IMO 2019 AND POLITICS WITHOUT MORALITY(PART 1)
IMO 2019 AND POLITICS WITHOUT MORALITY PART 1
BY PROFESSOR UZORMA NATHAN
Few weeks
ago, I was at a high profile meeting and one renowned elder statesman made a
statement that appeared abnormal to many elites who were present at the
political get-together. The statement he made was that “there is no morality in
politics…” The said assertion from a well placed Imo leader kept me awake for
many hours at night. I reflected on it and the article you are reading now is
the outcome of my profound rumination cum cogitation on the assertion.
Few days
thereafter, I visited a fellow Professor at Imo State University, while we were
charting very friendly, another Professor of Political Science joined us and
the discussion became very interesting and intellectually intertwined. At a
point, the Professor of political science inferred thus, “there is no morality
in politics…” We had it hot with him following the fact that both of us are of
the same (Philosophy of Religion) discipline. But I became more worried that our
various attachments to different religious denominations are not making any
good impart on our various system of thought. As you read on, we shall further
find out if it is truly in order to thrust leadership into the hands of those
that are not morally sound or not.
Life has
taught me that good sense about trivialities is better than nonsense about
things that matter. Progress in life is man’s ability to complicate
simplicity. A man who desires to say the
truth about our society today (as the Reformer does) is a radical with both
feet planted firmly in the air. When you are more successful is when you become
vulnerable, and that is when you make your biggest mistakes in life. Politics
is the same story told many years by the same but different people.
Nelson Mandela’s experience made him to infer
thus “In my country we go to prison first and then become president”. If in
South Africa, according to Mandela (we understand what he means) people go to prison
before becoming president; in Nigeria, a politician therefore is a person who
may have nothing to say but says it anyhow. In Nigerian democracy, you can say
what you like as long as you do what you are told. When you consider the
depleting level of our values which is hitherto in tandem with our political
system, one will be compelled to conclude that democracy in Nigeria is like
four wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Our political leaders
have not been able to offer yesterday’s solution to today’s problems and are as
well creating future problems to our teeming youths. This abnormal political
behavior has made the modern youths to think that politics is a game of
deception bereft of values as Maureen Potter would say “Politicians are like
nappies. They should be changed often-and for the same reason.”
The reason for proper application of Maureen
Potter’s philosophy in our Nigerian society and especially the case of Imo is
so obvious. Politics is a reality that touches almost all aspects of human
existence. It pervades much of human life: family life, social, religious,
economic and cultural life. Also national and even international activities
belong to its proper domain. It is to be noted however that political ethics
has to do with the moral principles at the basis of the political society. The Christians
who are in politics ought to be guided by Christian political ethics which is a
set of ideas derived from Christian principle in connection with the way to
enhance the realization of the goal of life in a political society. To David
Konstant, this ethics is “more like a set of signposts, suggesting the way
forward, or a set of question by which we can examine the way we live in a
political society”.
In Nigerian and Imo state in particular, the
need for political ethics is obvious. The careless abandon with which our
modern youths in politics go about their assignment and the consequent
nonchalance to things political on the part of the masses are causes of concern
to many of us. It was consequent upon the above that made Mel Brooks to
conclude, “If politicians don’t do it to their wives, they do it to their
country”. Could the various
misunderstanding of the word “politics” have its negative effect on the psyche
of our modern youth politicians? Besides the common concept and meaning of the
term, there are also etymological and socio-philosophical notions of the term
which varies from one scholar to another. Pope Paul VI confirms the above in
his Apostolic letter “Octogesima Adveniens” (1997) to the said various meaning
of the term when he said, “It is true that in the term “politics” many
confusions are possible and must be clarified”.
