by Theodore Dalrymple
When prisoners are released
from prison, they often say that they have paid their debt to society. This is
absurd, of course: crime is not a matter of double-entry bookkeeping. You
cannot pay a debt by having caused even greater expense, nor can you pay in advance
for a bank robbery by offering to serve a prison sentence before you commit it.
Perhaps, metaphorically speaking, the slate is wiped clean once a prisoner is
released from prison, but the debt is not paid off.
It would be just as absurd for me to say, on my imminent retirement after
14 years of my hospital and prison work, that I have paid my debt to society. I
had the choice to do something more pleasing if I had wished, and I was paid,
if not munificently, at least adequately. I chose the disagreeable neighborhood
in which I practiced because, medically speaking, the poor are more
interesting, at least to me, than the rich: their pathology is more florid,
their need for attention greater. Their dilemmas, if cruder, seem to me more
compelling, nearer to the fundamentals of human existence. No doubt I also felt
my services would be more valuable there: in other words, that I had some kind
of duty to perform. Perhaps for that reason, like the prisoner on his release,
I feel I have paid my debt to society. Certainly, the work has taken a toll on
me, and it is time to do something else. Someone else can do battle with the
metastasizing social pathology of Great Britain, while I lead a life
aesthetically more pleasing to me.
My work has caused me to become
perhaps unhealthily preoccupied with the problem of evil. Why do people commit
evil? What conditions allow it to flourish? How is it best prevented and, when
necessary, suppressed? Each time I listen to a patient recounting the cruelty
to which he or she has been subjected, or has committed (and I have listened to
several such patients every day for 14 years), these questions revolve
endlessly in my mind.
No doubt my previous experiences fostered my preoccupation with this
problem. My mother was a refugee from Nazi Germany, and though she spoke very
little of her life before she came to Britain, the mere fact that there was
much of which she did not speak gave evil a ghostly presence in our household.
Later, I spent several years touring the world, often in places where
atrocity had recently been, or still was being, committed. In Central America,
I witnessed civil war fought between guerrilla groups intent on imposing
totalitarian tyranny on their societies, opposed by armies that didn't scruple
to resort to massacre. In Equatorial Guinea, the current dictator was the
nephew and henchman of the last dictator, who had killed or driven into exile a
third of the population, executing every last person who wore glasses or
possessed a page of printed matter for being a disaffected or potentially
disaffected intellectual. In Liberia, I visited a church in which more than 600
people had taken refuge and been slaughtered, possibly by the president himself
(soon to be videotaped being tortured to death). The outlines of the bodies
were still visible on the dried blood on the floor, and the long mound of the
mass grave began only a few yards from the entrance. In North Korea I saw the
acme of tyranny, millions of people in terrorized, abject obeisance to a
personality cult whose object, the Great Leader Kim Il Sung, made the Sun King
look like the personification of modesty.
Still, all these were political
evils, which my own country had entirely escaped. I optimistically supposed
that, in the absence of the worst political deformations, widespread evil was
impossible. I soon discovered my error. Of course, nothing that I was to see in
a British slum approached the scale or depth of what I had witnessed elsewhere.
Beating a woman from motives of jealousy, locking her in a closet, breaking her
arms deliberately, terrible though it may be, is not the same, by a long way,
as mass murder. More than enough of the constitutional, traditional,
institutional, and social restraints on large-scale political evil still
existed in Britain to prevent anything like what I had witnessed elsewhere.
Yet the scale of a man's evil is not entirely to be measured by its
practical consequences. Men commit evil within the scope available to them.
Some evil geniuses, of course, devote their lives to increasing that scope as
widely as possible, but no such character has yet arisen in Britain, and most
evildoers merely make the most of their opportunities. They do what they can
get away with.
In any case, the extent of the evil that I found, though far more modest
than the disasters of modern history, is nonetheless impressive. From the
vantage point of one six-bedded hospital ward, I have met at least 5,000
perpetrators of the kind of violence I have just described and 5,000 victims of
it: nearly 1 percent of the population of my city—or a higher percentage, if
one considers the age-specificity of the behavior. And when you take the life
histories of these people, as I have, you soon realize that their existence is
as saturated with arbitrary violence as that of the inhabitants of many a
dictatorship. Instead of one dictator, though, there are thousands, each the
absolute ruler of his own little sphere, his power circumscribed by the
proximity of another such as he.
