Enough Patriotism, Already 
Kwame Appiah's refreshing call to cosmopolitanism 
_Julian Sanchez_ (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  



According to one popular narrative, the 9/11 attacks inaugurated  a new era 
of global conflict between two groups (perhaps even Civilizations)  with 
radically opposed worldviews: one thoroughly globalized, envisioning a  world 
community cooperating according to universal principles; the other  narrowly 
tribalist, animated by a prerational affection for the local and  parochial, 
committed to the superiority of its own group mores.  
It has not, alas, always been clear which group is which.  
It's a propitious time, then, for Princeton philosopher Kwame  Anthony 
Appiah's new book _Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0393061558?v=glance) . Drawing 
heavily on his 
last, more academic work, _The Ethics of Identity_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0691120366/ref=pd_bxgy_text_b/104-1913690-9487164?_encoding=UTF8)
 , 
Appiah makes the case  for a resurgent cosmopolitan ethos that navigates 
between 
the relativism of  hardcore multiculturalism and the arrogant colonialism of 
some forms of liberal  rationalism. Appiah's cosmopolitanism seeks to fuse a 
healthy pluralism with a  commitment to the universal rights of the human 
community.  
As important, Appiah pegs the radical Islamists who stand as the  most 
obvious threat to that liberal cosmopolitan vision not as evidence of an  
anti-modern tribalist backlash—a view made popular by works such as Benjamin  
Barber's  
(http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/199203/barber) 



Jihad  vs. McWorld—but as "counter-cosmopolitans," not the  leaders of a 
reaction against globalization and modernity, but offspring of  those forces.  
It has been observed that terrorists are often drawn from the  most affluent, 
modern, and westernized classes of their societies. Appiah draws  on the work 
of French sociologist Olivier Roy, whose insight-rich _Globalized Islam_ 
(http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023113/0231134983.HTM)  explains 
that 
this is no  coincidence, that _Salafist_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salafi)  doctrines, despite their veneration of 
the "pious ancestors" for which  
they're named, bear at their core the imprimatur of both modernity and  
globalization.  
What is in many ways radical and dangerous about these new  doctrines is that 
they reject the local and national accretions that the varied  local Islams 
have picked up over the years. Islamists promote what they consider  a purer, 
trans-national, trans-racial version of Islam that has been drained of  folk 
traditions and local customs—an Islam that is not embedded in any local or  
national culture. In a perverse way, it is more individualist than traditional  
Islam. And while the popular moniker "Islamofascism" may be apt for the more  
traditional, nationalistic Islamists who seized power in Iran, Roy argues that  
the neo-fundamentalists' "quest for a strict implementation of sharia with no  
concession to man-made law pushes them to reject the modern state in favour 
of a  kind of 'libertarian' view of the state: the state is a lesser evil but 
is not  the tool for implementing Islam."  
Appiah's liberal cosmopolitanism provides an appealing  counterpoint to the 
alluring idea of a unified Muslim _ummah_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ummah) 
. It is more a metaculture than a  comprehensive community, but it has enough 
of a whiff of the transcendent to  command allegiance as an ideal.  
Both proponents and opponents of the war on terror have botched  this 
possibility. While President Bush has actually been admirably insistent  that 
democracy and human rights are "universal" rather than specifically  "American" 
values, the rhetoric (and, on television, imagery) of much domestic  advocacy 
has 
eschewed such nice distinctions. One _thoroughly  universalist credo_ 
(http://www.americanvalues.org/html/wwff.html)  signed by a number of  
prominent 
American scholars was issued under the aegis of the unhelpfully named  
Institute for 
American Values. Critics of America's approach to that war,  meanwhile, feel 
obligated to wed their objections to protestations of superior  (or, in more 
defensive moods, less than faulty) patriotism—protestations that  ring oddly 
coming from people who, one suspects, never saw what was supposed to  be so 
terribly virtuous about patriotism in the first place.  
The late philosopher Robert Nozick once quipped that there was  something 
faintly paradoxical about Timothy Leary's professed desire to be the  "holiest" 
man alive. A genuine American patriotism is a similar sort of hot ice.  Not, of 
course, because Americans can't indulge in familiar affection for place,  
history, and song, but because the content of those symbols points so 
resolutely  
away from the local and parochial. What we share as Americans, as opposed to 
as  Manhattanites or Angelenos or Witchitans, are principles that trumpet our  
community with the rest of humanity.  
Liberal universalism is, for instance, a running theme in our  founding 
documents. The introduction to Thomas Paine's _Common  Sense_ 
(http://www.constitution.org/civ/comsense.htm)  reminds readers that "The cause 
of America is,  in 
a great measure, the cause of all mankind. Many circumstances have, and will  
arise, which are not local, but universal, and through which the principles of 
 all lovers of mankind are affected, and in the event of which, their 
affections  are interested." _The  Declaration of Independence_ 
(http://www.law.indiana.edu/uslawdocs/declaration.html)  asserts equality not  
merely among 
Americans but for "all men," and purports not merely to justify the  necessity 
"for 
one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected  them with 
another," but to lay out universally valid (if highly general)  principles of 
both 
legitimate government and resistance to unjust rule.  
Our own historical narrative, too, is most often told as an  object 
illustration of universal principles. The wars that are most definitive  of the 
American identity—the American Revolution, the Civil War, World War  II—gain 
their 
purchase not just through their excessive bloodiness but through  their fit 
with an American self-conception that makes universal human liberty  and 
equality 
lodestones. That which is most quintessentially American points  beyond 
America; the most authentically American patriotism, then, would be the  
abjuration 
of patriotism.  
Still, we too often insist on branding the war on terror with an  American 
flag, reinforcing the portrait of a conflict between the ummah  and one insular 
tribe, rather than an alternative global community. (There are  some 
heartening exceptions: President Bush eschewed national if not religious  
parochialism 
when he insisted in his _2003 State of the Union address_ 
(http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/01/28/sotu.transcript/)  that "The liberty 
 we prize is not 
America's gift to the world; it is God's gift to humanity.")  
In short, we needlessly encumber values whose very virtue is  their 
"thinness": The strength of liberal values such as freedom of speech or  
religious 
toleration is that they gain support from so many (often  contradictory) 
sources. 
I may value free speech out of regard for the dignity of  an unfettered human 
mind; or because of a Millian faith in the power of  unrestricted discourse to 
seek truth; or simply as a modus vivendi,  because I lack confidence that 
I'll get to decide who's censored in a pluralist  society. To bind those values 
too closely to any one people, or even to "the  West," is to shrink and atrophy 
them.  

_Julian Sanchez_ (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  is an assistant editor of 
Reason. He lives in Washington,  D.C.

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