If Books Could Kill - The Clash of Civilizations
Episode Date: February 23, 2023"If your thesis doesn't hold up to obvious criticisms, there's a chance that your thesis sucks." Thanks to Paul Musgrave and Alex Cruikshanks for helping us fact-check this episode...!Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/IfBooksPodWhere to find us: TwitterPeter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other podcast, Maintenance PhaseLinks!Huntington’s 1993 articleStatistics on deaths in state-based conflicts The Clash of Civilizations: An Islamicist’s CritiquePaul Musgrave’s Roundtable on Clash of Civilizations “The Hispanic Challenge” The “Arab Street”? Public Opinion In The Arab World The Clash of Ignorance Can Civilizations Clash?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Peter. Michael. Have you ever heard of a book called Clash of Civilizations?
I've heard of it. Clash of Civilizations, one of my favorite video games.
I'm excited to find out they made a book.
Tell me about your relationship with this book, what do you know about it? I actually do know a little bit about it.
If you were a professor of international affairs when the Cold War ended, you were contractually
obligated to write an entire book explaining why you think you should still be employed.
This is Samuel Huntington's attempts.
You never had to read it in school.
There's a huge difference between me being told I should read something
or have to read something and actually reading it.
So it's quite possible.
The reason that I ask is that one of the first things that I learned
when I was researching this is that clash of civilizations is one of the
10 most assigned books at US colleges.
Wow. Among top colleges, among like Ivy League colleges, it's number four.
It's just below Plato, but it's above Aristotle and
Democracy in America by Detokville.
I'm upset and disappointed to hear that international affairs and
political science academics are not seriously pursuing truth.
And are instead championing the hack work of their colleagues,
mentors, and friends.
This is shocking.
So what do you know about Huntington himself?
Now, this is all from memory.
So give me a little rope here, but I believe that he was
a big time international affairs academic,
also a statesman.
One of those guys who like went to Harvard or Yale
back in like 1918.
And then that's enough to just sort of be in government
or a near government for the rest of your life.
Yeah, he goes to the University of Chicago,
he gets his PhD from Harvard in 1951,
and then there's a little tiny interregnum period,
but then he becomes a Harvard professor
and he stays there for 58 years.
He's sort of like a walking who's who
of every single intellectual movement
of the 20th century.
Like he's friends with Francis Fukuyama,
he's friends with Chef Brzynski, Henry Kissinger,
he founded Foreign Policy Magazine,
he worked for LBJ,
according to one thing that I read,
he is the most cited political scientist in America for like many many years.
That makes sense to me and again, I'm someone who didn't try very hard in school and I still remember his name.
So I think that says a lot.
The book itself comes out in 1996 and the background to the book is this period that we touched on briefly with Fukuyama in the end of history,
basically from the mid-1980s until the early 2000s,
everybody was coming out with their,
what happens after the Cold War book.
Like I think it was just a very fertile time for takes
that we have all forgotten about
because most of these predictions did not come true.
Like apparently there was a famous book
about how the post-Cold War world was going to be defined by like America versus drug cartels. The like organized crime
was going to be like the next Cold War. There was a lot of just weird cock-a-mami shit bouncing
around at the time. I would have read that book, honestly. So the book itself, first it started as a
1992 lecture at the American Enterprise Institute, obviously. And just like Fukuyama, it started as a 1992 lecture at the American Enterprise Institute, obviously.
And just like Fukuyama, it began as an article with a question mark.
So it started as the clash of civilizations.
And then in 1996, when he expands into a book, it's the clash of civilizations.
So are you aware, like, the core thesis of the book?
I know a couple things about it.
One is I think that he was saying that the future conflicts,
the next big conflicts will be between cultures,
not nations.
The part of the book that's sort of discussed the most
is that he talks about Islam.
That like the Western values,
the Islam is the next big thing.
Yes.
Most of the book is him laying out this idea that now that the cold
war is over, we can finally reckon with the rise of identities.
He explicitly describes like a much more violent, much more conflictual world
in the future.
Does he have a basis for saying that we are diverging that like our
identities are in these certain areas are
getting stronger, or is it just sort of that he's just like spitballing?
This, Peter, thank you.
I'm, this transitions perfectly into the quote that I was going to send you.
I'm sending you the first four paragraphs of the first chapter.
All right.
The years after the Cold War witnessed the beginnings of dramatic changes in people's
identities and the symbols of those identities.
Global politics began to be reconfigured along cultural lines.
On April 18th, 1994, 2000 people rallied in Sarajevo, waving the flags of Saudi Arabia
and Turkey.
By flying those banners instead of UN, NATO, or American flags, these Sarah Yevans identified themselves with their fellow Muslims and told the world
who were their real and not so real friends. On October 16, 1994, in Los Angeles,
70,000 people marched beneath a sea of Mexican flags, protesting Proposition 187, a referendum
which would deny many state benefits to illegal immigrants
and their children.
Why are they walking down the street with a Mexican flag and demanding this country give
them a free education?
Observers asked.
They should be waving the American flag.
These flag displays insured victory for Proposition 187, which was approved by 59% of
California voters.
In the post-Cold War world, flags count
and so do other symbols of cultural identity,
including crosses, crecidences, and even head coverings
because culture counts.
And cultural identity is what is most meaningful
to most people.
Other than the sparkling pros, what do you think?
I mean, I would love to do an entire podcast
about that pros, which really fuck with my brain
in a way I'm not accustomed to.
So I'm noticing some little anecdotes being spun
into symbols of world historical importance.
Another thing that jumps out to me is what seems
to be a pretty casual xenophobia.
What the thing about how it's Mexicans fault
that California voters took their rights away?
Blaming Mexicans for having their rights taken away
because they were protesting too mean.
Not great.
Saying that Muslims were announcing who they're real
and not so real friends were based on who's flags
they were waving seems like a dramatic inference to make.
I know.
You know, saying something like cultural identity is what is most meaningful to most people.
