Columbus Day: In Praise of Exploitation

Many critics argue that Christopher
Columbus gave us a devil's bargain. In October 1492 that Italian explorer,
working for Spain, opened America to his fellow Europeans. The result: we got a
prosperous New World by impoverishing, enslaving and murdering the natives who
were already here.
But this view fails to distinguish
between two types of exploitation—one over other humans and the other over
nature: the former which should be expunged from our moral codes and civilized
society, the latter which is the essence of morality and civilization.
The former form of exploitation was
suffered especially by the tens of millions of individuals who inhabited the
pre-Columbian lands from Mexico through South America. Cortes the Conquistador,
for example, defeated the Aztec rulers of Mexico. Many of the tribes that were
subject to the Aztecs sided with Cortes; they hated the Aztecs for, among other
things, their practice of cutting the living hearts out of members of tribes
that they subjugated, as sacrifices to their gods. Cortes imposed his rule on
the Aztecs and their subjects alike, replacing one tyranny with another. The
natives were treated harshly, and many were forced to work as de facto or
actual slaves for their new masters.
On the other hand, many settlers,
especially in North America which had far fewer natives, took a different path.
They came to the New World to build their own lives. They did not prosper by
conquering other men but, rather, by conquering nature. They had to clear the
land, plant and sow crops. They had to practice the trades of carpenters,
masons, loggers, miners, blacksmiths, and tailors to build their towns and to
create the necessities for life and prosperity. In the centuries that followed,
their descendants—including Americans today—built the richest, most prosperous
country on Earth.
Today it is chic among
back-to-nature types to idealize the pre-Columbian natives and question whether
what we have today constitutes real progress. This silliness was given
philosophical credence by the eighteenth-century thinker Jean-Jacques
Rousseau's notion of the "noble savage." No doubt many individual
natives were as noble as one could be in savage circumstances, but America
before Columbus was no Eden.
Let's put aside the wars between
tribes, the outright brutality and the like, and just look at the daily lives
of the Indians before Columbus. Life was lived simply, in primitive cycles.
Natives inhabited crude hovels and hunted or used subsistence farming to
sustain themselves. Yes, they could enjoy family and friends, tell tales of
bringing down buffalo, and imagine that the stars in the sky painted pictures
of giant bears and other creatures. The ancestors of Europeans did the same.
But true human life, either for an
individual or society, is not an endless, stagnant cycle. Rather, it is a
growth in knowledge, in power over the environment, and in individual liberty.
Perhaps many pre-Columbian natives
were content with their lot in a simple, animal-like existence. But what of
young Indian children who wondered why family members sickened and died and if
there were ways unknown to the shamans to relieve their pain or cure them; if
there were ways to build shelters that would resist bitter winters, stifling
summers, and the storms that raged in both seasons; whether there were ways to
guarantee that food would always be abundant and starvation no longer a drought
away; why plants grow and what those lights in the sky really were; and whether
they could ever actually fly like birds and observe mountains from the height
of eagles? Where were the opportunities for these natives?
Three ideas from Enlightenment
Europe provided keys to true human life. First was the idea that we as
individuals have a right to our own dreams and desires, that we are not simply
tied to a tribe or the wishes of others, that civilization means that
individuals are free to live their own lives, as long as they acknowledge the
similar freedom of others.
Second was the understanding that
through the rational exercise of our minds we can truly discover the nature of
the world around us, replacing myths—no matter how beautiful or poetic—with
real knowledge.
And third was the appreciation that
such knowledge allows us to bend nature to our wills. Through our thoughts and
actions we gain the pride of achieving the best within us.
The clash between the cultures of
pre-Columbian natives and European immigrants certainly produced injustices for
natives. But it would have been unjust for those natives to expect the
immigrants to hold themselves to the level of primitive cultures and beliefs. The
true long-term tragedy is that so many of the descendants of the pre-Columbian
peoples in North America ended up on reservations rather than integrated into a
society that offers opportunities for each individual to excel.
Columbus opened a whole new land for
those who would tame nature and build a new, free, and prosperous nation. We
should celebrate the opportunity for America that he gave us—not apologize for
it.
Dr. Edward Hudgins directs advocacy and is a senior scholar at The Atlas Society.
Copyright, The Atlas Society. For more information, please visit www.atlassociety.org.
Click here to return to TRA's Issue CCXII Index.
Learn about Mr. Stolyarov's novel, Eden against the Colossus, here.Read Mr. Stolyarov's comprehensive treatise, A Rational Cosmology, explicating such terms as the universe, matter, space, time, sound, light, life, consciousness, and volition, here.
The
Rational Argumentator