Violent conflict, not confined to the home and hearth, spills out onto the
streets. Moreover, I discovered that British cities such as my own even had
torture chambers: run not by the government, as in dictatorships, but by those
representatives of slum enterprise, the drug dealers. Young men and women in
debt to drug dealers are kidnapped, taken to the torture chambers, tied to
beds, and beaten or whipped. Of compunction there is none—only a residual fear
of the consequences of going too far.
Perhaps the most alarming feature of this low-level but endemic evil, the
one that brings it close to the conception of original sin, is that it is
unforced and spontaneous. No one requires people to commit it. In the worst
dictatorships, some of the evil ordinary men and women do they do out of fear of
not committing it. There, goodness requires heroism. In the Soviet Union in the
1930s, for example, a man who failed to report a political joke to the
authorities was himself guilty of an offense that could lead to deportation or
death. But in modern Britain, no such conditions exist: the government does not
require citizens to behave as I have described and punish them if they do not.
The evil is freely chosen.
Not that the government is blameless in the matter—far from it.
Intellectuals propounded the idea that man should be freed from the shackles of
social convention and self-control, and the government, without any demand from
below, enacted laws that promoted unrestrained behavior and created a welfare
system that protected people from some of its economic consequences. When the
barriers to evil are brought down, it flourishes; and never again will I be
tempted to believe in the fundamental goodness of man, or that evil is
something exceptional or alien to human nature.
Of course, my personal
experience is just that—personal experience. Admittedly, I have looked out at
the social world of my city and my country from a peculiar and possibly
unrepresentative vantage point, from a prison and from a hospital ward where
practically all the patients have tried to kill themselves, or at least made
suicidal gestures. But it is not small or slight personal experience, and each
of my thousands, even scores of thousands, of cases has given me a window into
the world in which that person lives.
And when my mother asks me whether I am not in danger of letting my
personal experience embitter me or cause me to look at the world through
bile-colored spectacles, I ask her why she thinks that she, in common with all
old people in Britain today, feels the need to be indoors by sundown or face
the consequences, and why this should be the case in a country that within
living memory was law-abiding and safe? Did she not herself tell me that, as a
young woman during the blackouts in the Blitz, she felt perfectly safe, at
least from the depredations of her fellow citizens, walking home in the pitch
dark, and that it never occurred to her that she might be the victim of a
crime, whereas nowadays she has only to put her nose out of her door at dusk
for her to think of nothing else? Is it not true that her purse has been stolen
twice in the last two years, in broad daylight, and is it not true that
statistics—however manipulated by governments to put the best possible gloss
upon them—bear out the accuracy of the conclusions that I have drawn from my
personal experience? In 1921, the year of my mother's birth, there was one
crime recorded for every 370 inhabitants of England and Wales; 80 years later,
it was one for every ten inhabitants. There has been a 12-fold increase since
1941 and an even greater increase in crimes of violence. So while personal
experience is hardly a complete guide to social reality, the historical data
certainly back up my impressions.
A single case can be
illuminating, especially when it is statistically banal—in other words, not at
all exceptional. Yesterday, for example, a 21-year-old woman consulted me,
claiming to be depressed. She had swallowed an overdose of her antidepressants
and then called an ambulance.
There is something to be said here about the word "depression,"
which has almost entirely eliminated the word and even the concept of
unhappiness from modern life. Of the thousands of patients I have seen, only
two or three have ever claimed to be unhappy: all the rest have said that they
were depressed. This semantic shift is deeply significant, for it implies that
dissatisfaction with life is itself pathological, a medical condition, which it
is the responsibility of the doctor to alleviate by medical means. Everyone has
a right to health; depression is unhealthy; therefore everyone has a right to
be happy (the opposite of being depressed). This idea in turn implies that
one's state of mind, or one's mood, is or should be independent of the way that
one lives one's life, a belief that must deprive human existence of all
meaning, radically disconnecting reward from conduct.
