How
“Both Sides” Forge U.S. Supremacy
The Nationalistic Hypocrisies of “Violence”
and “Free Speech”
By Sam Husseini
August 18, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Many have focused on President Donald
Trump’s statements on Charlottesville
condemning the “violence” from “both sides”.
Which is understandable, since the killing
of Heather Heyer and overwhelming violence
came from white supremacists. But virtually
no one has scrutinized the first half of his
remarks: Trump criticizing the “violence” of
others.
How is
it that Trump is designated to be in a position
of judging the perpetrators of violence? The
U.S. government is regularly bombing a number of
countries. Just last week, Trump threatened
North Korea with nuclear destruction in
unusually blunt language — “fire and fury”
rather than the typical Obama administration
veiled nuclear attack code lingo “all options
are on the table”.
On Monday, the same day Trump read a scripted
condemnation of white supremacist violence,
Airwars.org
reported that in Syria: “Marwa,
Mariam and Ahmad Mazen died with their mother
and 19 other civilians in a likely Coalition
strike at Raqqa.”
Children killed with their mother in
International Coalition forces
shelling on... August 15, 2017. The
children Marwa, Mariam and Ahmad
Mazen ... |
You’d
be hard pressed to find a “news” story about
them. That’s the concern with the effects of
“violence” when it emanates from the U.S.
government.
But the threats and use of violence are not new,
nor is the hypocrisy. As he was ordering the
ongoing bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, President
Bill Clinton took time out of his schedule
to address the
shooting at Columbine High School: “We must do
more to reach out to our children and teach them
to express their anger and to resolve their
conflicts with words, not weapons.”
Such
outbreaks of domestic political violence are
used not as openings for introspection about
longstanding violence in U.S. society, but for
rallying cries to uphold alleged virtues of the
nation. The recent attacks are “repugnant to
everything we hold dear as Americans” Trump
claims.
Since
we live “under law and under the
Constitution…responding to hate with love,
division with unity, and violence with an
unwavering resolve for justice. No matter the
color of our skin, we all live under the same
laws, we all salute the same great flag, and we
are all made by the same almighty God.”
The words Trump uttered seemed to echo Saint
Augustine. Charles Avila in
Ownership: Early Christian Teaching,
outlines Augustine’s beliefs: “The Creator, who
alone is Absolute Owner, did not make us human
beings so many ‘islands,’ without any relation
to each other, but one human family, ‘made from
one mud’ and sustained ‘on one earth.’…We enjoy
the same natural conditions: ‘born under one
law, living by one light, breathing one air and
dying one death.'”
Thus,
what seemingly originated as a universal
theological admonition — to attack the notion of
private property no less — has been perverted
into a narrow nationalist one with universalist
trappings. It simultaneously seems to condemn
violence while actually facilitating it.
Nor is
this new, either. during the presidency of Bill
Clinton, he ordered up an “Initiative on Race”.
It’s largely forgotten because its primary goal
wasn’t actually improving relations between
different ethnic groups. Its goal was noted in
its title: “One America in the 21st Century”.
Not “Finally Overcoming Racism.” Not “Towards an
America of Equality.”
National cohesion is the driving concern here.
How can we make these differing ethnicities get
along well enough to ensure that this stays one
nation is a question elites must ask themselves.
See my piece at the time: “‘One
America’ — To what Ends?”
There’s
a tightrope being walked here. There’s a
functionality to the “debate” between “both
sides”. The system requires a great deal of
tension to keep people in their partisan boxes.
The main thing that each political faction has
going for it is the hatred towards the other.
But
there’s the threat that it could reach a
threshold that tears at national unity, which is
why you get Terry McAuliffe and other political
figures making Trump-like brazen contradictory
statements, pleading for unity one minute and
denouncing white supremacists as being repugnant
to American values the next, wholly unworthy of
engagement.
The
Democratic Party has to offer people something
more than Russia-bashing, and that something
seems to be opposition to a war that the party
of Jefferson was on the losing side of.
Many
were aghast at Trump’s remarks about Washington
and Jefferson: “So this week, it is Robert E.
