Liberal.world read political theory challenge: impossible!

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      7 months ago

      Idk. I saw someone clap back on a China Bad free Tibet post saying something like 98% of Tibetans speak Tibetan, how many Indigenous Americans speak their languages and that's been painted on the inside of my skull every since.

      • Rx_Hawk [he/him]
        ·
        7 months ago

        Wait, were they arguing that because China didn’t commit cultural genocide like the US did, Tibet should break away, but native Americans don’t have that right because we erased their culture???

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]
          ·
          7 months ago

          They were arguing that Westerns accusing the PRC of destroying Tibetan culture were naked hypocrites acting in bad faith, as there's ample evidence that the PRC has not destroyed Tibetan culture and Westerners should understand that by looking at colonized indigenous cultures in their own regions. Basically; The PRC supports Tibetan culture and that's obvious because Tibetans have retained their language, and it's ridiculous for Americans to throw these accusations when America shows so plainly what genocide really looks like.

          • SacredExcrement [any, comrade/them]
            ·
            edit-2
            7 months ago

            That's a great point. Not to mention, it's still called Tibet; good luck finding literally anywhere in the US that is still called what indigenous peoples here called it (unless it's some bastardized anglo translation)

          • ReadFanon [any, any]
            ·
            7 months ago

            There were excesses that occurred during the re-annexation of Tibet and that included the damage to and destruction of monasteries but it was a low-key civil war, depending on your perspective and how you want to frame it exactly and tbh I don't really care for debating those the terms, and so of course you have the Tibetan elites sheltering in monasteries and the coordination and harbouring of insurgent forces in monasteries - it's not like Tibet had barracks or many other large, permanent buildings out there which people would use as bases of operations.

            It's a pity that it played out that way and I'm sure that there were some monasteries that were sacked in reprisal or whatever. War is messy and soldiers aren't necessarily going to care deeply about defending and preserving sites of cultural significance. But by the same token, the Tibetan government at the time chose this path knowing that it would lead to war and they did it willingly so if you're going to talk about death tolls and destruction of monasteries then you also need to weigh the fact that the Tibetan government set the region on a course that virtually guaranteed this sort of death and destruction and they felt as though that was acceptable.

            I like to think of myself as being pretty pragmatic about this stuff and I don't have any particular sympathy for proselytising religions or missionary work but if someone is going to decry the destruction of religious sites and the harm that caused Tibet then that's cool and all but this also happened in the Batang Uprising from 1905-1911 which targeted Christians and their churches (which was part of a larger violent struggle against Christianity in this era that gets referred to as the mission cases) but you don't hear people clutching their pearls over that.

            What's that? You've never heard of the Batang Uprising and you think that they sorta had it coming because they were importing a religion and it was displacing Buddhism and possibly coercing or forcing people to convert?

            Lol okay bro, I'll let the Bönpos know of your concerns about imported religions suppressing the other religions in Tibet and your opposition to the forcible suppression and conversion of other faiths to this imported religion. 🙄

            (One of the most reviled figures in Tibetan history is a king who converted from Buddhism to the indigenous religion of Tibet, Bön. Thankfully a Buddhist monk assassinated this king and a famous travelling monk was invited to Tibet to restore Buddhism, which at that point was on the brink of being supplanted by Bön, so everyone* lived happily ever after.
            *As long as they were Buddhist and part of the correct school of Tibetan Buddhism)

            Of course people will cry into their tea over the sacking of a monastery (only when it's done by the Chinese - intra-Tibetan Buddhist monastery sackings get an automatic pass) but they don't give a single fuck about how there are extensive and ongoing efforts to preserve and revive elements of Tibetan culture which were dying out or dead under the feudal order.

            It's great that under the CPC Tibetan language is thriving but that's really only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to efforts to preserve Tibetan culture.

            On the other hand, libs will put their abject lack of dialectical thinking on display when you talk matters of Tibetan history and they'll express their deepest skepticism when you try to tell them that no, Tibetan Buddhism wasn't just this one single club where people held hands and tried to be nice to everyone but instead there were concerted efforts by competing factions to destroy, suppress, and convert rival factions and their practices and monasteries. Obviously this extends to Bön as well. They'll be utterly convinced that this couldn't possibly be true and sometimes they'll even try to convince you that you must be mistaken. Shit's wild.

            • Frank [he/him, he/him]
              ·
              7 months ago

              My understanding is that the Lamaists were absolute monsters and earned everything they got with interest from their brutal treatment of the peasantry, and even the then they were treated pretty mildly. I'm not moved by western liberals "all religions must be accepted at face value and cannot be crushed because they're feudalist slavers" thing.

