Exceptional Us
by John Liechty
by
John Liechty
"I don’t mind the human race," begins Kenneth Rexroth’s
poem Discrimination. But soon admits: "I shouldn’t care
to see my own sister marry one. Even if she loved him, think of
the children." Many people share such reservations towards
Homo sapiens, who has such an ironic air of misnomer about him.
Homo bellicosus, perhaps… Homo screwloosus … but Homo sapiens?
Wise Man??
Mark Twain’s take on the situation is typically arch: "Man
was made at the end of the week’s work, when God was tired."
Yes, we’ve come up with Lao Tzu, Bach, Rumi, St. Francis, Etta James,
Una Muno, Maimonides, Shackleton, and Shakespeare. But then there’s
the B List: Jim Jones, Stalin, Idi Amin, Barry Manilow, Judas Iscariot,
Donald Rumsfeld… A case for human preeminence can be made, but with
the B List allowed as evidence, it cannot be won.
And yes, there’s the Our-Brain-Is-Bigger-Than-Yours argument, which
our species so often manages to make sound like a schoolyard taunt.
But I don’t see what it really has to do with anything. By big-brain
logic, why shouldn’t the apex of creation award go to the elephant
for its trunk, or the chameleon for its tongue, or the cockroach
for its resilience, or the ant for its abundance, or the mandrill
for its backside? Big brains are fine, I guess, but does having
one really make the experience of life vastly superior to that of,
say, a green turtle or a head louse or an indigo bunting?
"Of course it does!" reflexively growl all but eight
of the 6.6 billion Homo sapiens currently subdividing, as inequitably
as can be gotten away with, the crust of this planet. Upon which
we must trot out Mark Twain again: "God’s noblest work? Man.
Who found it out? Man."
The notion of human exceptionalism is closely related to its sub-strain,
the notion of national exceptionalism, boiling down in our case
to: "God’s noblest nation? America. Who found it out? America."
Are we special? Undeniably. Ben Franklin, Andrew Carnegie, Sojourner
Truth, Edward Hopper, Marilyn Monroe… Point Reyes, the Golden Gate
Bridge, the 1968 Tigers, the Chrysler Building… But enough lists.
Are we different? Yes. Are we unique? In many ways, yes. But are
we extra-special? Are we extra-extra-special? Are we immeasurably
better than the French? Are we, in the Clinton Administration word,
indispensable? That’s what the zealous proponent of American
exceptionalism wants to hear. Not just that we’re special – that
we’re specialer than anyone else in history. Our special is bigger
than your special.
"The United States does not torture," a now-discarded
President assured us in 2005. We knew it wasn’t true, we knew that
the Bush government was very possibly torturing someone even as
the denial was spoken. But we nodded our heads anyway, because overriding
whatever else we knew was the fond notion that we’re special. Torture
is something the evildoers do. We might indulge in a little "water-boarding"
or "walling" now and then, but that’s different and as
government lawyers went to a lot of trouble to discover, legal too.
It could result in kidney failure or insanity or death, but it wasn’t
the crude stuff the bad guys practice. How could it be? "America
does not torture," a fresh President declared in February of
this year, declining to note that we pay client states to do it
for us. Masters of what Orwell termed doublethink, we pretend not
to notice.
A few days ago, Stephen Green of Midland, Texas, was sentenced
to life imprisonment for the 2006 rape and murder of a 14-year-old
Iraqi girl, Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi. Green also killed the
girl’s mother, father, and five-year-old sister, disgracing himself,
the uniform he wore, and one would have thought his country. Yet
one of the attorneys on the case found occasion to doublethink glory
from disgrace: "This trial represents some of the most important
principles of our Constitution and our democracy in action. The
decision of how justice would be best served was left to the people."
Ah, a special ending, after all. The Will of the People! Democracy
in Action! Justice Served! While it may be worth applauding that
a war criminal has been tried and is going to prison, let’s recall
that a number of war criminals are still at large. (The most high
profile among them are busy with their memoirs.) And let’s at least
acknowledge that our principles had as much to do with sending Stephen
Green to Iraq as with sending him to prison – and plenty to do with
sending Abeer al-Janabi, and how many like her, to an early grave.
The Iraq War has been a sordid business from day one. Where was
Democracy in Action when the serpent was hatched?
Through it all, a tone-deaf choir of American exceptionalists has
remained center stage, like preschoolers chanting that venerable
lyric: "I am special, I am special. Look at me! Look at me!"
The tune has long ceased to entertain the ears of the world, and
is even starting to grate on domestic ears. The choir is uncommonly
persistent, but perhaps it is time to expand the repertoire or retreat
to the wings.
May
30, 2009
John
Liechty [send him mail]
currently teaches in Muscat, Oman.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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