Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.
I'm a culturalist
Published on February 12, 2006 By Draginol In Current Events

I have little patience for racists.  Most racists I encounter fall into two groups:

Group 1: People who are indoctrinated to be racists.  They grow up around racist people and become racist themselves. These are the people who will go to ridiculous lengths to "prove" that one race is "better" than another.

Group 2: People who confuse race with culture.  They'll say "Look at all those <insert racial group here> doing that? They're natural born <insert insult here>."  No. Not true. Not natural born. Perhaps a product of their culture but not of their genetic code.

To use an analogy, ones race is like the hardware of a person.  And while there are certainly minute differences between one race and another due to the pressures of natural selection over the past 100,000 years, those differences are not very significant.  Simply put, humans are remarkably similar genetically.

But culture is a whole different thing. Culture is like the operating system.  For example, if you take two identical personal computers and install two different operating systems on them, they will behave remarkably different. And on that point, I won't cower to political correctness and try to say all cultures are equal. They are not.

I don't even think it's a value judgment.  A culture's ability to produce happy, well adjusted people who live a long productive life has some subjectivity to it but not a lot.  If someone reading this wants to say "Well maybe misery and suffering is 'good' to some people? Who is to say that happiness, joy, physical health, and longevity are 'better'?"  To those people I say, go away and get a life. Let's be real.

Operating system debates are pretty common. MacOS vs Windows vs. AmigaOS vs. OS/2 vs. Linux and so forth.  And indeed, it gets hard to say that one is "better" in all ways than another. Few are.  But in the case of human culture, I don't think it's a MacOS vs. Windows XP type debate.  It's more like a MacOS vs. some machine whose running an OS that requires people to flip switches and put in punch cards.  The differences between some human cultures is so vast that it's pretty obvious that it's not geography or bad luck that caused the discrepancies. It's that their culture is holding them back.

Some cultures simply fail,  utterly, to produce happy, healthy, prosperous, productive people. 

When I see the behavior of the Islamic world, I don't think "Damn Arabs." I don't think there's any significant genetic difference. But I think at this point we can say that the Islamic culture, as a whole, has some serious problems.  It is not as good as other cultures. I mean that.  It's the Vic-20 of cultures. And I'm not just comparing them to the west.

There are several different major cultures on our planet:

  • American liberalism
  • European socialism
  • Japanese
  • Chinese
  • Indian
  • Russian Orthodox
  • Latin American
  • Islamic

These are just the largest ones that come to mind that have a specific identity. There are sub-cultures as well. African-Americanism, Latin American Socialism, Sub-Sahara African cultures, Eastern Europe Orthodoxy/Slavic which is quite different than European Socialism, Australian liberalism.  And even within these various groups, there are different modest differences.  I'm just pointing this out before someone jumps in with semantics and wants to list off the ones I mised.

Most of the major cultures have their pros and cons to them.  Just as we might debate whether MacOS is better than Windows XP, we can debate whether American liberalism, with its consumerism is better than European socialism with its economic stagnation.  Each has its problems.  So for the most part, debating the various major cultures is like trying to debate Windows vs. Linux vs. Mac and so forth.

But it seems to me that the Islamic culture stands out amongst them all as being the most problematic.  It has been this way for my entire life.  I can't remember a time in my 34 years of life where the Islamic World wasn't blowing up something, murdering innocencts, or lashing out at something.  And over what?  There are lots of theories as to why there are Muslim extremists who have a pattern of doing this kind of thing.  I can't think of any other cultures that so routinely and consistently use their people as ordinance. Muslims can't even claim to have suffered particularly harshly compared to other cultures.

My personal theory is that at some level, Muslims know that there is something wrong with their culture. That it fails to produce happy, healthy, prosperous people at anywhere near the rate of other cultures. And rather than trying to adapt (borrow features from) other cultures, it simply blames other cultures and lashes out.

The Muslim riots over the pictures of their prophet being in a Danish newspaper come across as more than just violent. They come across as infantile. A big temper tantrum from a culture that routinely cuts the heads off people, sets fire to the religious and national symbols of other cultures and nations, and intentionally murders women and children whose crime is that they are from a different culture.  If the Muslim world were an individual person, it would be a slow-witted spoiled brat child with psychotic tendancies.

I personally think the world would be better off if Islamic culture were to disappear -- entirely.  I definitely think that the human beings who inhabit the places that are dominated by that culture would be better off (the women definitely would be).  I can't think of a single contribution to the world that the Islamic world has provided in the past 500 years.  You have to go all the way back to the middle ages to find anything and how much of that was due to geography -- the Islamic world is centered around the fertile crescent where much of Indoeuropean civilization started from.