A ridiculous pas de deux between doctor and patient ensues: the patient
pretends to be ill, and the doctor pretends to cure him. In the process, the
patient is willfully blinded to the conduct that inevitably causes his misery
in the first place. I have therefore come to see that one of the most important
tasks of the doctor today is the disavowal of his own power and responsibility.
The patient's notion that he is ill stands in the way of his understanding of
the situation, without which moral change cannot take place. The doctor who
pretends to treat is an obstacle to this change, blinding rather than
enlightening.
My patient already had had three children by three different men, by no means
unusual among my patients, or indeed in the country as a whole. The father of
her first child had been violent, and she had left him; the second died in an
accident while driving a stolen car; the third, with whom she had been living,
had demanded that she should leave his apartment because, a week after their
child was born, he decided that he no longer wished to live with her. (The
discovery of incompatibility a week after the birth of a child is now so common
as to be statistically normal.) She had nowhere to go, no one to fall back on,
and the hospital was a temporary sanctuary from her woes. She hoped that we
would fix her up with some accommodation.
She could not return to her mother, because of conflict with her
"stepfather," or her mother's latest boyfriend, who, in fact, was
only nine years older than she and seven years younger than her mother. This
compression of the generations is also now a common pattern and is seldom a
recipe for happiness. (It goes without saying that her own father had
disappeared at her birth, and she had never seen him since.) The latest
boyfriend in this kind of ménage either wants the daughter around to abuse her
sexually or else wants her out of the house as being a nuisance and an
unnecessary expense. This boyfriend wanted her out of the house, and set about
creating an atmosphere certain to make her leave as soon as possible.
The father of her first child
had, of course, recognized her vulnerability. A girl of 16 living on her own is
easy prey. He beat her from the first, being drunken, possessive, and jealous,
as well as flagrantly unfaithful. She thought that a child would make him more
responsible—sober him up and calm him down. It had the reverse effect. She left
him.
The father of her second child was a career criminal, already imprisoned
several times. A drug addict who took whatever drugs he could get, he died
under the influence. She had known all about his past before she had his child.
The father of her third child was much older than she. It was he who
suggested that they have a child—in fact he demanded it as a condition of
staying with her. He had five children already by three different women, none
of whom he supported in any way whatever.
The conditions for the perpetuation of evil were now complete. She was a
young woman who would not want to remain alone, without a man, for very long;
but with three children already, she would attract precisely the kind of man,
like the father of her first child—of whom there are now many—looking for
vulnerable, exploitable women. More than likely, at least one of them (for
there would undoubtedly be a succession of them) would abuse her children
sexually, physically, or both.
She was, of course, a victim of
her mother's behavior at a time when she had little control over her destiny.
Her mother had thought that her own sexual liaison was more important than the
welfare of her child, a common way of thinking in today's welfare Britain. That
same day, for example, I was consulted by a young woman whose mother's consort
had raped her many times between the ages of eight and 15, with her mother's
full knowledge. Her mother had allowed this solely so that her relationship
with her consort might continue. It could happen that my patient will one day
do the same thing.
My patient was not just a victim of her mother, however: she had knowingly
borne children of men of whom no good could be expected. She knew perfectly
well the consequences and the meaning of what she was doing, as her reaction to
something that I said to her—and say to hundreds of women patients in a similar
situation—proved: next time you are thinking of going out with a man, bring him
to me for my inspection, and I'll tell you if you can go out with him.
This never fails to make the most wretched, the most "depressed"
of women smile broadly or laugh heartily. They know exactly what I mean, and I
need not spell it out further. They know that I mean that most of the men they
have chosen have their evil written all over them, sometimes quite literally in
the form of tattoos, saying "FUCK
OFF" or "MAD DOG."
And they understand that if I can spot the evil instantly, because they know
what I would look for, so can they—and therefore they are in large part
responsible for their own downfall at the hands of evil men.