That feels like a quantifiable statement of some kind, and yet I do not see it being
quantified.
Yes.
You touched on like one of the main hallmarks of the book, which is that he makes a series
of sweeping statements, and then he gives as evidence,
like here's these two random things
that have nothing to do with each other.
Are you sure that people not waving the UN flag
is not a super important development
that we should be digging into?
Usually you go to a protest and there's UN flags,
everyone's waving.
This is like a little example of the way that he uses evidence in this book,
but to try to take his argument seriously, so his claim is that the fault lines of conflict
are going to be quote-unquote civilizations.
So if this is your argument, obviously the first thing you have to do is define a civilization. The definition that he gives is it's the biggest we that every person has.
So, you are from New York, so you have some sort of New York identity.
You probably have some New York state identity.
You feel sort of more tied to people that live in Buffalo than who live in Albuquerque, probably.
You feel sort of more tied to people that live in Buffalo than who live in Albuquerie probably you
Probably have some like east coast pride like west coasters are weird Mary Ann Williams and people and like You're more down to earth tell it like it is guy like there's probably some sort of identity in there, right? Yeah, I'm an Eric Adams guy
Yeah, I
Say that about you all the time and then zooming out one more level you probably have some like American shit
Mm-hmm You could also say at the at the sort of most zoomed out level, you also probably consider yourself
a citizen of like the West, like whatever that means, right? Like the the war in Ukraine
is probably more likely to like hit you in the fields than like the bombing and Yemen or something.
Sure. That's really what he means by civilizations that like everybody has all of these overlapping
identities. And basically when you take them up to their highest level of abstraction, that's where
you find like a small number of civilizations globally that essentially everybody falls
under one of these categories.
Okay.
Okay.
You don't sound convinced.
Well, I mean, that's one of those things that is not objectionable in the general sense, but also
too abstract to build a really coherent thesis around.
It's one of those things where it's like, yeah, that probably exists as a concept.
We all contain probably, I don't know, seven, twelve identities.
Those identities can be activated when certain things happen in the world or tell
us to support certain political candidates for whatever reason, et cetera. The fact that
those things exist, I think, is actually fairly unobjectionable.
This is the problem that all of these grand historical narrative attempts have in common,
right? They're just trying to split these like probably real, but still complex, overlapping people
and things into clean and distinct categories.
And it's not something you can readily do.
Right, and he's also making it the most important driver
and the most important explanation
for all world conflicts.
Right.
So, okay, I'm gonna send you actual map,
the actual civilizations.
Oh, wow, there's some real outliers here, okay?
Okay.
So, this is the world divided by color,
color coded, into what I believe are civilizations.
You have Western, which is Western Europe, US and Canada.
You have Western, which is Western Europe, US and Canada.
You have Latin American, which is almost everything below that. You have Islamic, which is just a broad,
and paintbrush across North Africa and the Middle East.
And then you have East Asia,
debuting up into a bunch of different cultures.
Sinek, Buddhist, Hindu, and then in the sort of Russian sphere,
the former Soviet Union is labeled orthodox,
and finally, you have Japan, which is its own civilization.
This is where I lost my fucking mind.
Oh my God, that's so fucking funny.
China and Japan are just their own civilizations.
He's like, I'm not gonna try to figure this one out.
I have no evidence for this.
I imagine his thought process is something like,
well, you can't put Japan with China, right?
Because these are very distinct cultures.
They were at war.
He's like, okay, it's working in Carboth, Japan.
But then in the Chinese civilization,
which he calls Sinik, he throws in North Korea.
Oh yeah.
And it looks like Vietnam too.
As soon as he carves off Japan,
I'm like, you should carve off all the countries.
The giant Latin American lump.
And then the fact that West African countries
and Iran are in the same civilization,
according to this,
just because they're Muslim.
No differences.
You got to be fucking kidding me with this.
This is another thing that I also don't think gets enough attention.
It's the fact that a lot of these civilizations are described in different ways.
So, like, there's like Buddhist Hindu Orthodox, right?
Those are religious distinctions.
Right.
But then he's got Africa, which is a geographic distinction.
And then he's got the West.
Right.
There's a good critique of him
that talks about his conception of the West
that most of the things that he talks about
as defining the West like rule of law
and free rights and all this kind of stuff,
that's a lot of countries.
Like the things that he says are unique about the West.
A huge number of other countries
should then fall into the West.
Like South Korea should absolutely be in the West by that definition.
One of the other things that I noticed while I was like, you know,
zooming in on various parts of this is that there's 14 different countries
where he's split them in the middle and he said that like Sudan is part Islamic and part African.
But like, if what he's trying to explain is foreign policy,
like the way the countries act on the world stage, you can't just say that one country is two.
Because then by that definition, then like most countries would be two or three or four or
five, depending on like various immigrant groups that they have histories. Right. As soon as you
start shopping up the identities in any given country, all of a sudden you have
to concede that identities don't really map onto borders perfectly and perhaps you should
be using another framework entirely.
Right, and then like every country is a bunch of squabbling interest groups.
Yeah, it should be fairly intuitive that that's a stupid way to do this.
Yes, he doesn't say this in the book, but I think as a result of getting all of these critiques
of the original article,
he comes up with a bunch of subgroups of civilizations.
In each civilization, there are member states,
core states, loan countries, cleft countries,
and torn countries.
The core countries is like really self-explanatory.
It's like the main country.
So like China is the main country of the Sinec civilization. He's then got this thing
of the cleft country. So something like Ukraine is a cleft country. Like it's halfway in between
the West and the Orthodox civilization. A torn country is like something like Turkey. It has one foot in the Islamic world,
but then there are large political movements
trying to transform it into something that is more Western.
And then there's lone countries where he says,
like Haiti is a lone country where like Africa
doesn't really want it and like South America
doesn't really want it either.
Like it doesn't fit easily into either one of those categories
and like it's its own thing.
Okay.
There's of course intercivilizational conflicts, right?
