The only thing Exceptional about the U.S. is its Moral Hypocrisy.
An African American Perspective
By Ajamu Baraka
In his recent op-ed in the New York Times,
Vladimir Putin raised hackles among the talking-heads across the U.S.
when he questioned the wisdom of President Obama’s evocation of the
narcissistic idea of “American exceptionalism.” After all, the
exceptionalism of the U.S. has never been a subject for reasoned
discussion or debate in the media or elsewhere. Everyone knows that the
U.S. is the greatest nation in the world and, therefore, has special
privileges and responsibilities! Those privileges and responsibilities
include not bothering with international law or processes when the
government decides that the “world” (meaning itself and a few European
nations and a couple of their client states) will take responsibility to
enforce global order according to its own interpretations, values and
needs.
The fact that many in the U.S.
believe that those interpretations, values and needs are neutral,
impartial representations of the global community at large is on full
display every night on cable news channels, where state propagandists
posing as journalists and the coterie of paid ex-military and U.S.
intelligence consultants make impassioned arguments in favor of the U.S.
waging war on Syria as a “punishment” for its alleged use of chemical
weapons.
But for many of us, the story of
American exceptionalism is an alien story, a children’s fairy tale spun
from the fertile imagination of revisionist historians, a tale wherein
indigenous people were sidekicks to lone rangers, the African slave
trade was an unfortunate aberration that was corrected by Lincoln,
children did not work in factories, women were not slaves to men,
socialists and communists were not harassed and jailed, U.S. citizens of
Japanese descent were not placed in concentration camps and Dr. King
would have approved of Barack Obama’s warmongering.
It
is that story which informs the thinking of President Obama when he
declares that “for nearly seven decades, the United States has been the
anchor of global security” i.e. the provider of an indispensable safety
net without which transcontinental chaos would have ensued. In his
version of exceptionalism, there was no CIA overthrow of the
democratically elected government in Iran in 1953; the brutal war in
Vietnam was a war to free the Vietnamese people from communism; there is
an explanation for why the U.S. gave its support to the Apartheid
government in South Africa; the coup in Chile was an internal event that
did not involve the CIA, and the millions of people who died in Iraq
were worth the price to get rid of Saddam Hussein.
Aurora Levins Morales quotes
feminist psychologist Judith Herman as she describes the way in which
perpetrators seek to control the disclosures and discourses of abuse:
“In order to escape
accountability for his crimes, the perpetrator does everything in his
power to promote forgetting. Secrecy and silence are the perpetrator’s
first line of defense. If secrecy fails, the perpetrator attacks the
credibility of his victim. If he cannot silence her absolutely, he tries
to make sure no-one listens… After every atrocity one can expect to
hear the same predictable apologies: it never happened; the victim lies;
the victim exaggerates; the victim brought it on herself; and in any
case it is time to forget the past and move on.”
For African Americans
experiencing depression-level economic conditions, our sons being
murdered by agents of the state at a rate of one every 28 hours, our
children locked away for life without the possibility of parole and more
than a million of our sons and daughters entombed in the dungeons of
this nation’s prisons, we did not need Vladimir Putin to remind us of
the fiction of “America’s” commitment to values and social practices
that make it “exceptional” in the community of nations. That reminder
was also not necessary for our indigenous brothers and sisters who still
struggle for sovereignty, dignity and self-determination in the
aftermath of their American holocaust and America’s God-given manifest
destiny.
Van Jones, the one-time black
progressive who has since sold his integrity to the Democratic Party and
CNN, recently joined Newt Gingrich during their new show to castigate
Putin for having the audacity to suggest that the U.S. was not
exceptional. Attempting his best effort at sincerity, Van offered that
no other country in the world could have made the progress toward
closing the gap between its stated values and social practices as the
United States. Of course Van knows better – he has not forgotten our
history of oppression, nor is he unaware of the contemporary crisis
facing black working class and poor people. He has simply decided to
deny the existence of those realities.
However, for the rest of us who
have been invaded, enslaved, murdered, subjected to systematic racist
dehumanization and colonized, we have not forgotten or denied those
realities despite the best efforts by the perpetrators of our ongoing
oppression to compel us to forget and just move on.
In fact we have done the hard
work of reconstructing our own stories and clearing our eyes in order to
see the world unencumbered by distorted myths and narratives that
marginalize our experiences.
As a result, we don’t harbor any
illusions about America and its real intentions when it professes
humanitarian concerns. We know and understand that the ideological
foundation of U.S. exceptionalism and the equally odious notion of
“humanitarian intervention” is just another manifestation of white
supremacy.
From our experiences and
analyses, we can see that the assumptions of Euro-American racial and
cultural superiority are so normalized, and social practices and
structures so deeply inculcated in the collective consciousness of
Americans of all races, nationalities, gender and class, that the
cultural and institutional processes and expressions of white supremacy
have been rendered largely invisible.
That is why so many Americans,
despite their reservations related to Syria, still ultimately support
the idea that the U.S. government has the right to contravene
international law in order to uphold international law, to kill at will,
to decide what nation has the right to sovereignty and to determine
that the value of lives of human beings in Syria are worth more than the
lives of the more than 2,000 murdered by the Egyptian military, or the
1,400 Palestinians murdered by the government of Israel a couple of
years ago.
But as obvious as these moral
contradictions are to most of the peoples of the world, it took the
questioning of U.S. exceptionalism by the President of Russia to cause
people in the U.S. to finally give some thought to an idea that they had
taken for granted as self-evident.
What many people around the world
understand is that exploding the dangerous myth of American
exceptionalism is absolutely critical if the global community ever hopes
to collectively solve the existential challenges that we face on the
planet today. We can only hope that after a decade of war and a
capitalist economic crisis, people in the U.S. will come to understand
this and recognize that their interests and those of their elite are not
the same, and that the U.S. must participate in the community of
nations and peoples as equals.
The popular opposition to Obama’s
proposal to wage war on Syria is encouraging because the world can no
long afford for the people of the U.S. to continue to allow the
country’s elites to impose their will over the rest of humanity. If
people in the U.S. have moved closer to that realization as a result of
this latest Syrian misadventure, that would be truly exceptional.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario