Wednesday, November 20, 2013

V. Putin, “attitude” and other considerations.


       I never thought I would one day compliment Vladimir Putin. But now, in a moment particularly threatening to world peace — specifically, the end of August and beginning of September 2013 —, it seems to me he´s worthy of some medals. And that only proves the theory that even in treacherous politics there can be redeeming turnarounds.
For that reason, the suggestion to not give the name of alive politicians to public locations is very wise. Anything can happen before or after the death of an “immaculate person turned into a plaque”. Extreme moral faults can come to light and it would be very complicated to alter names of streets and squares, for example, something that would confound the mailmen, the GPS and all kinds of human communication. On the other hand, people who have a bad image can unexpectedly reveal praiseworthy qualities. Good and evil live together, although amidst scratches and bites, within every human being, even if in different intensities.
There are two qualities which have always drawn my respect and which are more and more absent within people who govern the world: “personality” and “attitude”. Some might argue, with good reason, that both qualities are synonyms; however, when closely inspected, when sliced, dissected and scrutinized, it becomes licit to make a distinction between both terms.
 “Personality” is an essentially intellectual virtue: thinking on your own, making your opinion known with the utmost independence and honesty — even to yourself, which is probably the most difficult part —, especially when all the “masters” and owners of the truth and the money say the opposite. It also means not to give importance to criticism from other parties, even when such criticism is veiled.
“Attitude”, on the other hand, is a more bellicose addition to “personality”, something closer to the physical courage of not only going against an erroneous unanimity in a soft spoken and frightened way, but also by affirming and proving, clearly and loudly, that the others are wrong. It is to say such a thing even amidst booing, thrown eggs, slaps and kicks. The firmness of character when everyone else hesitates is something admirable, almost super-human. Especially when the “bold one” is deep down actually scared but feeling compelled to pretend he isn´t. Of course this is only valid when the daring hero (or heroin) is not looking for a demagogical sensationalism, aiming to capture the admiration of an audience which is ignorant and willing to listen to lies passed as truths.
Media and opinion polls seem to turn politicians from every inclination and from the most varied countries into cowards. They only want compliments, as if the public and media are always right, forgetting that the same weakness the politicians have are also present in the population and in the editorial rooms of newspapers and magazines. “Leaders” exist to lead, not to be led by public opinion – which, more often than not, is none other than the opinion of the most powerful media, capable of hiring for itself the best writing brains.
Putin doesn´t deserve praise for his “electoral trick” of power rotation in Russia with his “buddy” who is currently vice-president but who previously held Putin´s job. But he is praiseworthy for his position of supporting an attack to Syria only if there can be found reliable evidence that it was the Syrian government  — and not the armed opposition — who has used chemical weapons against the population. China´s and Russia´s vetoes in the Security Council were one of the few examples of how the power to veto can also be necessary in some situations.
Putin has also shown his personality in the matter of offering temporary asylum to Edward Snowden, the former NSA service provider who is wanted by the USA for espionage – even if in the beginning the Russian President showed some hesitation to provide shelter to someone who was hated by a nation which has enormous economical and military power and with whom he intends to keep a good relationship. Even though such decision was far from profitable in any sense to Putin or to Russia, morally it was the only possible one. And that´s because Snowden´s “crime” was not actually an act of bad faith, as in most felonies, but it was merely a crime of convenience which assures the continuance of something that is morally wrong: government´s hypocrisy. And who in their own mind could compliment and support the continuance of hypocrisy?
Before being granted asylum, Snowden had been in the transit area of a Russian airport for days. He would not be able to remain in that situation for long; if he fled the airport, he would certainly be captured by American agents; if Putin deported him to the USA he would be tried for treason, perhaps even convicted to the death penalty – even though the American government had recently claimed the capital punishment would not be applied to his case and only a life sentence might be a possibility. Such a promise made by Barack Obama would only hold a relative value, considering that if the American legislation determined that in cases of “treason” a death penalty was possible, then a court would have the power to, at least theoretically, condemn him to death, therefore ignoring the President´s promise.
It seems clear that Snowden has not committed the crime of “treason”, after all such a felony implies a harmful intention to transfer certain secrets to the enemies of one´s own country. The brave former NSA employee has clearly not acted with such a specific and treacherous intent – he has merely shown to the citizens of his own country as well as other countries, without differentiating between allies or enemies, that the USA has been spying the whole planet in both public and private affairs, taking advantage of their superior technology. They have been spying even allied governments. Such “spying” superiority, when added to its bellicous superiority (including nuclear), gives the nation an almost absolute dominance and control over the rest of humankind. And excessive power is always tempted to be abusive.