Like civilizations fighting with each other,
but there's also intracivilizational conflicts
where countries are fighting over like
who is going to be the core country.
Basically, he's done the sort of the responsible scholar thing
where he's acknowledged all of these caveats, right?
He said they're like, yeah, you know,
civilizations can change over time and like they have blurry borders and there's all these subgroups within them and like not every conflict is between civilizations.
I'm obviously I'm oversimplifying an unreal amount to the point where anything I say from here on in is completely useless.
Exactly.
But let's let's plow forward. So you're like 300 pages into this book
and you're like, what is the point of this book then?
If, if China goes to war with Iran,
it's like, oh, it's like the Sinec civilization
versus the Muslim civilization,
ooh, he's right.
But then if China goes to war with Vietnam,
a neighboring country, it's like,
oh, it's an interesting civilizational fight.
What is an event on the world stage that this
wouldn't explain? Right, so he puts out
an essay that's basically like, oh,
there are these different civilizations,
and then a bunch of people are like, well,
what about like, intercivilizational
conflicts? And so he's like, oh, good
point. I'll just put a chapter on that
in my book. Right. So like, every
possible caveat has an avenue. Yes.
Your thesis is again so abstract and so riddled with caveats
that it just doesn't fucking mean anything.
Right.
Why not drill down to the individual level at this point, right?
Fuck it.
This is another thing, is that like by the time he's come up
with these categories of like cleft country,
lone country, core country, it's like,
well, then you were just back to countries.
Right.
The civilizational framework is supposed to be an alternative to talking about countries
acting in their national interest.
Right? Like, Paraguay does stuff because of like specific things happening in Paraguay.
And then this guy comes along and he's like, no, no, no, no, no. Paraguay does things because
it's Latin America. Right.
But then he breaks up Latin America into all of these subgroups, where it's actually paragués, a cleft country.
It's like, yeah, that's what I said in the first place.
Paragués doing paragués stuff.
It should be sort of transparently obvious
to anyone just glancing at this,
that someone who's writing a 400-page book
and just going region by region, country by country,
and giving descriptions of them,
is not an expert in any given thing that he talks about.
Oh, yeah.
Instead, they're just sort of like crafting a language
that allows them to talk about this stuff
as if they are experts, right?
Right.
Oh, you're talking about Ukraine.
That's a cleft country.
Right.
It's like talking points for different countries
when you're at the big international affairs meeting
in Washington, D.C.
Exactly.
Another thing that I came across in one of the critiques of him
that I think is actually really insightful,
is also that he points out, I think, correctly,
that all of us have all of these overlapping identities, right?
But the core of his thesis is that the identity
at the highest level of abstraction is the strongest.
If you wanna understand Africans,
like their African identity is much more powerful to them
than like any sub-identities.
But when you think about actual world conflicts
and the way that like most of world history has happened,
it's exactly the opposite.
Right.
If it comes down to like one of my more proximate identities
and it's like super abstract, highest order identity, I'm going to pick the proximate identity and this like super abstract highest order identity.
I'm going to pick the proximate identity every time.
Am I overthinking this or isn't the highest order identity just like being a citizen of
the earth?
He has like a sentence on that.
He says it's like civilizations are the highest order of identification before human
being.
Okay.
I mean, but that's also a good point because like if we're talking about the highest
order of abstraction, the highest order of abstraction is human being.
Right.
Even though Syria is not necessarily
in quote unquote the West,
and like maybe I have closer ties mentally
to Ukraine than to Syria,
it's not that like all of a sudden
like my allegiance to the Ukraine is really, really strong,
and then my allegiance to Syria is non-existent.
Right, I mean, there's something in this thesis
that is actually a question of psychology
in what circumstances is a given identity
sort of triggered and prioritized in a person's mind, right?
There's research on this and it's a little bit weird
to talk about it as a completely abstract thing.
It's clearly more complicated than that,
and not just that, but like,
you're gonna need data. You know, you're gonna need data if you want to make these claims.
But Peter, some Mexicans were marching with a flag. Did you read the paragraph about the Mexicans?
Sorry, I forgot about all the data I've been given already. So, the next, like, after he defines all
of these civilizations, he then gets into like his vision of the future.
Okay.
So first of all, the West is like fading.
Okay.
Even though the Cold War is over and we won,
all these other countries have developed.
He specifically talks about indigentization,
where basically all of these countries
after they've thrown off the shackles of colonialism
are like getting a lot more confident.
China is becoming this this big economic powerhouse
and there's African countries that are taking on
a more African identity and forming trade relationships
within themselves.
I think this is true, right?
That post-colonialism, a lot of countries,
started to have national pride in a way
that was literally illegal in a lot of places before that.
There's a weird dynamic in that I saw in Foucaillama's book
to these guys came up during an era
where international affairs
from the United States perspective
was just bullying everyone.
Yes.
And then we're sort of entering this period
where that's a little bit harder to do.
Smaller countries are accruing political
and economic power.
These guys, the Huntington's of the world,
are like gazing out upon all of this
and thinking like, yeah, this is fucking annoying, right?
Yeah.
This, I want to do, you know,
I want the US to be able to do whatever it wants.
That's how we've been doing about our shit.
And now we can't.
And it's fucking annoying. And no one's saying thank you. I want to do the bad stuff. And now we can't. And it's fucking annoying.
And no one's saying thank you.
I want to do the bad stuff.
And yet here you are telling me it's bad.
This is the part of the book where he completely
abandons his civilizational framework.
So he does all of his groundwork to talk about, like,
the Latin American civilization, the Buddhist civilization.
And then he never talks about them again,
because he says that once he's established
all of these civilizations, he says the real threat
comes from two places, Asia and the Middle East.
What about cartels?
He's leaving cartels on the table, come on.
A lot of the book actually focuses on the threat from Asia.
It's just the general fears about Japan fears about like Japan, you know,
buying up a bunch of American companies
like being better at business than us.
