Pith: Behind the Western Guilt Complex
My take on the courage deficit afflicting us.
One of the defining characteristics of our society is a sense of guilt.
This guilt manifests itself in the way we bend over backwards for marginalised groups, and the way we defend weakness with ferocity.
White guilt, LGBT allies and male feminists abound.
Obesity is championed as body positivity.
People are villainised and ostracised for their lack of feeling for those who struggle. You are a bad person if you are against redistribution.
Our judgement of people's character primarily takes place through this lens.
Empathy, rather than courage, has the moral high ground.
I say this merely as an observation, rather than to dismiss the merits of empathy as a virtue.
I've long wondered why this is, and have been presented with various explanations.
One is colonial and slaver guilt - that we feel ashamed of the horrors we committed as the British Empire and as white slavers in the US.
Another is our culture's roots in Christianity, where the notion of original sin breeds a sense of shame.