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Tolerance,
a Dangerous Virtue
by Plinio Correa de Oliveira
In a previous article, we established
that tolerance, as well as its antithesis, intolerance, cannot
be thought of as either intrinsically good or bad. In other
words, there are cases in which tolerance is a duty and intolerance
is an evil. And there are other times in which tolerance is
evil and intolerance is a duty.
We return to the subject now not to further develop the basic
principles we have already expounded, but to show the risks
of tolerance as well as the precautions necessary for
its practice.
Let us remember, before anything else, that all tolerance,
as necessary and legitimate as it may be, has inherent risks.
In short, tolerance consists in permitting one evil to exist
so as to avoid a greater evil. Now, it follows that the unpunished
existence of evil always creates danger, for evil tends necessarily
to produce evil effects. Moreover, it is undeniably seductive.
Thus, there is the risk that tolerance of itself bears even
greater evils than those one desires to forestall by its practice.
We must keep this aspect in mind, for our entire study rotates
around it.
To avoid the aridity of an exclusive1y doctrinal study, let
us imagine the situation of an officer who notes grave signs
of agitation among his troops. He finds himself faced with
a dilemma: Should he punish those responsible with all the
rigor of justice, or should he treat them with tolerance?
The second solution begets a range of other questions: In
what measure and manner should tolerance be practiced?
By applying mild punishments? By not applying them, but summoning
those responsible and gently advising them to change
their altitude? To feign ignorance of the situation?
To begin perhaps with the most benign of these solutions and
successively apply the others in the measure that the more
persuasive or mild solutions show themselves insufficient?
What is the exact moment in which one should discard one procedure
and adopt another more severe?
These are questions that may forcefully confront military
officers, but they may likewise confront anyone invested with
a position of command or responsibility in civil life and
clearly conscious of his obligations. What father of a family,
department manager, company director, professor, or leader
has not faced these questions? How many evils did they avoid
by resolving them with perspicacity and vigor of soul?
And how many evils had they to grapple with for failing to
apply judicious solutions in situations they encountered?
In truth, one who finds himself in such a contingency ought
first to make an examination of conscience in order to guard
himself against the snares that his own personal frame of
mind may create.
I must say that I have witnessed the greatest absurdities
regarding this matter throughout my life, almost all of them
leading to excessive tolerance. The evils of our epoch have
their present alarming character because there is generalized
sympathy in relation to them, a sympathy that even those
who combat them frequently share.
For example, many people oppose divorce. But among these are
found numerous people who, although against divorce, have
an excessively sentimental spiritual makeup. Consequently,
they consider problems born of "love" romantically.
In face of a difficult marital situation among some friends,
these "anti-divorcists" judge it super-human, not
to say inhuman, to exact of this innocent and unhappy
couple that they reject the possibility of "starting
over" (which means killing their souls through sin).
Hypocritically, they will profess being sorry about what happened,
but if one were to bring up the problem of tolerance they
will have a whole edifice built up inside for justifying the
most extreme and aberrant concessions. Thus, they will comment
on what took place with softness, will invite the "newlyweds"
over, visit them, and so forth. That is, they will favor divorce
by their example while condemning it by their words. Clearly,
with such conduct on the part of thousands or millions of
opponents of divorce, divorce has much more to gain than
to lose.
How did they come to the decision to tolerate such an evil
as this gnawing cancer of the family? Because deep down
they had a pro-divorce mentality.
Let us not stop here. Let us have the courage to say the whole
truth. Modern man abhors asceticism. He is averse to anything
that exacts of his will the effort of saying "no"
to his sentiments. He finds the restraint of moral principles
odious. The daily struggle against the passions seems to him
a Chinese torture.
Because of this, modern man, even when gifted with good principles,
is exaggeratedly complacent, and not only towards those
who are divorced.
There are entire legions of parents and teachers who for this
very reason are excessively indulgent towards their children
and students. And the chorus they sing is always the same:
"Poor so-and so
Poor so-and-so, indeed,
for he is lazy, takes ill the admonitions of his elders, filches
snacks, frequents bad company, watches immoral films,
and so on. And since he is "poor so-and-so, he
rarely receives the benefit of a rigorous punishment. The
fruits are there for all to see. There are thousands, millions,
of moral disasters occasioned by excessive tolerance. "He
that spareth the rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him
correcteth him betimes, teach the Scriptures (Prov.