He keeps saying like, you know,
Asia is gonna want to impose Asian values,
which he always puts in quote marks.
But he never actually says like what those values are
or like why they're bad.
And of course, the second part of that
is that Islamic societies are becoming more fundamentalists.
Sure. Muslim countries are becoming more fundamentalists. Sure.
Muslim countries are getting more Muslim
and like they're super mad at us.
And like you basically can't reason with these people
because they're bewitched by their like ancient religion.
After everything we've done for them.
I know.
I know.
He also, OK, one of my favorite things
about reading these old books that have become
cultural touchstones is how much random shit in them has been completely memory-hold.
So he has a whole section about the greatest threat to the world is a confusion Islamic
alliance.
That the real threat isn't just the Asians and the Muslims separately, it's that the Asians and the Muslims are going to team up against us.
Okay.
So his, so hold on, this whole theory is just like, well, they're both mad at us.
Yeah.
So maybe they'll team up.
And then he has some like, this is one of the places where he does actually use statistics.
He has stats on like China selling arms to Pakistan or something.
And then like actual regional experts
will be like, dude, China's arms sales
to the Middle East account for about 1% of their arms
and America accounts for 33% of their arms.
Yeah, I was gonna say good news if you think
that selling arms to someone makes them your ally,
then we have nothing but friends all over the world.
He also has a thing with one of the reasons
we can't trust middle eastern countries,
because Islamic countries are more prone to violence
than non-Muslim countries, right?
He's like, if you look at the statistics,
Muslim countries have higher military spending
for their populations.
What?
I'm like, are're really gonna do this?
Oh shit.
From America, you're right in this in America, okay.
So, not mean look, not only is America's military spending
unreal large, but like, yeah, we've turned the Middle East
into a proxy war zone for 80 years.
So, like, yeah, some of those countries are arming up pretty reasonably.
We're only going to invade two of these countries in the next like 10 years.
So come on, everybody relax.
So this is his vision, right?
This is, this is basically his core case.
So like this is what the next 50 years of the world is going to look like.
This Islamic confusion, uppity Asian people and Muslims, right?
So of course, the question that one asks is like,
well, what is his evidence for this thesis, right?
Because one of the interesting things about the book,
this is another place where he caveats himself into oblivion.
He's making this bold prediction about the next 50 years, right?
But he says that anything that happened during the Cold War doesn't really count
because it's not really evidence for his thesis
or evidence against his thesis
because it was like under the rubric of the Cold War.
Okay.
He also says that anything that happened
before the Cold War also doesn't really matter
for his thesis because it was before the rise
of identity politics and it was before the rise
of like globalization.
Countries weren't as connected back then.
There wasn't as much travel.
There wasn't as much migration.
When you think of something like World War I, you can't really put that in the civilizational
paradigm because there were all these other things going on at the time that were specific
to that period in history.
So his rubric for understanding the entire world does not apply if you go back five years
because there are other variables that his rubric does not account for.
Exactly.
As I'm reading this, I'm like crossing off periods of history in my head, right?
Because he's writing the book in 1996.
Anything before 1989 doesn't count.
So basically all that leaves him with is fucking 1989 until 1995,
essentially, right? Right. Basically the only options for things that can support
his thesis and he spends like two chapters talking about this is the Gulf War in
1991 and the Balkan War of 1993 but like kind of throughout the 90s. Right. So I'm
gonna send you another brick of text about the Gulf War.
Okay.
This is his case for why the Gulf War means that he is correct.
Here we go.
The Gulf War thus began as a war between Iraq and Kuwait, then became a war between Iraq
and the West, then one between Islam and the West, and eventually came to be viewed
by many non-Westerners as a war of East versus West.
Millions of Muslims from Morocco to China, rallyed behind Saddam Hussein, and acclaimed
him a Muslim hero.
75% of India's 100 million Muslims blamed the United States for the war, and Indonesia's
171 million Muslims were almost universally against US military action in the Gulf. Audacity.
Arab intellectuals lined up in similar fashion and formulated intricate rationales for
overlooking Saddam's brutality and announcing Western intervention. King Hussein of Jordan
argued, quote, this is a war against all Arabs and all Muslims and not against Iraq alone.
Facts.
Drop in knowledge.
Knowledge.
I love that the the the amount of people worldwide who opposed American intervention is like
them taking sides for Islamic civilization or something.
Is that that's what that is supposed to be like?
Yes.
This is like very interesting in part because if you view the goal for as I do, and I think
many people do, as sort of like a part of a chain of events that ended up with the complete
destruction of Iraq, like the rise of ISIS, the war in Syria, etc., then the idea that
like opposing it is something irrational or something that you would only do if you were sort of like too tied to your Muslim identity.
I mean, just insanely wrong, insanely fucking wrong.
Yes.
So reductive.
Okay, all right, I'll let you go.
I'm all coiled up waiting, waiting to debug this.
I'm glad.
Go ahead.
Okay, so okay, one of the best articles I read,
really, really, really good article,
is called The Clash of Civilizations
and Islamists Critique by a guy named Roy Mataday.
And he has this great section on the Gulf War,
where he points out that it's true that Saddam Hussein
was trying to do the, we're all Muslims here, guys.
Yeah.
But then, as soon as he invaded Kuwait,
the air bleak voted to side with the United States.
Yes.
Egypt, Syria, Pakistan, Morocco, and Bangladesh,
all sent troops, Turkey closed a pipeline to fuck with Iraq.
Yeah, no, there was, there was a, like,
this is in sort of like Islamic-American relations.
The Gulf War is an important symbolic turning point
because it showed how many Middle Eastern actors
had aligned their interests with the United States,
right to the point where they felt obligated
to participate actively in the war effort.
Exactly.
And so it's actually true that like Saddam was pretty popular
throughout the Muslim world before the Iraq war,
but then all of the Gulf states,
70% of the population opposed Saddam invading Kuwait
because they thought it went against Islamic law.
