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DearProfessorMoglenAnOpenLetter 32 - 14 Apr 2010 - Main.EbenMoglen
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| Dear Professor Moglen,
I am writing this letter because I think you provide a vital voice to the Columbia Law School community, and because the time you devote to students in office hours and the work you do on the wiki is more than commendable and should be more common. However, though you are one of the most engaging and dedicated professors I have encountered at CLS thus far, its not all just peachy. | | Respectfully.
-- TemiAdeniji - 13 Apr 2010 | |
> > | I'm confused by this,
Temi. I'm sorry that you felt I was inconsiderate to you, but the
conversation we had was conducted with entire respect on both sides
throughout, and you haven't said otherwise. You seem to be
suggesting that my expression of an historical conjecture is itself
an injurious thing to do, and I'm not sure why.
Let's put what I said and you accurately quoted into context. We had
been talking about the absence of civil society in Nigeria, which you
defined as the greatest obstacle to doing what you would most want to
do in your life, namely working to improve the situation in one
locality. We were talking about the problem of post-colonial social
definition, when an empire withdraws and leaves behind a space that
cannot be created into a nation state, because it is comprised by
nations that acknowledge the force of imperial control, but have no
political will to union. Under such conditions, corruption and other
forces begin eating away at the post-imperial civil society, and
eventually destroy it. In commenting on your essay I touched on the
same issue, through the same comparison: with the dissolution of the
Yugoslav post-imperial socialist republic that came out of the Second
World War. I then said, as you quote, that it seemed to me quite
possible that in fifty years the political entity Nigeria would not
exist, and it wasn't obvious that the lives of people would be worse
for the dissolution.
This is an opinion about the historical forces at work that you may
not agree with. My political sociology may be wrong, or the
post-imperial dynamic may be different in a thousand ways that would
lead to different outcomes. I certainly wasn't making a firm
prediction, but rather pointing to a possibility disclosed by
historical comparison.
But why is the expression of such an idea "unproductive"? Let us
suppose that the idea is "wrong." Is it therefore unproductive? I
have been trying to teach the notion that ideas are valuable for
where they lead. Asking the questions no one else will ask—I
pointed out with respect to the profile of Richard Ravitch that I
assigned—is not what politicians or diplomats do. But it is what
the people who generate new ideas and create policy do.
Perhaps, to a patriot, indulging the possibility that one's country
might dissolve into component societies seems shocking, unimaginable,
and therefore an undiscussable "pontification." Contemplating the
dissolution of the United States doesn't have that effect on me, but
the US is a curious empire and I'm an untypical patriot. If the
point you are making is that even the conjectural possibility of a
post-Nigerian West Africa is somehow disrespectful to contemplate, I
understand the strength of sentiment, but I think one might have to
be willing to confront the possibility of disagreement.
The sign of creative thinking is the asking of questions that no one
else has thought to ask. Learning to frame such questions means
recognizing the limitations that the received wisdom puts on our
thought processes. "Thinking outside the box" means breaking the
corners that convention establishes around "common sense."
Perhaps this process is painful, because it means that we are pushed,
or push ourselves, outside the zone of "comfortable" thought. I'm
sorry for the discomfort I have caused you, and I hope that the
larger value of what I am trying to communicate has not been entirely
lost in consequence.
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