World Peace Threatened by Your Bad Habits?
Summary:
The
rise and fall of civilizations may hinge not so much on the behavior of their
governments as the bad habits of their citizens.
By Wahab Raofi
Did
you know that if you change some of your habits, you could change the world,
maybe even help bring about peace and stability?
You know who you are – the person who
bribes a police officer to get out of a traffic ticket, cuts in front of people
in a queue, parks in spots reserved for the handicapped.
But no! Pardon me! Of course, that’s not
you. Your worst sins are little things, maybe just fudging a little on your tax
returns, leaving work early, or using your cellphone in a movie theatre.
Everybody does that, right?
Right. And that’s the problem. I call it
the “Smelly Foot Syndrome,” and it is eroding society on almost every
continent.
A colleague once told me he avoids
flying a certain airline and pays higher fares to another carrier just to avoid
the odor. The airline’s seats are almost always smelly because passengers remove
their shoes, leaving the seats with the fragrance of dirty socks.
The Smelly Foot Syndrome is causing one
airline to lose business, and that same attitude is causing a lack of civility
that violates our very Social Contract – the implicit agreement we make in
order to form a society.
All the little rude or dishonest things
we do add up to a crumbling, disrespected culture that eventually leads to instability
and a loss of peace.
In developing nations, “big” is good,
and governments provide it. Big projects – dams, strong armies, nuclear
programs, wars against insurgencies – become matters of national pride. Such long-term
projects succeed with good governance, but they falter if small bricks at the
foundation are weak.
These small bricks are you, me and our
fellow citizens. How we behave in our mundane daily lives can topple the entire
structure, just as pulling out a small block near the bottom of a stack of wood
can bring it all crashing down.
The predicament is more pronounced in
poor or developing nations, like my native Afghanistan. When bad habits dominate
all aspects of daily life, they become midwife to political, economic and
social upheaval.
As one member of the Afghan parliament
said TOLO news “It’s not always the government’s fault. (Sometimes) it’s the
citizens’ fault.”
In some countries, we see rampant
bribery and corruption among citizens, soldiers selling weapons for
black-market cash, or even pharmaceutical companies using unethical means to
feed opioid addictions for personal profit.
These “bad habits” can be small and
personal, yet still destructive: the exchange of women to settle disputes in
Pakistan, the bacha bazi practice of
using young boys in sexual slavery in Afghanistan, the ritual of female genital
mutilation in Africa and Asia.
They also can be the types of unkindness
in first-world nations that citizens laugh off – tailgating, littering, taking
credit for the work of others.
Corruption has been woven into national
cultures for millennia, but you’re kidding yourself if you think it’s a relic
of the past or irrelevant in first-world nations. The U.S. era of domination
already is in decline. A Reuters news analysis by Glenn Hubbard and Tim Kane
used data to show that U.S. economic power peaked in the year 2000 and has been
falling ever since.
Some of that corrosion is due to bad behavior.
The U.S. lost an estimated $4.5 trillion due to illegal tax evasion in the last
10 years, per the Internal Revenue Service. Developing nations – which feel a
much greater impact from revenue loss – are cheated out of an average of $114
billion each year by citizens who don’t pay their taxes, says the International
aid agency Oxfam.
Can our worldwide standard of living and
prospects for lasting peace really be changed simply by better behavior from our citizens?
In The Power of Habit, author and business
reporter Charles Duhigg argues that the habits of employees can build
or destroy any organization. Companies often fail because of bad habits, and
the theory applies to communities and nations as well. That means if the
citizens change their bad habits, everyone will benefit collectively.
The
damaging consequences of bad habits can be colossal: governments fail to
provide basic services because of a lack of revenue, citizens seek street
justice because of a corrupt judiciary, domestic and foreign companies take
their business elsewhere, and social unrest festers.
No
foreign aid or dictatorial regime can rectify the problem unless the citizens change
their own bad habits. As the late British prime minister Margaret Thatcher observed, “There's no such thing as
society. There are individual men and women, and there are families. And no
government can do anything except through people, and people must look after
themselves first. It is our duty to look after ourselves and then, also, to
look after our neighbors.”
That
airline with the “Smelly Foot Syndrome” isn’t being hurt by bad aircraft, food
or service, but by the odor of dirty socks. The problem could be solved if
people just change their bad habits. Yes, the airline could prohibit the
removal of shoes, but the best way to change a bad habit is not by
authoritarian force, but by human decency.
Think
of the Golden Rule. When individuals treat others as they would like to be
treated, entire nations can be saved. Change your bad habits.
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