'Rising' to Empire, Falling From Grace
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: Steven
Pinker’s Statist Gospel
"If we
have to use force, it is because we are America. We are the indispensable
nation. We stand tall. We see further into the future."
This panegyric
to what is commonly called "American Exceptionalism" could
have been composed by any of a number of GOP-aligned media figures,
such as Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Mark Levin, or their legions
of local imitators. Those
words were actually spoken by Madeleine Albright in 1998,
when she was the Clinton administration’s Secretary of State. She
was defending the U.S. role in enforcing an embargo on Iraq in the
aftermath of the first Gulf War in 1991.
Albright had
memorably addressed that issue in a different fashion three years
earlier during
an interview on the CBS program 60 Minutes.
"We have
heard that a half million children have died," observed interviewer
Leslie Stahl. "I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima.
And, you know, is the price worth it?"
Without challenging
the statistics, or displaying even a tremor of remorse, Albright
replied: "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price
– we think the price is worth it."
By reconciling
Albright’s statements we learn that when "we have to"
impose policies that result in the avoidable death, through starvation
and disease, of hundreds of thousands of children, "it is because
we are America.... We stand tall. We see further into the future."
For some reason,
the self-styled seers and visionaries who defended the Iraqi embargo
didn’t foresee how that policy, coupled with decades of U.S. meddling
in the Middle East, would cultivate and nurture the seeds that bore
murderous fruit on September 11, 2001.
To ordinary
people not blessed with Albright’s oracular insight, it seemed obvious
that some variety of murderous blowback would be the inevitable
product of a foreign policy that featured deliberate mass starvation
punctuated with bombing raids. However, the custodians of permissible
opinion have decreed that history began on the morning of 9/11 –
that nothing the U.S. government did prior to that date has any
organic connection to the motives and actions of those who carried
out the attack (at least as that attack is described in the officially
sanctioned narrative). To suggest that Washington’s policies had
some relationship to anti-American sentiment in the Middle East
is to commit a grave blasphemy against American Exceptionalism –
the official creed of the ruling Establishment, irrespective of
party.
What makes
America exceptional, from this perspective, is not the blessings
we have been allotted by Providence, or the individual liberties
promised by our country’s founding documents. America is exceptional
because of the power of the government that rules us, as manifest
in its ability to kill people in distant lands.
That view,
once again, is not limited to bellicose left-wing internationalists
like Albright. On several occasions, Rush Limbaugh – who, like fellow
late-blooming militarist Dick Cheney, had "other priorities"
when he was of draft age during Vietnam – has related an anecdote
about witnessing a military fly-over during a Super Bowl in the
1980. Aroused by the spectacle to the point of rapture, Limbaugh
(by his own account) was moved to exclaim, "How can you see
something like that, and be a liberal who hates your country?"
Offensive as
it would be to both Limbaugh and Albright, a compelling case can
be made that their reflexive militarism is a repudiation of our
country’s founding principles. The Framers of the Constitution,
painfully familiar with the uses to which large military establishments
could be put, never intended for the united States of America (in
Congress assembled) to have a standing, centralized army. While
they did have the lamentable intention of creating a consolidated
central government – and pretty clear ambitions for territorial
expansion to the West – they did not entertain grandiose ambitions
of policing the world.
The most admirable
members of the Founding Generation understood that love of country
was not measured by one’s enthusiasm for government-inflicted bloodshed.
That’s why Washington’s Farewell Address, while emphasized the need
for both adequate provision for defense and the compelling necessity
to avoid entanglement in the affairs of other countries.
"Wherever
the standard of freedom and Independence has been or shall be unfurled,
there will her heart, her benedictions and her prayers be,"
observed John
QuincyAdams in his 1821 Independence Day Address. "But
she goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy. She is the
well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion
and vindicator only of her own. She well knows that by once enlisting
under other banners than her own, were they even the banners of
foreign independence, she would involve herself beyond the power
of extrication, in all the wars of interest and intrigue, of individual
avarice, envy, and ambition, which assume the colors and usurp the
standard of freedom. The fundamental maxims of her policy would
insensibly change from liberty to force.... She might become
the dictatress of the world. She would be no longer the ruler of
her own spirit." (Emphasis added.)