13:24). But in our days, who wants to hear it?
Now, the same takes place, mutatis mutandi, between certain
kinds of managers and workers, since the managers, as paganized
as their subordinates, feel that if they were workers they
would be rebellious too.
And such examples continue to multiply in every field
of life.
Clearly this tolerance is founded upon all kinds of pretexts---exaggerating
the risk of using excessive force or the possibility
of things taking care of themselves, people closing their
eyes to the dangers of impunity, and so on and so forth.
In reality, all this would be avoided if the soul faced with
the decision of whether or not to use tolerance were capable,
out of humility, of being suspicious of itself.
Do I have unconfessed sympathies towards this evil? Am I afraid
of the struggle intolerance will bring? Am I too lazy to make
the effort that an attitude of intolerance would impose upon
me? Do I seek personal advantages of any kind in an accommodating
attitude?
Only after such an examination of conscience can a person
confront the hard alternative of tolerance or intolerance.
Without such examination, one cannot be certain of taking,
in relation to himself, the necessary precautions to avoid
sinning through excessive tolerance.
In general, there is some very fitting advice for those who
find themselves faced with such an alternative. Everyone has
particular bad tendencies that have taken root within him.
This one is apathetic, that one is violent, another is
ambitious, yet another is cynical, and so forth. We need
not have much fear of sinning through excessive tolerance
as long as this tolerance exacts victory over our most deep-rooted
bad tendency. But as long as tolerance gratifies our bad inclinations,
let us open our eyes, for the risk is grave.
Thus, if we are apathetic, we will probably not sin through
excessive tolerance toward a friend who rouses us to action:
There is nothing more sticky, nothing harder to catch, nothing
more choleric than a lazy man contradicted in his lethargy.
If we are irascible, we do not run much risk of exaggerated
tolerance toward those who harm us. If we are sensual,
it is improbable that we will show ourselves excessively rigorous
in the matter of sleeves and low necklines. And if we
have a servile spirit as regards public opinion, only with
difficulty will we overstep ourselves in hurling invectives
against the errors of our century.
Likewise, it is advisable to have greater fear regarding our
own weakness on this point, particularly when the rights of
third parties and not ours are in question, thus preventing
ourselves from sinning through excessive tolerance.
We are habitually much more "understanding" regarding
the plights of others. We more easily pardon the thief who
robbed our neighbor than the one who broke into our own house.
And we are more disposed to recommend that injuries be forgotten
than to practice this virtue ourselves.
Let us not lose sight of the fact that on this point we, according
to the primary impulses of our egoism, quite often find that
God is a third party. Hence, we are much more inclined to
pardon an offense committed against the Church than one against
ourselves, to endure a violation of God's rights than a violation
of our own interests.
In general, this is the state of spirit of hyper-tolerant
Catholics. Their language is imaginative, soft, and sentimental.
They only know how to argue--if one can call this arguing--with
their heart. In relation to the enemies of the Church, they
are full of illusions, complaisance, courtesy, and expressions
of affection.
But they are terribly offended if a zealous Catholic causes
them to see that they are sacrificing the rights of the Church.
And, in place of arguing doctrinally, they transpose the subject
to the personal terrain. "Are you saying that I am lukewarm?
That I don't know perfectly well what I have to do? Are
you doubting my wisdom? My courage?" The chest heaves,
the face reddens, the eyes brim with tears, and the voice
takes on a certain tone. Watch out, for this hyper-tolerant
soul is nearing the apex of a crisis of intolerance.
One can expect any violence, any injustice, and anyone-sided
thing from such a soul. This, because his facade of tolerance
exists only when insipid and secondary values--orthodoxy,
purity of the Faith, the rights of the Church--are in question.
Everything changes when his little self enters the scene.
Behold him disposed to cast into Hell those who provoke
him--even from afar--to indignation like that which Saint
Michael had towards the devil: "Who is like unto me?"
We will see in a following article how tolerance, in cases
where it is just, ought to be practiced.
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