Moreover, they are aware that I believe that it is both foolish and wicked
to have children by men without having considered even for a second or a
fraction of a second whether the men have any qualities that might make them
good fathers. Mistakes are possible, of course: a man may turn out not to be as
expected. But not even to consider the question is to act as irresponsibly as
it is possible for a human being to act. It is knowingly to increase the sum of
evil in the world, and sooner or later the summation of small evils leads to
the triumph of evil itself.
My patient did not start out with the intention of abetting, much less of
committing, evil. And yet her refusal to take seriously and act upon the signs
that she saw and the knowledge that she had was not the consequence of
blindness and ignorance. It was utterly willful. She knew from her own
experience, and that of many people around her, that her choices, based on the
pleasure or the desire of the moment, would lead to the misery and suffering
not only of herself, but—especially—of her own children.
This truly is not so much the banality as the frivolity of evil: the
elevation of passing pleasure for oneself over the long-term misery of others
to whom one owes a duty. What better phrase than the frivolity of evil
describes the conduct of a mother who turns her own 14-year-old child out of
doors because her latest boyfriend does not want him or her in the house? And
what better phrase describes the attitude of those intellectuals who see in
this conduct nothing but an extension of human freedom and choice, another
thread in life's rich tapestry?
The men in these situations
also know perfectly well the meaning and consequences of what they are doing.
The same day that I saw the patient I have just described, a man aged 25 came
into our ward, in need of an operation to remove foil-wrapped packets of
cocaine that he had swallowed in order to evade being caught by the police in
possession of them. (Had a packet burst, he would have died immediately.) As it
happened, he had just left his latest girlfriend—one week after she had given
birth to their child. They weren't getting along, he said; he needed his space.
Of the child, he thought not for an instant.
I asked him whether he had any other children.
"Four," he replied.
"How many mothers?"
"Three."
"Do you see any of your children?"
He shook his head. It is supposedly the duty of the doctor not to pass
judgment on how his patients have elected to live, but I think I may have
raised my eyebrows slightly. At any rate, the patient caught a whiff of my
disapproval.
"I know," he said. "I know. Don't tell me."
These words were a complete confession of guilt. I have had hundreds of
conversations with men who have abandoned their children in this fashion, and
they all know perfectly well what the consequences are for the mother and, more
important, for the children. They all know that they are condemning their
children to lives of brutality, poverty, abuse, and hopelessness. They tell me
so themselves. And yet they do it over and over again, to such an extent that I
should guess that nearly a quarter of British children are now brought up this
way.
The result is a rising tide of
neglect, cruelty, sadism, and joyous malignity that staggers and appalls me. I
am more horrified after 14 years than the day I started.
Where does this evil come from? There is obviously something flawed in the
heart of man that he should wish to behave in this depraved fashion—the legacy
of original sin, to speak metaphorically. But if, not so long ago, such conduct
was much less widespread than it is now (in a time of much lesser prosperity,
be it remembered by those who think that poverty explains everything), then
something more is needed to explain it.
A necessary, though not sufficient, condition is the welfare state, which
makes it possible, and sometimes advantageous, to behave like this. Just as the
IMF is the bank of last resort, encouraging commercial banks to make unwise
loans to countries that they know the IMF will bail out, so the state is the
parent of last resort—or, more often than not, of first resort. The state,
guided by the apparently generous and humane philosophy that no child, whatever
its origins, should suffer deprivation, gives assistance to any child, or
rather the mother of any child, once it has come into being. In matters of
public housing, it is actually advantageous for a mother to put herself at a
disadvantage, to be a single mother, without support from the fathers of the
children and dependent on the state for income. She is then a priority; she
won't pay local taxes, rent, or utility bills.
As for the men, the state absolves them of all responsibility for their
children. The state is now father to the child. The biological father is
therefore free to use whatever income he has as pocket money, for entertainment
and little treats. He is thereby reduced to the status of a child, though a
spoiled child with the physical capabilities of a man: petulant, demanding,
querulous, self-centered, and violent if he doesn't get his own way. The
violence escalates and becomes a habit. A spoiled brat becomes an evil tyrant.