Egypt and Morocco both were anti-Saddam,
the only country where the majority of the population
like thought it was cool for Saddam to invade Kuwait
was Jordan.
And Jordan had like some specific stuff going on because there were all these rumors that Israel was going to invade Kuwait was Jordan. And Jordan had like some specific stuff going on
because there were all these rumors
that Israel was going to invade Jordan at the time.
Yeah, you know, I mean, first of all,
like you're not accounting for the fact
that a lot of those countries you just described
are torn countries.
And some of them are also cleft countries.
The sort of like attempts to paint
that part of the world as monolithic
are never-ending on the part of the American elite.
And to see it come from someone in this position
who's at least holding himself out
as an expert on international affairs generally,
it really sort of drives home.
This comes down from the highest levels of academia
and government, the idea that Muslims are one thing.
They exist over there,
and they are representing a singular set of interests.
One of the things that I think all of his
thudding pros can distract you from
is that if you zoom out,
this is one of the only pieces of evidence for his thesis.
We're gonna have more clashes of civilizations.
It is a case in which a Muslim country invaded another Muslim
country and America intervened on behalf of the Muslim country, right? And like
some Muslim countries supported it and some didn't. That doesn't speak to a
existential crisis in which the West and Muslims
are going to be at war for the next 50 years.
Yeah, I mean, ironically,
he probably would have had a stronger case
in this section if he had waited a few years, right?
And you get to build in the 9-11 narrative.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know if that's where you're going next,
but I'm sort of curious how that factors in in your mind or or if he wrote any follow-up or if anyone else like analyze it in light of post 9-11
Developments shall we say well one thing that actually bugs me about this is because of course
I mean I only heard of this book after 9-11
I think most of the population it really became canonical for the population after 9-11 because it was supposed to be like
Oh, well, we're you know that this explains what's going on, right?
Right.
He barely mentions terrorism in the book.
It's not actually the case that like 9-11 proves him right.
He doesn't really mention the possibility of a terror attack in America.
His core thesis is that little territorial skirmishes, things like Iraq vs. Kuwait, which
ultimately on the world stage, don't have to become a huge deal.
What's gonna happen with these things is states are going to step into them on like various teams,
and these conflicts are gonna escalate.
Right. He doesn't really mention non-state actors.
He also doesn't mention oil in this book.
He doesn't mention like other things that like would cause conflict among countries.
Incredible to talk at length about the Gulf War
and not mention oil.
That's the thing,
he doesn't like most conflicts between countries
are between neighboring countries over some resource, right?
You want more land, minerals in the ground.
Like that's most of world history.
That's what the conflicts have been between neighboring states.
Uh huh.
And that's basically what fucking the Gulf War was.
Right. Saddam did it because Kuwait, like he owed Kuwait money and he didn't want to pay them back.
And like Kuwait was dumping a bunch of oil onto world markets and keeping prices low.
And Saddam was mad because it was like cutting into his profits.
It's like petty dictator stuff.
Yeah. And we got involved because we are looking to spread freedom and democracy all across the globe.
America, the good guys yet again.
But that's the thing is like,
this fight is actually like fairly typical.
And he's trying to like whip it up into this meringue
of like it's something completely different
and like the best way to understand the Gulf War
is to see it as like a fight between civilizations.
And it's like, you look into the specifics
and it's like, no man, the best way to understand it
is just like the dynamics of these specific states.
You know, there's something interesting about the fact that he doesn't mention terrorism because
if you start with this idea that in the post-Cold War era,
we're going to see slightly more atomized identities.
You would think that you would lead, that would lead to the idea that non-state actors
are going to play a significant role, but because he's such a fucking
basic bitch state department hack,
even when he's sort of saying,
oh, the Islamic and Western worlds are gonna be in conflict,
he totally misses on what the nature of that conflict
is going to be.
But then, okay, it gets much worse with his second example,
right, because the only other thing that can support his thesis that happens in the early 90s is the Balkans.
Yeah.
This actually supports his thesis slightly better in that it serves who are Orthodox and
Bosnians who are Muslims. And it is actually true that like a lot of Muslim countries kind
of intervened on behalf of the Bosnians and kind of went with team Bosnia.
And then Serbia was pretty substantially backed by Russia.
You know, this Balkan conflict
doesn't necessarily need to be a global conflict,
but all of a sudden it becomes one.
Yeah.
So I'm gonna send you, this is his explanation
for like why the Balkan war broke out.
Okay.
Probably the single most important factor leading
to the conflict was the demographic shift that
took place in Kosovo.
Kosovo was an autonomous province within Serbia.
In 1961, its population was 2 thirds Albanian Muslim
and 1 quarter Orthodox Serb.
The Albanian birthrate, however, was the highest in Europe,
and Kosovo became the most densely populated area of Yugoslavia.
Facing those numbers, Serbs emigrated from Kosovo in pursuit of economic opportunities in
Belgrade and elsewhere.
As a result, in 1991, Kosovo was 90% Muslim and 10% Serb.
According to Serbs, discrimination, persecution, and violence against Serbs subsequently intensified.
Numerous violent incidents took place which included property damage, loss of jobs, harassment, rapes, fights, and killings.
As a result, the Serbs claimed that the threat to them was of genocidal proportions and that they could no longer tolerate it.
So this entire sequence could have been written by Slobodan Milosevic.
Why are there all these tensions in the Balkans in the early 1990s?
Huntington's actual explanation is that Muslims were having too many babies.
I mean, I thought that I was sort of perhaps misunderstanding the point being made here.
But this quote at the end, saying that the Serbs claimed that the threat to them was of genocidal proportions.
That is itself being used to defend a genocidal impulse.
Am I wrong?
This is the rhetoric that starts to appear
before ethnic cleansing.
Right.
If we don't do it to them, they're going to do it to us.
Yeah.
And so he says exactly the same thing about Bosnians.
He's describing the Muslim birth rates in Bosnian.
Like Bosnians are having too many babies.
And he actually says, this is a real quote.
