THURSDAY, NOV 26, 2015 05:00 AM CST
Reasons to give thanks: America is a total mess — and some of it is good news
GOP insanity and resurgent youth activism are aspects of America's long and necessary struggle with history
TOPICS: REPUBLICANS, REPUBLICAN PARTY, DONALD TRUMP, RACISM, THANKSGIVING, NATIVE AMERICANS, CIVIL WAR, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, SLAVERY, BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP, 14TH AMENDMENT, CONSTITUTION, STUDENT ACTIVISM, CAMPUS ACTIVISM, CAMPUS PROTESTS, ACTIVISM, AMERICAN HISTORY, U.S. HISTORY, NEWS, POLITICS NEWS
There’s a ritual of American journalism that goes back nearly as far as the Thanksgiving holiday itself, a holiday largely concocted to create an aura of fictional harmony around the painful and complicated history of early encounters between Anglo-Saxon settlers and Native Americans. That ritual consists of assuring readers that we have plenty to be thankful for in our national life as we find it now, despite all the obvious things that have gone wrong. It’s a truism that has the virtue of always being true, even in a year of political insanity, intense domestic discord and rising international tensions when the reasons for communal or national gratitude seem elusive.
The episodes in American history that lie behind this paradoxical holiday present us with an intractable series of what-ifs, straight out of “The Man in the High Castle” or “Inglourious Basterds.” As far as we can tell, in struggling to separate truth from legend, there were people of good will among both the Pilgrims and the native peoples of Massachusetts, who did not foresee a future in which one people would wage wars of conquest from coast to coast, while the other would be relentlessly persecuted and dispossessed. Did things have to turn out as they did? In some alternate stream of reality, did America end up more like the bicultural society imagined by the Quaker leader William Penn and the great Lenape chief Tamanend, who both died believing they had put the territorial enmity between their respective peoples to rest?
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There’s no answer to questions like those, and also no point pretending that what happened in North America was all that different from the pattern of exploration, conquest and colonization repeated all over the globe. Sometimes American exceptionalism can be found on the left as well as the right, in the claim that our history of genocide, slavery, racism and imperialism is uniquely appalling and renders the other, better stuff – the preamble to the Declaration and the Gettysburg Address, Louis Armstrong and Elvis Presley, Huck and Jim’s flight to freedom and Nick Carraway’s final reverie, the opening scenes of “Goodfellas” and “Do the Right Thing” – irrelevant or worse.
American history is a few panels in a large and bloody tapestry, and is entirely bad enough as such without beating our breasts and declaring our nation the worst of the worst, the elect among the damned. (Max Weber’s observation that all Americans are Protestants, whether they realize it or not, never stops being true.) You can understand where that overreaction comes from when you consider the grotesque delusions that still fuel so much of American cultural discourse, informing the decisions of roughly half the voting public and roughly one and three-quarters of our two political parties.
When Donald Trump and Ted Cruz and the other raving lunatics and epic hypocrites in the Republican Party – to call those people “clowns,” one of the clichés of this cycle, is an insult to an ancient and honorable art — announce that our God-given greatness and divine destiny have been tarnished by sinister forces, but can be restored through further enriching the rich, widening the scope of endless war and victimizing the weakest among us, Democrats offer no clear and consistent answer. The best they can do, generally speaking, is to mumble that yes, we do have a God-given destiny of some kind, if we can only figure out what it is. It might turn out not to be about blowing up villages on the other side of the world and being incredibly mean to poor people and reverting to feudal oligarchy! Or at least not about doing those things quite so enthusiastically. Why is anyone surprised that in the popular imagination Democrats are perceived as spineless? The problem is not their policies, which are reasonably coherent if often disappointing; it’s their strategy of responding to religious hysteria and mass delusion by agreeing with it a little. In Salem Village, they’d have been the people arguing that we must be judicious in determining which of these girls really had sexual congress with the Horned One.
But I’m not seeking to fulfill the tradition of the Thanksgiving Day journalistic thumb-sucker by telling you that we should all be grateful not to be the worst country in the history of the world, or that we should celebrate the good kind of patriotism, as epitomized by Martin Luther King Jr. or Bruce Springsteen or whomever, and reject the bad. I am in fact profoundly grateful that our culture is still robust enough that we can make fun of Donald Trump all day long while being reasonably sure he won’t end up sending us all to internment camps. (I won’t say 100 percent sure; beneath our mockery runs an obvious undercurrent of fear.) Those things are distinctly better than the alternatives, but they don’t quite seem like enough in this year of deepening crisis and evident peril. Where I do see some reason to be grateful is in the renewal of our painful struggle with American history itself, a struggle that has been coterminous with the American project since at least the middle of the 19th century and has now reached a critical phase.
Everything about this cultural and political moment speaks to that struggle. I have repeatedly argued that the Republican Party, intentionally or otherwise, is pursuingapproximately the same goals as the Islamic terrorists they despise so fervently and have vowed to annihilate. Both groups think democracy has gone rotten, and was probably never a good idea in the first place. They would like to replace it with a godlier and more masculine system with a firmer backbone and sharper teeth. It is equally true, and less controversial, that the Republicans dream of rolling back American reality to some halcyon past. This is customarily understood as an imaginary version of the 1950s, with sock hops and stay-at-home moms and all-white suburban neighborhoods and the total invisibility of immigrants and homosexuals. But that’s only part of the picture: Republicans would not like the actual 1950s, when taxes on the wealthiest Americans reached all-time highs and domestic spending on infrastructure and social programs went into overdrive, in an effort to fend off the Communist menace.
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