambedkar wrote the
constitution for his native India, a passage saying something to
the effect that "we have a schizophrenic nation where all are
politically equal, but economically unequal, and it behooves us
to address the latter," meant they were certainly not Socialists,
merely good Democrats!
Entering
into the spirit of the thing, I passed a written question to the
good professor along the lines of:
"When
democracy is so often antithetical to property rights, how can you
say it is a prerequisite for progress? Will you not admit that only
capital brings progress, not populist confiscation?"
Since
I sat near the front and had scribbled on the back of the card on
which my question was written, I could plainly see that Ms Marx,
the editor of the Wimmin's thingumybob who chose and read out
the questions had conveniently shuffled it to the bottom of the
(fairly slim) pile she held, right where it could not possibly have
been asked in the time allotted.
Why
was I not surprised? Hmmmm… YOU work it out!
(Incidentally,
my host, John, bought me a Margarita afterwards. So, yes, he IS
still a friend!)
November
14, 2003
Sean
Corrigan [send him mail]
writes from London on the financial markets, and edits the daily
Capital Letter
and the Website Capital
Insight. He is co-manager of the Bermuda-based Edelweiss
Fund.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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