Anyway, Snowden has acted as an idealist, a cleaner, someone who was disgusted by what he had witnessed. And he didn´t profit from his actions; on the contrary, he became an  international pariah, running from one place to another while being chased, until he at last managed to get to an airport in Moscow, where he started living in the area which is open to the public. He certainly was not able to have even a decent bath, since airports´ bathrooms do not provide such facility. Snowden, moved by an ethical impulse, has become an improvised “inspector-general” of bad political acts. His fearless action will certainly influence politics to become, in the future, increasingly less deceitful, and this is something very positive for humankind. It was a step which shall be considered historical, well accepted by the good people who have always expected governments to be less deceitful towards one another and towards their own citizens.
In some mediocre newspaper analysis, there are those who have said that Snowden has made a mistake, since spying is something widespread. To those people, he is nothing but naïve. Well, drug trafficking, embezzlement, ordered murder, slave work, swindling, deceitful advertising, women trafficking, child pornography and a whole array of crimes are also seen in almost every country; however, no government has ever considered the possibility of not fighting those crimes because they are widespread.
Putin is also correct when he demands the courts to take legal measures against Russian cartoonists who have disrespected him as well as his Prime-Minister by drawing them accompanied by women in intimate situations or some such.
And what is the basis for my support to Putin? Well, the consideration that the same degree of respect given to human beings in general must also be given to criticized chiefs of state. Something which is not tolerated against a garbage (or “residue”) collector  cannot be allowed against a politician currently holding power or not. It is not because a citizen has become a chief of state or government that he can instantly be demoralized without any restriction. I am referring here to the “residual” continuance of human rights even to those citizens who hold a position of power.
A few years ago, an ordinary citizen in Brazil initiated a lawsuit — I don´t recall exactly if it was a civil or a labor lawsuit — demanding moral damages from his former employer because the latter forced him to dance ridiculously on a table while the other employees made fun of him.
And what was the reason for such a punishment from the employer? The “victim”, who was part of a sales team, was the least effective salesmen in a certain period. His punishment, of course, was not physical, but moral – which is far from being less painful. It´s purpose was to demoralize him. The boss certainly claimed in his defense that the shame was supposed to “stimulate” the employee.  But the decision was favorable to the former employee — who had resigned or been made redundant — and the justification for the sentence was the right that every human being has to be treated with dignity.
If that salesman couldn´t sell as much as his colleagues, then the employer´s solution should have been to put him in some other position or else to fire him. And it was certainly demonstrated in the records of the lawsuit — I read about this in a legal website — that the ridiculous dance was executed with noticeable embarrassment to the employee.  If the employee had always been a funny guy or a kind of jester, one of those people who enjoy being “on stage”, then such an indemnity would not be rightful.
It was a fair decision. As fair as a similar decision would be in a case where a serious and demanding company director was depicted in ridiculous situations by an internal newspaper (e.g., naked, crouched, doing his physiological needs, dancing the French can-can and showing his behind to the audience). In summation: employers and employees, governing and governed people, all of them have the same human rights to maintain their dignity. 
Another admirable example of “attitude” was found in Dwight Eisenhower, who was president of the United States from 1953 to 1961. It is well known that, when this particularly intelligent and organizing general was leading the allied forces in the fight against the Nazi, he became aware that one of his subordinate generals, George Patton — a valiant but especially intolerant and aggressive military man —, had offended and slapped a soldier who had been undergoing treatment in the Army´s hospital. The soldier had what´s known as “Combat Fatigue Syndrome” or nervous exhaustion. Patton didn´t accept such “sensitivities” and for that reason he not only called the man a coward, but also kicked him out of the hospital.
Such incident was brought to Eisenhower´s ears. And what did he do? He demanded General Patton to solemnly apologize to the slapped soldier in front of the troop. And that´s what he did. Not every chief of operations would do something like that, especially considering Patton´s prestige, a man who was very admired for his courage and for being really “tough”. Another peculiar trait of Eisenhower´s, who was an extremely competent military man, was that he was a fierce opponent of all kinds of war and even refused to take part in new war adventures regardless of at least eight political requests.
I mention now three more examples of demonstrations of “personality”, all of them seen in a Brazilian general who has always been despised by those with left-wing inclinations. I am talking about General Castelo Branco, who was the first Brazilian president during the military dictatorship.
According to reports from a very respectable journalist, Carlos Chagas, when Castelo Branco died in an aviation accident the only assets he left to his heirs were an apartment in the Ipanema neighborhood (in Rio) and a few shares in public and private companies. He was an honest man. And he displayed a great respect for justice in Brazil, up to the point that when the then president of the Brazilian Supreme Court, Justice Ribeiro da Costa, went to him right after the 1964 Revolution took place and proposed that lawsuits involving salary claims from magistrates should no longer be decided by judges but instead by senators, Castelo Branco disregarded the suggestion, arguing that he trusted the Brazilian Justice.