He says, ethnic expansion by one group led to ethnic cleansing
by the other.
He literally quotes a Serbian fucking soldier saying,
we have to do this to them,
or else they're gonna come to our villages and do it to us
because there's too many of them.
Jesus Christ.
He has this whole section called Islam's bloody borders.
Where he talks about if you basically draw a circle around the Muslim world, everywhere
along that circle, everywhere the Muslim world intersects with other civilizations, you find
conflicts.
He's using the term conflict very deliberately.
So he talks about the Chechen Muslims.
He talks about the fucking Wigers in China.
And then he has this kind of conclusion
that's like, well, wherever you find Muslims,
you find conflict.
Yeah, that's one way to put it.
Right, it's like, well, yeah.
There are conflicts in the sense that Muslims
are very obviously facing discrimination.
You could easily look around the world in the late 1800s and be like, everywhere you find Jews,
which is fine to be. Right.
It's about whether Jews are really banned for the population. I don't know.
We're sort of building towards almost this self-fulfilling prophecy.
Right.
Here you have this deeply influential person saying the next big conflict is between
the US or the Western interests and the Islamic world.
It's hard to know how much of that conflict is shaped by the fact that influential people
defined the conflict as us versus Islam.
This has been written up in like many an academic paper is like,
once you start believing this shit, you're going to act like it. And once you start acting,
like the Muslim world is like this monolith, you're going to act like it. And once you start acting like the Muslim world is like
this monolith, you're gonna act like it's a threat. This is actually why I'm really objected.
This book still being on so many syllabi because the average American undergrad is not going to
know enough about the Gulf War or the Balkan War to know how fucking egregious these things are. I didn't quite realize we'd get into
like genocide victim blaming in this book.
I didn't think that it got that dark.
Right.
A lot of like the basic thesis is just sort of
obviously wrong.
Like it doesn't account for various
geopolitical alliances that sort of like
contradict this cultural framing, right?
Like the US has what is now a longstanding alliance
with Saudi Arabia, despite the fact
that it's a hardliner Islamic state.
The whole West V Islam framing,
it feels like it's just this convenient thing
to convey to the public, because like,
oh, we're actually constantly maneuvering
to find geopolitical leverage
and don't really have
any particular set of ideals or beliefs
other than our own power.
That's not like a mission statement
that people are gonna love if you put it out there.
My other favorite thing about using this as an example.
Again, this is a conflict between Muslims and Orthodox people
in which America intervened on behalf of the Muslims.
America teamed up with behalf of the Muslims. Right.
America teamed up with parts of the Muslim world to help out the Bosnians due to these
specific circumstances going on in the Western Balkans, right?
Like, it makes no sense to see this as civilizational terms, and it especially doesn't make
its sense to see it in civilizational terms, in which America sided with a different
civilization.
Like, there aren't really any Western versus the rest dynamics going on here.
If your thesis starts hitting this point where it's just caveat after caveat after caveat,
then maybe the thesis sucks.
It's so wild to see these theorists rise to prominence on the backs of oversimplification, right?
Of just like turning every complex situation into a little sound bite.
What's also amazing to me is that he oftentimes does actually admit the weaknesses of his arguments,
but like he just handwaves them away.
So in this section, he says, yeah, yeah,
like America intervened on behalf of the Muslims,
but America did not send ground troops.
It's like, well, why is that the,
why is that the important distinction?
Right, there's an idea in the law
called distinctions without a difference.
Right, right. When someone is trying to create
differentiate between two things,
they start grabbing on to any
distinction they can, even if they're not meaningful
distinctions, that's what he's doing here.
Yes, yes, we intervened on behalf of the Muslims, but like, we
didn't like super duper intervene. Right. But like, your
theory predicts that we would not intervene. And yet we did.
So, and you know, we, um, we did put boots on the ground
in Kuwait, however, we did not conduct a full-scale invasion of Iraq.
So, so, there's always a line. There's always a pretend line you can draw.
So, okay, so then, our last section, the last like two chapters of the book are where he gets into like what he really wants to say,
and it's straight up like a great replacement, Like it reads like a fucking mass shooter manifesto. Hell yeah. So from this completely unconvincing world system of
civilizations, which he then completely abandons and is like Asia and Muslims, then he
abandons the Asia part and then he's like Muslims are bad, right? And then it's like, what
do we do about this? Like how do we prevent this like coming wave of conflict, right?
And he basically lands on like, we need to preserve the values of the West.
So I'm going to send you another, I'm going to send you another, like a little clip from this.
Oh, this is a lot of words when you only need 14.
Okay.
Rejection of the American Creed means the end of the United States of America as we have known it. only need 14.
Rejection of the American Creed means the end of the United States of America as we have
known it.
It also means effectively the end of Western civilization.
If the United States is de-westernized, the West is reduced to Europe and if you lightly
populated overseas, European settler countries.
This is not just a problem of economics and demography. Far more significant are the problems of moral decline, cultural
suicide, and political disunity in the West. Often pointed to manifestations of
moral decline include one, increases in anti-social behaviors such as crime,
drug use, and violence generally. Two, family decay, including increased rates of divorce,
illegitimacy, teenage pregnancy, and single parent families.
Three, at least in the United States,
a decline in social capital,
that is, membership in voluntary associations
and the interpersonal trust associated with such membership.
Four, general weakening of the work ethic
and rise of a cult of personal indulgence,
five, decreasing commitment to learning
and intellectual activity manifested in the United States
in lower levels of scholastic achievement.
Boom. How do we preserve the West?
Just a bunch of deranged conservative boilerplate.
Yeah, this is, this is, Pat, you can't ditch it, right?
This is just your conservative reactionary pearl clutching.
Moral decline.
Moral decline.
And, well, how do you measure a moral decline?
Well, let me just point to several things,
some of which exist, some of which don't,
have fell together.
You know, you have increases in anti-social behavior
such as crime, drug use, and violence generally,
all of which were plummeting at the time he wrote this
and continued to plummet for decades,
decline in social capital.
