Are
We Slow Learners?
by
William Marina
by William Marina
“That’s
not the way the world really works anymore. . . . We’re an empire
now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re
studying that reality judiciously, as you will we’ll
act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too,
and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors .
. . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”
~
A senior Bush administration adviser, 2002
A large number of Americans believe we are an "Exception
to History”; brighter, richer, and just all around more Providentially
Blessed, even when it appears this year with respect to wars, hurricanes,
and just plain corruption and lies, that our leader may have lost
the "Mandate
of Heaven."
It may be that we are just, as a People, simply slow learners!
Even
if you teach all of the people all of the time, some folks just
don't learn very quickly, that the top of the stove is often hot
to the touch. It appears, at times, that we even elevate one of
these slow learners to the presidency, in order to better teach
the rest of us by his example!
Anna Quinlan reminds us that we've been through this whole scenario
before.
A historian might suggest to her, actually, this is at least the
third time, and maybe, we have to hope this is not like baseball
3 strikes and you're out and that we will have to
wait as long as the Chicago White Sox did, to have a shot at a World
Series again.
In the Philippines over a century ago, we killed and tortured at
least several hundred thousand Filipinos, although it may have been
many more, losing a mere 4,000 Providentially Blessed American soldiers
who gave their lives for the Empire. This "success"
was due in great part because the Filipinos had few guns, having
often to use bolo knives, to face American rifles, machine guns
and artillery. Like the Vietnamese, the Iraqis do have guns and
explosives!
While we were still diddling around setting up a "regime
change" Protectorate in Cuba, we overwhelmed the Filipino revolutionaries,
and set up a government of the old, Spanish Comprador elite, that
men like Gov. Gen. William Howard Taft out in the Islands, to use
today's terminology, would surely have proclaimed a great success
in "Nation Building."
Those Americans who believe that, might read the five-part series
by Pedro Escobar in the Asia Times some months ago, entitled "The
Sick Man of Asia," detailing the corruption and instability in those
Islands today. Apparently, Nations don't stay Built! A good case
could be made that this is about where things would be if we had
simply left them with Spain. Most likely, with a little help somewhere
along the line from the Japanese, they would have freed themselves
from the Spanish anyway.
Perhaps America needs a new Motto: "Those who refuse to learn from
History are doomed to repeat it."
Actually, at this point, our nation is bankrupt, not only morally,
but financially as well, and that inflationary
trend was evident several decades ago.
A number of historians, going back to the ancient empires of old,
have remarked on a seeming 300-year cycle of the high tide of imperial
power. At this point, what remains, is to speculate whether our
Empire
will even make it into that less than charming circle!
November
1, 2005
William
Marina [send him mail]
is Professor Emeritus in History at Florida Atlantic University,
a Research Fellow of the Independent
Institute, Oakland, CA, and Executive Director of the Marina-Huerta
Educational Foundation. He lives in Asheville, NC. This article
originally appeared on the History News
Network.
Copyright
© 2005 History News Network
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Marina Archives
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