Another of his courageous actions — bold because it would displease many of his military colleagues — had to do with a judge from São Paulo, Dr. Antônio Carlos Alves Braga, who had the audacity to go against an order from the Revolutionary Movement right at its beginning, in a moment when everyone feared the unlimited power of the Military. Such a fact was told to me by the judge himself and here´s a brief description of what went on: once the Revolution was established, an officer of the Army in the city where Dr. Alves Braga was a judge ordered the seizure of the cattle of some of the county´s farms without any kind of formality. One of the local farmers didn´t admit such an arbitrary way of losing his cattle, so he presented a writ of injunction against the military authority who had ordered the forfeit.
  Dr. Alves Braga — another example of a citizen who had an aptitude for tough decisions — accepted the injunction, preventing the sequestering of the cattle. A little while later, an officer of the Army went to the court to speak to the judge with the purpose of canceling the injunction, arguing that the meat was necessary to supply the quarters and the unlimited powers inherent to the revolutionary situation. The officer´s effort ended up being useless, after all the judge told him that as far he knew civil legislation was still in place and the cattle could only be seized after following every appropriate legal procedure.
The officer in question was unhappy with what he heard from the judge and left, obviously resentful or openly vexed. That same night the judge admitted to his wife that she should get ready to become the wife of an unemployed judge, since a few magistrates had already been “chased” by the Revolution for being suspected “lefties”.
Much to the judge´s surprise, a few days later he received a letter from Castelo Branco himself praising him for his firm action and saying that the officer in question had already been punished.
Last but not least, here´s another passage related to Castelo Branco: when he was in Italy, in the end of World War II, commanding the Brazilian soldiers who were fighting the Germans, on the eve of an especially risky battle a low rank officer or sergeant — I don´t recall his exact rank — refused to take part in said battle, excusing himself from the fight for being a new father and saying he didn´t want his son to become an orphan so soon.
Castelo Branco was asked to resolve the matter and, after hearing the insubordinate soldier´s reasons, said — while unholstering his gun and placing his hand on it — that if the man didn´t fulfill his duty, his son would indeed be an orphan the following day. It was a very clear warning and the soldier considered more prudent to participate in the battle. The outcome: the soldier ended up earning one of the most important badges of honor given to those who perform acts of extreme bravery. Had he refused to do his duty, he would certainly carry with him the tag of “coward” till the end of his days. Whether or not Castelo Branco would have killed the soldier as he had hinted we will never know, but the mere threat of such an action ended up being helpful to the soldier, who avoided the stamp of weak, even though he wasn´t one – in fact, the refusal in itself was already a demonstration of the man´s bravery, which was only proved later on with the medal of valor.
While searching the internet for names of military men, I came across the information that all – yes, ALL! – five military presidents, from Castelo Branco to João Figueiredo, were honest men, who left the Office without any increase in their patrimony. They left government exactly as they entered it: middle-class men - and very “middle” indeed. This is something rare nowadays and it only goes to show that they were idealists, men who were convinced that if the left-wing took charge of the country, Brazil would become an amplified version of Cuba with a lower per capita income.
If there were — and there really were — tortures and abuses against human rights during the military dictatorship, they occurred much more due to the presence of sadistic individuals within the lower levels of government. There are sadists everywhere, even playing stupid pranks in colleges. And sadism would have also very likely appeared if the “lefties” were in the government, possibly in the form of torture and a widespread use of paredóns (“big walls”) against “right-wing terrorists”. That´s what the human being becomes when facing challenging and conflicting situations. Hence the need for the maintenance of the rule of law and democracy, with an alternation in power even with all the load of inefficiency it eventually involves. It just so happens that democracy often gets out of hand, falling victim to its own carelessness, as a consequence of a lack of “attitude” from governors.
In order to write the previous two paragraphs, I confess I had to borrow a good deal of boldness and “attitude” from the distinguished individuals abovementioned. Telling the truth and praising the honesty of former military presidents is a taboo in Brazil, where the winds blow almost unanimously and full of prejudice in the opposite direction. Now, hiding such a relevant fact could even be considered a lack of character.
I don´t yearn for the military dictatorship but I believe some governors and magistrates are excessively fearful to act with the energy some situations demand. The anarchy of the recent depredations made by masked vandals has been excessively tolerated. If a protester has his face covered, his will to plunder or attack policemen is confessed. If a driver refuses to take the breathalyzer test, this implies a confession of drinking before driving. It is up to him to try later on to make justice revert his punishment through an appropriate lawsuit, with the burden of proof that he was neither drunk nor had drunk anything before grabbing the wheels of a vehicle. The teachers in school rooms should be able to teach and give orders without fearing being attacked by students. There is still a complete lack of “attitude” in our country. I just hope the excessive tolerance towards anarchy doesn´t give rise to a growing yearning for tougher and militarized times.

(September 11, 2013)