But as a practical matter, people won't stand up and say the obvious: Some cultures are not as good as others. They won't say it because you'll have unscrupulous politicians and opportunists tag those who say it as "Racist" even though race and culture are unrelated.  And because people won't say the obvious, they cannot move people to action.  A worldwide movement to put pressure on the Islamic world to knock it off and grow up would probably do some good.

While the other cultures continue to evolve and improve themselves, the Islamic culture stagnates and revels in hatred and violence.   So yea, you could say I'm a culturalist.  I think some cultures are more worthy than others.  I define "Better" in terms that I think are pretty universal for human kind. Happiness. Health. Longevity. Prosperity. Productivity. 


Comments (Page 1)
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on Feb 12, 2006
If it would even matter at all, I'd give you an insightful.

Wonderful, wonderful article. I think what you're saying has a lot of validity, and you've chosen a very clear, understandable, (and unique) analogy to illustrate it.
on Feb 12, 2006
Very true.

There are no differences between different races or colours or whatever else a man is born with; not between sexes either. By that I mean relevant differences. That is why racism (and sexism) are wrong.

But there are significant differences between cultures. And some are better than others. Older socialists know this. Socialism (and communism) used to be about creating a better society, a better culture. It was argued that communism was a superior culture to capitalism and feudalism and what not. That was wrong. But the idea that some cultures are better than others is right. (And capitalism, with all its faults, proved to be better than communism.)

I am a culturist.

I seriously believe that an English-speaking man in a suit who drinks tea is better, culturally, than other people. But I am not a racist. I believe that everybody can become an English-speaking man in a suit and drink tea. It's learned behaviour, not genetic. (The example is a very dirty summary of the real thing!) For me an African or Indian who speaks with an English accent is English (or British).

You forgot the British culture, which is between the American and the European. It spans the British isles (including Ireland), Canada, Australia, and New-Zealand as well as some other countries and islands. (The Caribbean is a subset of the British culture, another mixture between cultures. This is probably well represented by the Creole languages the people speak there.)

Continental Europe really is one culture. The differences between the British (including the Irish) and the French are bigger than the differences between the Germans, the Italians, and the French.

It is difficult for me to think of an American culture, as it is an off-shoot of the British culture, which I now define as a mixture between American and European. It is a mixture not because of American influences (although there are now many), but because of where the American culture comes from.

European, British, and American culture are, of course, also related and owe a lot to Jewish culture, which is, again, now a mixture between the three (specifically German) and the Islamic (specifically Arabic) culture. (I usually refer to the three very related cultures as "ABC".)

Jewish culture influences European culture via Christianity and later via German culture.

It's all quite interesting.
on Feb 12, 2006
Cultures based on religion are generally problematic and often result in hatred and violence. We see that happening throughout the Middle East and Europe with the Islamic culture, but the Christian “culture” also has a history of hatred and violence. Christian fundamentalists have committed murder in the name of God for nearly 2000 years. The Crusades, The Reformation, The Inquisition, the actions of the KKK, and the murders of doctors who performed abortions are a few of the worst atrocities, not to mention the numerous wars that were fought between various Christian sects.

Some of the “cultures” in your list are probably not really cultures. What is “American liberalism” culture? You find liberals in all walks of life just like you find conservatives, although liberals are definitely better looking. European socialism is a form of government, not a culture. The United States is made up of many different cultures – regional, ethnic, and to some extent -- religious, especially with religious fundamentalists. Some occupations and interests might be somewhat cultural, such as technology or farming.
on Feb 12, 2006
Muslims can't even claim to have suffered particularly harshly compared to other cultures.

C'est vrai que la théorie du complot fait ravage parfois dans le monde arabo-musulman. Quant à la compétition victimaire, les musulmans sont des années lumières d'en faire un fonds de commerce, comme chez bien d'autres...

If the Muslim world were a n individual person, it would be a slow-witted spoiled brat child with psychotic tendancies.

Est-ce que vous pensez vraiment que tous les musulmans sont slow-witted?
Sometimes, it's better te be slow-witted than narow-witted...
Je pense que votre jugement de valeur est assez biaisé, et apparemment basé sur des présupposés médiatiques...Est-ce que vous est-il arrivé de fréquenter des musulmans dans la vraie vie ?

There are several different major cultures on our planet....

