-Caveat Lector-

Why Multiculturalism and Democracy don't mix (Balkans case study)
By Steve Sailer

In a lifetime of being boggled by the American press, I don't believe
I've ever seen anything as baffling as their rote insistence that the
last ten years of war in the Balkans were caused by "dictatorship,"
for which the solutions were "democracy" and "multiculturalism."

Folks, democracy is what caused the mess. Multiculturalism works
fine ... under a real dictator, like Tito. He had multiethnic
Yugoslavia locked down tight, nice and peaceful. But when the
inhabitants got more say in their lives, they started killing each
other. They wanted democracy. But they knew that to have it, they
needed mono-ethnic states.

When the old multiethnic Yugoslavia cracked up, the rest of the world
recognized the phony borders that Tito had concocted to minimize the
size of the Serbian administrative unit within his empire. This left
large numbers of Serbs living outside Serbia, where they were exposed
to their historic enemies. The great Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn explained
it all in The Times of London in 1997:

The bloody Yugoslav tragedy has unfolded before our eyes (and is it
over yet?) To be sure, blame for it lies with the Communist coterie
of Josip Broz Tito, which imposed an arbitrary pattern of internal
borders upon the country, trampling on ethnic common sense, and even
relocating ethnic masses by force. Yet blame lies also with the
venerable community of Western leaders, who -- with an angelic
naivet� -- took those false borders seriously, and then hastened at a
moment's notice, in a day or two, to recognize the independence of
several breakaway republics whose political formation they apparently
found to be advantageous. It was these leaders, then, who nudged
Yugoslavia toward many grueling years of civil war; and their
position, declared as neutral, was by no means such.

Yugoslavia, with its seven estranged peoples, was told to fall apart
as soon as possible. But Bosnia, with its three estranged peoples and
vivid memories of Hitlerite Croatians slaughtering up to a million
Serbs, had to remain united at all costs - the particular insistence
of the United States Government. Who can explain the disparity of
such an approach? [http://www.suc.org/news/world_articles/times082197]

Democracy requires trust - that the other members of your democracy
won't vote to despoil you. That's utterly lacking in the Balkans,
where nobody trusts anybody they aren't related to. And for good
reason. Each and every ethnic group has the blood of its neighbors'
ancestors on its hands.

Democracy also needs a "settled distribution of property." Britain's
modern parliamentary system dates from the Glorious Revolution of
1688. This permanently confirmed Henry VIII's theft of the Catholic
Church's properties, thus ending 150 years of turmoil. But everyone
in the Balkans is convinced that somebody from another ethnic group
stole valuable land from his father or grandfather or great-great-
great-grandfather. These suspicions are usually accurate. (Of course,
everybody conveniently forgets that the land he lives on was usually
stolen from somebody else too.)

Human beings have a remarkable capacity for forgiving the murder,
rape, or enslavement of their forefathers. But not the theft of real
estate. As the real estate agents tell you, "They ain't makin'
anymore of it." And, along with associated grievances, it doesn't go
away.

All this was well understood in the West during the century between
the Glorious Revolution and the framing of the American Constitution.
But it's been forgotten since, because we don't need to worry much
about who owns what anymore. You don't have to worry that your house
will be handed back to the descendents of the Indians who used to
camp there. Your property is secure because the white race decided to
steal the vast majority of the land from the red race, and then not
worry about it much anymore.

That's why our leaders and media couldn't understand what was clear
to the peoples of the Balkans: Tito's bogus borders left only two
alternatives - redraw the borders or ethnically cleanse them.

Instead, we just decided that the Serbs were Evil. So, we had years
of carnage in Bosnia until they finally ended up with a de facto
three-way partition anyway. Franco Tudjman solved the problem in
Croatia by ethnically cleansing all the Serbs. Kosovo was and remains
a fiasco.

The good news is that, in the northern Balkans, we now are closer to
normal (i.e. ethnically-homogenous) nation-states. Slovenia is a nice
little European country. Croatia is calming down now that the Serbs
are gone. They've at least stopped killing each other in Bosnia now
that they have borders of sorts.

But in the southern Balkans, the process of redrawing borders and/or
ethnically cleansing populations could go on for years. The
Montenegrins are restive under Serbian rule. The Albanians are
looking to jerry-rig a greater Albania comprised of the present
country of Albania, Kosovo, and parts of Macedonia. There are an
enormous number of people in Bosnia who have very good reasons for
killing other people in Bosnia as soon as the peacekeepers go home.
There are many people in Serbia who will be bitter unto the 7th
generation for being ethnically cleansed, with no financial
compensation, from Croatia and Kosovo

If the West wanted to intervene in 1991, it should have stepped in,
as at the Congress of Berlin in 1885, and redrawn the borders to
match the ethnic reality on the ground. Give Serbia those chunks of
Croatia and Bosnia where its people lived, but take away southern
Kosovo where few Serbians lived. Croatia would get parts of Bosnia,
with the Muslims in Bosnia left with a small but homogenous republic.

That still would have left numerous ethnic pockets on the wrong side
of the new borders. The West should then have sponsored ethnic
cleansing. Sounds harsh? Population exchanges between Greece and
Turkey in the early Twenties are what led to three-quarters of a
century of peace between those inveterate brawlers.

To make this ethnic cleansing orderly, humane, and not conducive to
the permanent bitterness that endangers peace, the rich nations of
the West could have poured in $20 billion or so to pay for
relocation. Buying out 7,000 Israeli homeowners in the Sinai
peacefully and permanently solved that potentially explosive problem
when Israel had to hand that peninsula back to Egypt after the Camp
David accords. Buyouts would have worked in the Balkans too.

Okay, nothing works truly well in the Balkans. But it's hard to
imagine that it could have proven worse.

Steve Sailer (www.iSteve.com) is president of the Human Biodiversity
Institute.
http://www.vdare.com/sailer_balkans.htm
October 30, 2000

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