He once rebuked billionaires for not paying taxes. Now this historian says we need 'moral ambition' to fight tyranny
It is one of the most inspiring photographs in modern history, one that reveals the worst and best of human nature with a click of a camera shutter.
It is a black-and-white image of a crowd of workers at a shipbuilding factory in Nazi Germany. It shows hundreds of them tightly packed in virtual military formation, extending a Nazi salute to Adolf Hitler all except for one man. He stands in the middle of the throng, coolly defiant, with his arms folded across his chest and a sour look on his face.
Historians have debated the identity and fate of the man in the photo, which was taken in 1936. But the Dutch historian Rutger Bregman uses the image in his new book to ask two questions: What innate characteristic enabled that man to resist the fear the Nazi state instilled in so many of its citizens? And what can people today learn from him, and others who are fighting new forms of state-sponsored fear?
Bregman says one antidote to that fear is moral ambition. Its his term for people who blend the idealism of an activist with the ruthless pragmatism of an entrepreneur to make the world a better place. In his new book, Moral Ambition: Stop Wasting Your Talent and Start Making a Difference, Bregman uses the example of that German shipyard worker and other ordinary people to critique what he sees as a common failing of people on the left: They fall for the illusion of awareness, a belief that simply exposing people to injustice will inspire them to act.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/once-rebuked-billionaires-not-paying-110006498.html