Je trouve votre taxinomie culturelle un peu boiteuse, les critères changent d'une culture à un autre : entité géographique ( latin american, indian), croyance religieuse (russian orthodox,islamic), mode économique (american liberalism, european socialism).
Do you think that Europe still in socialism ideology ?
on Feb 12, 2006
Cultures based on religion are generally problematic

The principal reason that the US Constitution is secular by intent, as are the governing constitutions of most western democracies.

Draw up two lists - one of countries with secular democracies, another of countries with theocratic rule. Then just look at it awhile.
on Feb 12, 2006

Sometimes, it's better te be slow-witted than narow-witted...

Unfortunatley, the muslim culture is both.

on Feb 12, 2006

Cultures based on religion are generally problematic and often result in hatred and violence.


What about Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia? What about China and North Korea?

The most violent cultures, those that have become a symbol for evil are not based on religion at all.

Blaming religion is easy. And it always sounds smart. It sounds as if one really understand humanity. But it's not that easy.

on Feb 12, 2006
A great example of an even more dismal failure of a culture is the American gypsy culture, which once had some residue of tradition, music, dance, basic mechanical/repair skills, but which has mostly devolved into rampant drunkenness, drug abuse, child and spouse abuse, living on welfare while begging and/or stealing or conning to get pocket money, etc. The smart, productive gypsies have left and largely abandoned any connection to their roots, while the parents remaining in the culture typically go to great pains to prevent their kids from learning to read, so that they have no options.
on Feb 12, 2006
"My personal theory is that at some level, Muslims know that there is something wrong with their culture. That it fails to produce happy, healthy, prosperous people at anywhere near the rate of other cultures. And rather than trying to adapt (borrow features from) other cultures, it simply blames other cultures and lashes out."


Dead on. It's the religion part that makes their bugs into features. Even once you realize how bad the bugs are, you can't admit they are bugs since God signed the comments, and God doesn't write bad code.

At some point most cultures decide "Wait, if this is bad code, and God doesn't write bad code, maybe God DIDN'T write this..." They accept it, though, because a thousand years of oppression have left their populations unable to handle much more than obfuscated GOTO statements. So, a nasty, memory eating loop it is until the system crashes and whoever ends up in charge of the middle east decides to impose something new at gunpoint.
on Feb 12, 2006
There are 1.3 billion muslims in the World, none of them are apparently individuals, but subscribe to some monolithic single minded property (has Brad seen too many Alien movies?), according to Brad.

There are of course muslims who happily co-exist with all types of cultures and ideologies. There are islamic marxists and conservative muslims and also socialists and liberals etc. There are muslims who happily live side by side with the modern World.

There are unfortunatelly those who still believe that Media gives an accurate picture of the way things are. In the Danish situation there's much more to the events than the cartoons alone show. Americans should take a look at what has happened there the last 3-4 years to get a more full picture. Watching 5 minute clips on CNN wont do it.

Hope to buy GC2 soon

Marcus (happily atheist/heathen)
on Feb 12, 2006

There are 1.3 billion muslims in the World, none of them are apparently individuals, but subscribe to some monolithic single minded property [...], according to Brad.


Uhm, no. I'm afraid you have to read his article again.



Marcus (happily atheist/heathen)


Don't tell the Muslims.
on Feb 12, 2006

First, like Tex, I got to give you 2 thumbs up!  Outstanding!  Exactly!  Thank you!  Now on the following.

Blaming religion is easy. And it always sounds smart. It sounds as if one really understand humanity. But it's not that easy.

Unfortunate and true.  they use it like Stalin did, and forget what Stalin did.  Too many have advanced that argument. and ran away when confronted with contrary data.

on Feb 12, 2006
For once I agree with you Draginol. I think there are some cultures that are better than others, and certainly I consider contemporary Middle Eastern political culture to be almost utterly lacking in redeeming features. I don't think it's purely a divide of religion though, as the differences between the 'Asian Values' of southeast Asian Islam and Middle Eastern values are to my mind far more significant than the differences between American and European social-liberalism. But as you said that's just semantics.

The basic thesis of your argument I agree with entirely. Like Tex said, if I thought it would mean anything at all I would give you an insightful for this one.
on Feb 12, 2006

Unfortunate and true. They use it like Stalin did, and forget what Stalin did.


It's like the "it's all about oil" argument. They think they display an extraordinary amount of wise cynicism and that they "get it" while others do not.

But in truth they just took the first obvious (and wrong) answer and believe that they are smarter than those who already rejected it.
on Feb 12, 2006
Marcus, I don't think you got the gist of what I was saying.  I am not talking about individuals or people. I am talking about cultures -- a set of principles, guidelines, values, etc. I can assure you, a culture has no feelings to hurt.
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