That's so abstract,
then not even gonna fucking bother.
The beginning of work ethic is just,
this is just an old guy,
a fucking old guy complaint
that old guys have been saying
forever, it's like the lazy kids don't work like we used to.
I knew how to, 10 was like a conservative, right?
But I didn't think that he was just sort of like your base
grandpa, Facebook level conservative.
I feel like an underrated critique of this book
is that its conclusions do not follow from its premises at all.
So basically his diagnosis of the world
is that we're all splitting into these civilizations
along cultural lines.
But then his prescription is to emphasize
what makes us different and in his mind
what makes us better than the other civilizations?
He talks in this passage about being de-westernized,
and he's essentially saying,
oh, we need to re hours and I choose white Right
And like if you think about you know the European example where for hundreds of years
People in France and Germany would have said were a totally different civilization from them
Right and they're like constantly war with each other constantly skirmishing over like various resources and territory
etc
And then what you have in like a fairly short period
over the last 50 years,
you have all of this economic integration, free movement,
exchange programs where they're studying
in each other's country and they're learning
each other's language.
And now for basically anybody under 50 years old,
the idea of France and Germany going to war with each other
is this like comical like sci-fi notion.
It makes no sense.
Looking back, it's like, oh, what seemed to be a civilizational conflict
turns out to be ultimately pretty superficial.
Yeah.
And rather than include any historical context
or any like mature conflict management strategies,
he's basically looking around the world.
And he's like, the problem today is that everyone thinks that their own culture is superior
and they're willing to go to war for it.
But it turns out that our culture is superior.
Right.
We need to demonstrate that.
That's what's interesting about this is a lot of these complaints are symptoms of a
liberalizing culture, right?
Things like divorce rates.
If you're Samuel Huntington, and that's your concern,
then perhaps check out divorce rates in the Muslim world.
Right.
The bottom line is that a lot of the complaints
about like the Islamic world are complaints
about these particularly conservative elements of the Islamic world.
And to see conservatives make them on one hand and then also make the case for the rise of those conservative elements in their own society,
it's transparent. I would think that someone like Huntington would be very slightly above that, but I suppose not,
and that's what I get for giving a Harvard guy credit.
This is like one of the bullets in my notes.
He says very explicitly throughout the book that like one of the reasons you can tell
that like Muslims are less civilized, one of the pieces of evidence, he gives for that
is he's like, look at the way that they treat women and minorities.
Right, like he wouldn't want to be a Christian minority
in a Muslim state, right guys? But then we get to this chapter and it's like, what if our immigrants
are like uniquely bad? Right. So shouldn't you be admiring them for cracking down on their minorities?
Like maybe their minorities are like going to destroy their civilization too. This is exactly,
this is like islamicist rhetoric. Right, what happened to that complaint about Mexicans
who were too angry at us for our anti-immigration laws?
Also, do you want to know what he says about Mexicans?
He doesn't.
Because I was wondering, I was like, is he going to turn to this?
Sure.
He says, while Muslims pose the immediate problem to Europe,
he's like what Muslim immigrants, Mexicans pose the problem
for the United States.
The central issue will remain the degree to which Hispanics Muslim immigrants, Mexicans pose the problem for the United States.
The central issue will remain the degree to which Hispanics are assimilated into American
society as previous immigrant groups have been.
Second and third generation Hispanics face a wide array of incentives and pressures to
do so.
Mexican immigration, on the other hand, differs in potentially important ways from other
immigration.
This is my favorite fucking argument.
When it's like in one breath, you admit,
you're like, well, every previous immigrant group
has eventually like within one generation
assimilated into American society.
But these new immigrants, right?
They're not gonna assimilate.
It's like, well, this is the same thing
they said about Italians, Russians, Poles,
and then
he has this whole fucking thing of like Mexicans can't assimilate because other immigrants
crossed an ocean to get to America, but Mexicans crossed the land.
Europeans were coming west.
Right.
Mexicans are going north.
They are not going against the wind.
Yeah.
I love this cro- like they did, they cross that ocean thing.
You have Guadamollans fleeing a civil war around the time that this is being
written, walking all the way up through Mexico into the United States.
And his position is like, well, that's too easy.
They have an experienced hardship, you know, get the fuck out.
So he ends the book.
This is the closing paragraph.
He says, the underlying problem for the West
is not Islamic fundamentalism.
It is Islam, a different civilization
whose people are convinced of the superiority of their culture
and obsessed with the inferiority of their power.
Well, I'm glad that we are not from a culture
that is convinced of its own superiority.
Could you imagine what that would be like?
I know.
People who are anxious about losing their relative position in society and who think their
culture is best.
Nope.
Don't see anybody like that around.
We're only a couple books in on this podcast.
When it comes to these types of like weird theory
of everything books, one day we will have a comprehensive
theory of these dudes.
There's something so unique going on in their brain
where they believe that they are capable of capturing
these complex phenomena, boiling them down to something simple,
and then throwing them out in a quick book
that frankly should be a lengthy essay at most.
Yeah, a magazine article.
Right.
I haven't quite figured it out yet,
but I fucking will, I swear.
Well, I, I mean, this kind of leads us into
the epilogue of the episode about the book's legacy
and kind of debunking.
Yeah. One of the essays about the book and about Huntington specifically that I found really interesting
was by Edward Said and what he pointed out is that most Americans don't know very much
about different countries. The population to understand world events relies on narratives.
We need sort of a story to slot world events into. And
oftentimes those narratives are supplied by elites. And the Cold War was in some
way a narrative that was constructed by people like Samuel Huntington. And
Saeed has like speeches by Huntington in the 70s and 80s where he just openly
talks about. He's like, well, to do the things that we wanted to do
with American military power,
we had to cast every single thing
that happened on the world stage
as part of the Cold War.
That was partly a social construction,
like it was partly real too,
but it was a very deliberate effort
to create that kind of narrative for people.
