Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 106
Here's an excerpt from a book I recently read, "The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?" by Jared Diamond.
Despite the excitement and the prestige of tribal fighting, tribespeople understand better than anyone else the misery associated with warfare, the omnipresent danger, and the pain due to the killings of loved ones. When tribal warfare is finally ended by forceful intervention by colonial governments, tribespeople regularly comment on the resulting improved quality of life that they hadn’t been able to create for themselves, because without centralized government they hadn’t been able to interrupt the cycles of revenge killings. Anthropologist Sterling Robbins was told by Auyana men in the New Guinea Highlands, “Life was better since the government had come because a man could now eat without looking over his shoulder and could leave his house in the morning to urinate without fear of being shot. All men admitted that they were afraid when they fought. In fact, they usually looked at me as though I were a mental defective for even asking. Men admitted having nightmares in which they became isolated from others in their group during a fight and could see no way back.”
Despite the excitement and the prestige of tribal fighting, tribespeople understand better than anyone else the misery associated with warfare, the omnipresent danger, and the pain due to the killings of loved ones. When tribal warfare is finally ended by forceful intervention by colonial governments, tribespeople regularly comment on the resulting improved quality of life that they hadn’t been able to create for themselves, because without centralized government they hadn’t been able to interrupt the cycles of revenge killings. Anthropologist Sterling Robbins was told by Auyana men in the New Guinea Highlands, “Life was better since the government had come because a man could now eat without looking over his shoulder and could leave his house in the morning to urinate without fear of being shot. All men admitted that they were afraid when they fought. In fact, they usually looked at me as though I were a mental defective for even asking. Men admitted having nightmares in which they became isolated from others in their group during a fight and could see no way back.”
That
reaction explains the surprising ease with which small numbers of
Australian patrol officers and native policemen were able to end tribal
warfare in the then-territory of Papua New Guinea. They arrived at a
warring village, bought a pig, shot the pig to demonstrate the power of
firearms, tore down village stockades and confiscated the war shields of
all warring groups in order to make it lethally dangerous for anyone to
initiate war, and occasionally shot New Guineans who dared to attack
them. Of course, New Guineans are pragmatic and could recognize the
power of guns. But one might not have predicted how easily they would
give up warfare that they had been practicing for thousands of years,
when achievement in war had been praised from childhood onwards and held
up as the measure of a man.
The
explanation for this surprising outcome is that New Guineans
appreciated the benefits of the state-guaranteed peace that they had
been unable to achieve for themselves without state government. For
instance, in the 1960s I spent a month in a recently pacified area of
the New Guinea Highlands, where 20,000 Highlanders who until a decade or
so previously had been constantly making war against each other now
lived along with one Australian patrol officer and a few New Guinea
policemen. Yes, the patrol officer and the policemen had guns, and the
New Guineans didn’t. But if the New Guineans had really wanted to resume
fighting each other, it would have been trivially easy for them to kill
the patrol officer and his policemen at night, or to ambush them by
day. They didn’t even try to do so. That illustrates how they had come
to appreciate the biggest advantage of state government: the bringing of
peace.
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