Today in Nigeria, almost every youth sees
politics as a dirty game to be practised by dirty people. The Nigerian modern
youths are not alone in this assertion. Leonardo Boff stressed this point in
the observation that not a few people regard “politics (as) something dirty, a
lie, demagoguery.” C.I Ejizu makes the same point that some Christians see
politics as “dirty, devilish and only fit for crooks, cheats and liars”. Why
this obnoxious notion about politics? I may be forced to conclude that this
obnoxious view is informed by the undesirable attitudes of our politicians. The
answer to the above question was given by Leonardo Boff thus, “… a prejudice
that results from bad political experiences involving corruption, manipulation
and struggle of special interest groups”. To Fredrick the Great, “The said
obnoxious notion of politics is traced to “deception and misuse of power which
is an accepted practice among politicians”. In the words of Cardinal Arinze,
“If, however, the politician takes and gives bribes, assassinates other peoples
characters… exploits women and embezzles government and party funds, then it is
he (or she), not politics that is dirty.”
The above
distinction by cardinal Arinze only suggests that it is the task of the
well-meaning citizens of our land to cleanse and sanitize our politics.
Therefore those who are morally fit should be allowed to effect the changes
that everybody is yearning for. Among many great scholars that have various
views about politics (Plato, Aristotle,
Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Hobbes, John Lock, Karl Max, Jaen Jacque,
Rousseau, Carl Schmitt, and Max Webber) Niccole Machiavelli singled himself
out from the long list by separating politics and morality.
For Niccole Machiavelli politics is purely a
mechanical play of forces without ethical values. What counted for him was
success at whatever cost and by whatever means. The great scholar Jacque
Maritain after studying the political philosophy of Machiavelli wrote, “ politics became by definition non-moral and
successful politics: art of conquering and keeping power by any means
whatsoever-even good, should an opportunity offer, a rare opportunity-on the
sole condition that they be fit to ensure success”. Adebayo Adediji the
former executive secretary of the Economic community for Africa like many
others agrees with Jacque Maritain’s evaluation of Machiavellianism when he
wrote, “The tactics of governance which
combines the artfulness of a fox with the savagery of a lion and which put in
the forefront, as overarching governance objectives, personalized power and
fame; and moral political expediency instead of justice, temperance, wisdom,
courage and the promotion of public good”.
The above is a total rejection of
Machiavellianism. Machiavelli’s political philosophy is unhealthy to the
principles of morality and can conventionally be called ‘Okorochaism’ which in
my term is a political philosophy that erodes morality and true political
ethics and values. The practice of this ignoble philosophy is the anti-thesis
of Aristotelian view that the true purpose of politics is the achievement of
the common good, thus it is not an end in itself but rather a means to an end.
To the adherent of this ignoble ‘theory’ Man is for the state and not state for
man. To sacrifice all that the human person stands for on the altar of success
is to have ones priorities right. It is the philosophy that promotes immediate
success no matter how and therefore should be regarded as an animalistic
approach to leadership.
The Bible upholds politics as a good thing
willed by God for the well-being of humanity. It was for this good reason that
St.Paul affirms that “all government comes from God” and that “The state is
there to serve God for (peoples) benefit… (Rom. 13:1-7). It is hitherto obvious
that the Christian concept of politics is founded on the common good and is
opposed to separation of politics from morality. This is further confirmed by a
South Africa Theologian T.S.N Gqubule thus, “The Christian religion teaches
that God is lord of the whole life and the lord of all creation. There is no
sphere of life such as politics, economics education which is not under his
lordship.”
The decayed value system is affecting our
growth. Values give direction and firmness to life and they bring to life the
important dimension of meaning which adds joy, satisfaction and peace to life.
Values identify a person, giving him a name, a face and character. Without
values one would be floating like a piece of driftwood in the swirling waters
of a river. Values bring quality to life. The philosophical study dealing with
the nature of value and the types of value, as in morals, aesthetics religion,
and metaphysics is known as axiology. Morality which is part of our value
system is gradually eroding away thereby making politics a do or dies affair.
All hands must be on deck to resurrect our values to enable us stand the taste
of future civilization.
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