And that's why this is like so disconcerting because he's almost framing it like a prediction.
But what it is is like a fucking bat signal to American elites.
Yeah, here's what I think should be next.
And what Said says, it's a brief and crudely articulated manual in the art of maintaining a war
time status in the minds of Americans.
That's partly what he's doing here. I don't think Huntington is calculated. I think he believed this stuff, frankly.
But I think that the reason elites latched onto it, right? Because as we've said,
a billion of these books were published, right? The fact that this book became so canonical is like more interesting than the book itself.
And people latched onto this as like,
oh, it's the next justification for us
to keep our military this big.
There really is this conservative thing
where they need to seek out conflict.
Right, I think it was Cory Robbins
and the reactionary mind wrote a bunch about this.
In the 1990s, when things were relatively peaceful,
there was an industry by the end of the decade on the right
of just think pieces about how we needed a fight. Not even saying, like, oh, I think the Islamic
world is next or anything like that necessarily, but just saying that in general, we need a fight.
One of the reasons I really like this Edward Said Essay, I mean, he wrote a couple of them,
but his overall argument is that it has a very
Marge Gunderson at the end of Fargo thing
He talks about how the the central tragedy of clash of civilizations is that it was written this time
When yes, there was a power vacuum and he has this like very moving section where he talks about like you know
Humanity was facing at that time. A lot of common challenges. Like, yes, there are civilizations and they do have differences,
but there's no inherent reason why those differences have to lead to conflict.
Right. You could have looked for something that, like, hey, we can all collaborate
on building a better world together. We, you know, we have this wartime nuclear bombs hanging over us,
curtain that has just been lifted.
And instead of trying to build that world
or even entertain the idea,
it's like, who are we fighting next?
It's just kind of ugly.
And I like that he pointed that out,
that it's not just the factual errors in Huntington's book.
It's also just like, why do this?
Like, why are you like this?
Yeah, and why not?
Like, how could you not be,
if you're like an international affairs guy,
a little bit inspired by the concept
that like the next era might not be defined
by like the threat of violence coming from somewhere else,
and the need for us to match it with force of our own.
The Soviet Union falls,
and rather than looking around for who to punch next,
you could be saying, wow,
maybe I could put my guard down for a bit.
Wouldn't that have been a beautiful sentiment
to see coming from some of our elites at the time?
Perhaps.
Like a little martial plan,
like a global martial plan of like,
let's look at who we can help.
Like, let's think about what things we can work together on, right?
Anti-bacterial resistance or something.
Like, find something fun to do together, you know?
And you know, there's something to be said for the fact that these,
you know, the two books that we've read that are essentially about this same topic
in some form or another come from Foucaillom and Huntington who are both deeply connected with the State Department.
It says something about how our elites think.
They come from this Cold War era, right?
And that's where they've succeeded in a world where the US is very invested in forcibly bullying smaller nations and asserting
itself globally at all times. If you were like an international affairs expert in 1990,
that's all you know. You're not an expert in peace. You're not an expert in prosperity. You're an
expert in fighting.
I mean, that kind of speaks to the last thing I want to talk about,
which is like where the book is now.
Paul Musgrave, who's a political scientist,
has written a bunch of essays about like the weird zombie longevity
of this book, right?
It's like, it's assigned in introductory classes.
He acknowledges the fact that like a lot of professors
who assign this book would also talk about critiques of it,
and they're not necessarily endorsing it, and that's kind of what college is for, right, is to talk about paradigms that are no longer relevant.
But also, this book is assigned more than Aristotle.
But do we mean this book in every introductory class, right?
It's been totally debunked. Like every time you have a book like this in a classroom,
it's like there are books that are correct
that you're not assigning.
Like there's a slot on a syllabus
that you're wasting on a wrong book that, you know,
he emphasizes that like no scholars take this seriously.
And Samuel Huntington, his next book was called,
Who Are We, the Challenges to America's
National Identity, and he published an excerpt of it in foreign policy in 2004 that was
headlined the Hispanic Challenge.
He became a total fucking crank later in his life.
We know this, and we're all supposed to pretend that he wrote this book based on his like academic
analysis of all the fairs and not his like ugly grandpa xenophobia.
There's only one circumstance we should be teaching this book. And it's as essentially a proof
that there's no such thing as an international affairs expert. Don't, you know, don't be like
Samuel Huntington. This was an embarrassing time for all of us. Let's move on to the real shit.
So I want to end with this quote from Paul Musgrave. He says, the longevity of Huntington, this was an embarrassing time for all of us. Let's move on to the real shit." So I want to end with this quote from Paul Musgrave. He says,
the longevity of Huntington's thesis becomes more explicable when we treat it not as
scholarship aimed at skeptics, but as a sermon to the faithful. The creed that Huntington and his
audience share holds that civilizations exist as unchanging cultural organisms, that the rise of
other regions threatens Western civilization, and that a successful Western response requires purity at home and separation from the rest.
These are not factual assertions.
They are unfalsifiable axioms.
Trying to fact-check Huntington's more specific claims is useful, but shouldn't lead
us to miss the larger point of his project.
Huntington's myriad bigotries are not deviations from a generally-sound approach.
Rather, they sit at the heart of the book's appeal.
Huntington's civilizational paradigm complements his nativism, his hostility to social change,
and his profound lack of interest in economics and politics.
As long as a constituency that subscribes to its axioms can be found, clash-style logic
will survive, no matter how costly or dangerous its prescriptions may be.
Well, fucking owned. Oh, I do think it's notable that this is in many ways
a normative text, right? It's it's prescriptive. It is not simply that he is trying to say,
hey, this is what I think is happening in the world. He is writing a prescription for a more
He is writing a prescription for a more reactionary and isolated United States. One that's more defensive, more aggressive towards specific cultures.
That's not just him saying, here's the world as I see it.
It's here's the world as I want it to be.
You sound like somebody in the midst of a dire moral decline, Peter.
Typical.