But if the welfare state is a
necessary condition for the spread of evil, it is not sufficient. After all,
the British welfare state is neither the most extensive nor the most generous
in the world, and yet our rates of social pathology—public drunkenness,
drug-taking, teenage pregnancy, venereal disease, hooliganism, criminality—are
the highest in the world. Something more was necessary to produce this result.
Here we enter the realm of culture and ideas. For it is necessary not only
to believe that it is economically feasible to behave in the irresponsible and
egotistical fashion that I have described, but also to believe that it is
morally permissible to do so. And this idea has been peddled by the
intellectual elite in Britain for many years, more assiduously than anywhere
else, to the extent that it is now taken for granted. There has been a long
march not only through the institutions but through the minds of the young.
When young people want to praise themselves, they describe themselves as
"nonjudgmental." For them, the highest form of morality is amorality.
There has been an unholy alliance between those on the Left, who believe
that man is endowed with rights but no duties, and libertarians on the Right,
who believe that consumer choice is the answer to all social questions, an idea
eagerly adopted by the Left in precisely those areas where it does not apply.
Thus people have a right to bring forth children any way they like, and the
children, of course, have the right not to be deprived of anything, at least
anything material. How men and women associate and have children is merely a
matter of consumer choice, of no more moral consequence than the choice between
dark and milk chocolate, and the state must not discriminate among different
forms of association and child rearing, even if such non-discrimination has the
same effect as British and French neutrality during the Spanish Civil War.
The consequences to the children and to society do not enter into the
matter: for in any case it is the function of the state to ameliorate by
redistributive taxation the material effects of individual irresponsibility,
and to ameliorate the emotional, educational, and spiritual effects by an army
of social workers, psychologists, educators, counselors, and the like, who have
themselves come to form a powerful vested interest of dependence on the
government.
So while my patients know in
their hearts that what they are doing is wrong, and worse than wrong, they are
encouraged nevertheless to do it by the strong belief that they have the right
to do it, because everything is merely a matter of choice. Almost no one in
Britain ever publicly challenges this belief. Nor has any politician the
courage to demand a withdrawal of the public subsidy that allows the
intensifying evil I have seen over the past 14 years—violence, rape, intimidation,
cruelty, drug addiction, neglect—to flourish so exuberantly. With 40 percent of
children in Britain born out of wedlock, and the proportion still rising, and
with divorce the norm rather than the exception, there soon will be no
electoral constituency for reversal. It is already deemed to be electoral
suicide to advocate it by those who, in their hearts, know that such a reversal
is necessary.
I am not sure they are right. They lack courage. My only cause for optimism
during the past 14 years has been the fact that my patients, with a few
exceptions, can be brought to see the truth of what I say: that they are not
depressed; they are unhappy—and they are unhappy because they have chosen to
live in a way that they ought not to live, and in which it is impossible to be
happy. Without exception, they say that they would not want their children to
live as they have lived. But the social, economic, and ideological
pressures—and, above all, the parental example—make it likely that their
children's choices will be as bad as theirs.
Ultimately, the moral cowardice of the intellectual and political elites is
responsible for the continuing social disaster that has overtaken Britain, a
disaster whose full social and economic consequences have yet to be seen. A
sharp economic downturn would expose how far the policies of successive
governments, all in the direction of libertinism, have atomized British society,
so that all social solidarity within families and communities, so protective in
times of hardship, has been destroyed. The elites cannot even acknowledge what
has happened, however obvious it is, for to do so would be to admit their past
responsibility for it, and that would make them feel bad. Better that millions
should live in wretchedness and squalor than that they should feel bad about
themselves—another aspect of the frivolity of evil. Moreover, if members of the
elite acknowledged the social disaster brought about by their ideological
libertinism, they might feel called upon to place restraints upon their own
behavior, for you cannot long demand of others what you balk at doing yourself.
There are pleasures, no doubt, to be had in crying in the wilderness, in
being a man who thinks he has seen further and more keenly than others, but
they grow fewer with time. The wilderness has lost its charms for me.
I'm leaving—I hope for good.
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