Sunday, October 26, 2008
Dalrymple, Theodore. "False Apology Syndrome: I'm Sorry for Your Sins." IN CHARACTER (Fall Issue 2008).
There is a fashion these days for apologies: not apologies for the things that one has actually done oneself (that kind of apology is as difficult to make and as unfashionable as ever), but for public apologies by politicians for the crimes and misdemeanours of their ancestors, or at least of their predecessors. I think it is reasonable to call this pattern of political breast-beating the False Apology Syndrome.
Mr. Blair, the then British prime minister, apologized to the Irish for the famine; one of the first public acts of Mr. Rudd, the Australian prime minister, was to apologize to the Aborigines for the dispossession of their continent; Pope John Paul II apologized to the Muslims for the Crusades. There are many other examples, and there are also demands for apologies by aggrieved, or supposedly aggrieved, groups.
What is this all about, and what does it signify? Does it mean that at long last the powerful are making a genuine effort to see things from the point of view of the weak, or is it, on the contrary, a form of moral exhibitionism that subverts genuine moral thought and conduct? . . .
Read the rest here: http://www.incharacter.org/article.php?article=119.
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I quite like the work of Arnold Mindell as decribed in his Sitting In the Fire via
ReplyDeletewww.aamindell.net
In which he points out that history is never dead and that we are ALL effected by what he calls the unacknowledged and unreconciled Time Spirits of the "past".
Plus the author is actively associated with and hence an apologist for the neo-psychopaths that gave the entire world the eight years of the Bush nightmare in which was then left of USA culture (and its standing in the world), was completely trashed.
Meanwhile any organisation that has Michael Novak on its board wouldnt know diddly squat about REAL character.