              • ReadFanon [any, any]
                ·
                7 months ago

                My take is that it's a bit varied. Tibetan Buddhism is basically the Catholicism of Buddhism - statecraft, absurd amounts of riches accumulated at the top, pretty brutal in terms of dealing with heretics and pagans, subsuming the local traditions and practices into their practices, preaching penitence and a life of austerity from atop gilded thrones and affording lavish lifestyles for the clergy, the institutionalised repression of nuns, taking a very simple and austere religion and turning it into lavish parades and ostentatious building and furnishings to wow people...

                But then you also have some monks or lamas that are genuinely good people who do good work and aren't interested in personal gain or a life of luxury, just like what you can find in Catholicism.

                You could make an argument that these people still support a fucked theocratic system and that they helped to maintain the good public image of the religious hierarchy and its excesses - I would find that argument compelling. You could also argue that these people were genuinely committed to doing their best by the people and I'd find that argument convincing too.

                But yeah, there was tons of abuse and excesses generally amongst the Tibetan religious elite. Assassinations, coups, horse trading for political favours (reincarnations were pretty much exclusively recognised in wealthy and powerful families with the justification that lamas who had accumulated enough merit would be able to choose a "favourable" reincarnation; the contradiction implicit in such a justification being that a "low" birth means a life of immense suffering and deprivation but also it's a theological argument that people who were born as peasants deserved their station in life due to bad karma accrued in previous lifetimes [kinda sorta, but I'm not going to get right into the weeds on the Tibetan Buddhist theological position on how a human reincarnation was perceived because that's a long story]), conflict between schools of Buddhism as they vied for power...

                [CW: CSA and SA discussion ahead]

                ...along with high ranking lamas sometimes taking "consorts", which was really just a religious justification for having a woman or a harem that were enlisted into sex servitude, and lamas taking peasant children (particularly boys) to be dancing boys - basically just a euphemism for child sex slavery.

                There's a lot of dirt, both historically and in contemporary times, and that's just an overview of some of it - there's plenty more examples I can rattle off from the top of my head.

                At one point I actually had a private audience with the most prominent Nyingma lama in the west at the time. The Nyingma school doesn't have a de jure head like the Gelug school has the Dalai Lama (again, kinda sorta but that's its own long and boring story) but this guy was definitely the figurehead of the Nyingma school in the west; maybe more like the star player of the team moreso than the captain. Anyway, of course all this shit kinda semi comes out about him being a sex pervert. And that's far from being the only case. Samye Ling monastery in Scotland, the first Tibetan Buddhist centre established in the west and known for being a place that attracts high flyer western celebs, is well known for being a hotbed of drug use and sexual abuses which goes right back to its co-founder Chogyam Trungpa.

                Then there's all kinds of shit with the Dalai Lama - it used to be popular in airport bookstores and those shitty pop-up bookstores in B-tier malls to have all sorts of books written by the Dalai Lama when in reality he was just leasing his name and image to anyone who was willing to pay for it and he didn't have a hand in writing any of that shit. Or how he rode the wave of islamaphobia and sinophobia in the west amongst his followers while peddling the softer end of doomsday cult bullshit (not Alex Jones-style weapons grade doomsday cult but still). Or when a biographer interviewed him in India and noted that in his quarters there was a rifle - upon being quizzed about this and how it would be perceived by others, the Dalai Lama assured the biographer that it was just an air rifle that he used to scare away birds of prey (hawks? I forget...) while feeding pigeons. How you square the idea that an air rifle is going to shoot far enough to spook a hawk, how pigeons are just going to be hanging around feeding when there's a hawk lurking nearby, how an expert marksman like a Buddhist monk with coke-bottle glasses is going to spot a hawk before the birds do and how he would spot a hawk before it was within striking distance... that's all a matter of faith, I guess?
                With "just a simple monk" like this, who needs politicians?

                There's a big culture of pissing on people's boots and telling them it's raining in Tibetan Buddhism, or maybe more appropriately, pissing on people's heads and calling it a prayer wheel.

                It's a rotten religious hierarchy, just like every other one to exist. There are some good people within it, there are plenty of awful people in it. If someone gets a lot from Tibetan Buddhism or they have a beneficial relationship to a lama then I'm glad for them but I have a pretty dim view of Tibetan Buddhism because of how it functions, especially historically, and what happens within the Sangha and how that gets excused and covered up.

                I have zero patience for westerners who have this naive, idealised notion of Tibetan Buddhism being literally the ATLA Air Tribe because that's just a fairytale which sells books and speaking tours and shit like that.

    • assyrian
      ·
      7 months ago

      have you considered that some people could WANT to be slaves under a feudal class system???