Sunday, May 10, 2009

Ethnocentrism on Meet the Press

By LindaBeth

Today's Meet the Press featured David Gregory's interview with President Karzai of Afghanistan. The last question posed to Karzai was regarding the legality of marital rape under Afghani law.


It is important to watch the clip rather than read the transcript, because Gregory's tone was nothing less than ethnocentric. Gregory is questioning the democratic-ness of Afghanistan because of this law's passing. He might as well have called Afghanistan a "so-called" democracy for having passed an anti-human rights law.

Clearly, making marital rape legal is an egregious human rights violation. However, as so many Americans have been shocked! outraged! at this Afghani law as was Gregory, perhaps a history lesson is in order:

Marital rape was legal in the United States in all 50 states until 1976. Marital rape has only been illegal in all 50 states since 1993. And only 17 states make no legal distinction between marital and non-marital rape in terms of legal charges, sentencing and defensibility. And Raquel Kennedy Bergen writes in her paper, "Marital Rape: New Research and Directions":

However, in 30 states, there are still some exemptions given to husbands from rape prosecution. In most of these 30 states, a husband is exempt when he does not have to use force because his wife is most vulnerable (e.g., she is mentally or physically impaired, unconscious, asleep, etc.) and is legally unable to consent (Bergen, 1996; Russell, 1990; NCMDR, 2005). Because of the marital contract, a wife's consent is assumed.


This begs the question: Who are we to "primitivize" Afghanistan for legalizing a heinous act that in our own country was not fully illegal until 15 years ago?

And if having no legal civil or human rights violations is the measure of whether or not one is a democracy, then for the majority of its history, the United States has not been a democracy, and perhaps still is not one.

(Cross posted to Smart Like Me)

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2 Comments:

  • I agree wholeheartedly with your comments (I was flabbergasted at gregory's tone to both Karzai and Zardari, so much so that I had to see if I was alone in my feelings, thankfully I'm not). I don't believe that a condescending tone equals objective jouralism. Similarly was his tone regarding the Afghani outrage Afghani casualties due to US bombing. criticizing Karzai as "anti-American" for standing up for his public. The arrogance to assume that the US has carte blanche to take any means necessary to "protect" the US citizenry in a post 9/11 world while simultaneously chiding a foreign leader for wanting to protect his people. It is precisely this arrogance that gets the west into these problems in the first place.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:02 PM  

  • Illuminating post. Let's not forget that the American conservative movement has been against every last attempt to grant basic rights to women and should be ashamed to pretend moral superiority.

    By Blogger Capt. Fogg, at 2:04 PM  

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