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Penetrating The Haze Of Truth

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  • Penetrating The Haze Of Truth

    PENETRATING THE HAZE OF TRUTH
    by Philip Bowring

    South China Morning Post, Hong Kong
    http://www.scmp.com/
    October 23, 2006 Monday

    "What is truth? said jesting Pilate, and would not stay for an
    answer." Chief Executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen is keen on quotes from
    British authors, so I commend to him these first lines of Francis
    Bacon's essay on Truth. The 17th century writer was an early exponent
    of scientific inquiry and experiment as the path to truth.

    So how should one deal with those who deny what is obvious or what
    is regarded as common knowledge as a result of constant repetition?

    Here, in Hong Kong, we have a chief executive implicitly denying the
    connection between public health and the haze of particles that so
    often sits over the city. Is this bone-headed ignorance? Or is it
    a politically convenient posture to avoid what Al Gore's film calls
    "an inconvenient truth"?

    Does the chief executive only care about the smog if it keeps away
    tourists and foreign businesses? Does he not care for the health of
    those who live here? Does he really believe that it is only our view,
    not our health, that is at stake? Or is it just a way of sidestepping
    the risk of offending the vested interests who support him politically
    - and give cosy jobs to ex-civil servants?

    Either way, it is sad, but the one thing we do not want to do is put
    him in jail, let alone execute him, for denying "the truth". That is
    something of which the Catholic Church and the Communist Party have
    had plenty of experience. Even they may have learned lessons that
    fear is only effective in the short term in spreading a gospel.

    Let the facts speak for themselves, and they will if they are repeated
    often enough by a sufficiently large proportion of society in general,
    as well as the scientific community.

    Letting facts speak for themselves seems rather difficult at present
    for two great nations - France and Turkey - who ought to know better.

    Even more remarkable is that they have become embroiled in a dispute
    not over what they did to each other but an issue of marginal interest
    to France: the massacre of Armenians in Turkey in 1915. This is no
    China-Japan dispute over the Nanking Massacre or the Yasukuni Shrine.

    Turkey has some laws, allegedly in the interests of national
    solidarity, which make it illegal to denigrate the nation, and the
    founder of modern, secular Turkey, Mustafa Kemal. This makes honest
    appraisal of the events of 1915 difficult. Turkish bone-headedness on
    this topic is an obstacle to joining the European Union. (These laws
    remind me of threats in Hong Kong to outlaw suggestions that Taiwan
    is not part of China, history notwithstanding).

    But at least the Turks are just silencing each other. Now the French
    parliament has passed a law making it an offence to deny that the
    1915 killings were "genocide".

    Certainly, probably hundreds of thousands of (Christian) Armenians in
    Turkey were massacred. But to use the word genocide is dubious. Most
    of the evidence points not to government-directed massacres but to
    spontaneous, communally led killings.

    At the time, Turkey was being invaded in the west by France and Britain
    (at Gallipoli) and (more successfully) by Russia in the east.

    The Russians used Christianity in an effort to detach Armenians in
    eastern Turkey to their cause - with some success. So the response
    of the Muslim Turks wasn't surprising. But don't expect the French
    parliamentarians to bother with such facts, or to look at whether
    the French record of massacre in Algeria also counts as genocide.

    Of course there are historical episodes whose basic facts are
    beyond dispute. The Holocaust is one. But should those who deny it
    be jailed? Either they are ignorant to the point that no one will
    take them seriously. Or they have an agenda which can only be served
    by martyrdom.

    Constructing an over-arching truth from a series of facts is
    difficult. But facts are facts, and sooner or later they penetrate
    most skulls, just as those particles penetrate the lungs as surely
    as they are seen by the eyes.

    Philip Bowring is a Hong Kong-based journalist and commentator
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