Unlike the
supposedly far-seeing Madeleine Albright – who couldn’t foretell
how her arrogant endorsement of genocide in 1995 would help catalyze
the enmity that led to the devastating 9/11 assault six years later
– Adams displayed uncanny foresight in describing the degenerate
state of American "patriotism" today, 190 years after
he delivered his warning against interventionism: "Patriots"
today celebrate force, not liberty.
Today, what
Adams and his generation called "Independence Day" is
simply called the Fourth of July. Rather than being a celebration
of individual liberty, the "Fourth" has become an annual
orgy of militarism, often involving saturation-level barrages of
propaganda in the form of televised war "movie marathons"
and military parades that wouldn’t be out of place in Pyongyang.
Lest it be
forgotten, Independence Day originally commemorated an act of insurrection
against the "legitimate" government – an incomparably
powerful globe-spanning empire on which the sun never set. The men
who committed that act of rebellion would probably consider it perverse
that they are "honored" by public rituals extolling the
imperial power of a government that is more corrupt and oppressive
– by several orders of magnitude – than that of George III.
America was
unique because of its origins in principled rebellion against lawless
rule, and because of a set of founding political instruments that,
while imperfect, did provide individuals some protection against
government aggression. Those traits that are typically celebrated
as tokens of "American Exceptionalism" – an interventionist
foreign policy; a Chief Executive with unqualified power to kill,
imprison, and torture people at whim; a badly overgrown military
establishment – are, in a specific sense, un-American.
A commercial
republic in which both citizens and their elected representatives
are governed by law, and individual liberty is regarded as the highest
political good, would be truly exceptional. A sprawling empire ruled
by a corrupt oligarchy that plunders both the national treasury
and the resources of distant lands is actually quite commonplace.
To catch a
glimpse of the America that could have been, it's useful to pay
a brief visit to the period between the end of the War for Independence
and the mercantilist
counter-revolution in Philadelphia that abolished the Articles
of Confederation and created a more centralized constitutional Union.
In 1782, a
year after the British
surrender at Yorktown and one year before the Treaty
of Paris finalized American independence, a former French Lieutenant
named J. Hector Saint John de Crevecoeur composed a series of essays
entitled Letters
from an American Farmer. Six decades before Alexis
de Tocqueville published Democracy
in America, Crevecoeur devoted his considerable literary
gifts to an examination of the question: "What, then, is the
American, this new man?"
Unlike Europe,
a continent plagued by entrenched elites, there were "no aristocratical
families, no courts, no kings, no bishops, no ecclesiastical dominion,
no invisible power giving to a few a very visible
one" in America, he wrote. The inhabitants of this new-born
confederacy of constitutional republics were "a people of cultivators,
scattered over an immense territory … united by the silken bands
of mild government, all respecting the laws, without dreading
their power, because they are equitable." (Emphasis added.)
At its best,
the "mild" government to which Crevecoeur referred was self-government;
it was the spontaneous cooperation of productive people, rather
than the imposed order of a parasitical elite. This state of affairs
was hardly uniform throughout the confederation, of course, but
that it existed at all was something truly inspiring.
On "Evacuation
Day," November 25, 1783, British
troops ended their occupation of New York. In comments recorded
by the New York Packet newspaper, a departing British officer
expressed a bemused admiration for the Americans, who distinguished
themselves by their unwillingness to be ruled:
"Here,
in this city, we have had an army for more than seven years, and
yet we could not keep the peace of it. Scarcely a day or night passed
without tumults. Now we are [leaving] everything is in quietness
and safety. These Americans are a curious, original people; they
know how to govern themselves, but nobody else can govern them."
The promise
of the War for Independence was the establishment of a system of
individual liberty protected by law – and, at least at that early
stage, that promise was being kept. That genuinely exceptional America
earned the admiration of the world – not because its government
possessed the power to murder people by remote control, or annihilate
entire continents in a nuclear paroxysm, but rather because its
people were free and independent, and its society – although displaying
all of the imperfections to which fallen man is heir – aspired to
be governed by the Golden Rule.
Tragically,
"our" government’s rise to global power has meant our country’s
fall from grace.
Reprinted
with permission from Pro
Libertate.
October
27, 2011
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2011 William Norman Grigg
The
Best of William Norman Grigg
|