Lee. I noticed that Stonewall Jackson is coming
down. I wonder, is it George Washington next
week? And is it Thomas Jefferson the week after?
You know, you really do have to ask yourself,
where does it stop?”
If we
do honest history, it doesn’t stop. That’s the
point. It condemns most of the political class.
And would do so to most of current political
class. But that’s not a conclusion many in the
political class are interested in. A line can
certainly be drawn from Washington to Lee, as
Confederates frequently argued.
As
historian
Gerald Horne has
argued, the
U.S. Revolutionary War was largely a war to
ensure the continuation of
slavery. Part
of the “genius” of the U.S. was the
“unification” of many non-black and non-native
people as “white”, including southern and
eastern Europeans and Arabs. So you have a large
immigration pool to forge the nation.
Nor of
course is slavery the only crime. It’s perhaps
focused on to at least some extent in our
current political discourse because it’s the
main aspect of the imperial project that
created, rather than destroyed, a major domestic
constituency that was a victim of it. Native
Americans are not a major domestic constituency
because, unlike black folks in the U.S., their
ancestors were not chained and brought to U.S.
shores as slaves, but were driven out, killed en
mass or made to die or be confined and
marginalized.
And that project predated the formal creation of
the United States. Kent A. MacDougall notes in “Empire—American
as Apple Pie”
in Monthly Review that “George
Washington called the nascent nation ‘a rising
empire.’ John Adams said it was ‘destined’ to
overspread all North America. And Thomas
Jefferson viewed it as ‘the nest from which all
America, North and South, is to be peopled.'”
Of
course, Trump isn’t raising Washington and
Jefferson to broaden the critique of the crimes
of white supremacy, but to try to limit it. This
is somewhat similar to when Bill O’Reilly said
in an interview with Trump that Putin is “a
killer” — Trump replied: “There are a lot of
killers. You think our country’s so innocent?”
Trump thus becomes the only honest person on the
national stage, but largely not for the purpose
of positive change. He’s using what is mostly a
left wing critique to entrench the
establishment, which is similar to what
“neocons” have done.
Trump’s statements, understated as they were,
about current U.S. government violence were
roundly condemned by most of the political
class.
CNN’s “chief national security correspondent”
Jim Sciutto
called them “relativistic” — when they were they
are the exact opposite. What’s relativistic is
condemning the actions of others while approving
of similar actions by one’s “own side”. Of
course, Trump is relativistic when he condemns
the violence from “many sides” in
Charlottesville.
So we
have two relativistic dead ends: Trump “vs” the
rest of the establishment. One victim for the
time being is people’s brain cells who have to
endure and try to parse through the constant
machinations.
Comments like those about U.S. violence or the
history of Washington give Trump a legitimacy of
sorts. The establishment media effectively keep
the microphone away from anyone else who would
note such defining facts, while giving reams of
coverage to Trump. He effectively becomes the
leading “dissident” while also being the head
inquisitor. This discourse effectively immunizes
the establishment from meaningful change or even
dialogue.
Contrast Trump’s realistic statement with what
passes for dissent on “Democracy Now”, which
recently reverentially
interviewed Ta-Nehisi Coates
of the once somewhat dignified journal The
Atlantic. Coates stated: “The Civil War was
the most lethal war in American history. The
casualties in the Civil War amount to more than
all other wars—all other American wars combined.
More people died in that war than World War II,
World War I, Vietnam, etc.”
“People.”
Martin
Luther King warned African Americans were
“integrating into a burning house.” Robert E.
Lee said of blacks in the U.S.: “The painful
discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for
their instruction as a race, & I hope will
prepare & lead them to better things.” Many have
seemingly accepted such instruction.
A path
for “acceptance” by the establishment for
African Americans, immigrants and others is to
kiss the ring of U.S. supremacy.
This insular discussion of “both sides” in the
U.S. context frequently renders the non-U.S.
“other” even more expendable. As I wrote in
2015: “How
#AllLivesMatter and #BlackLivesMatter Can
Devalue Life“:
Both sides limit who they mean by “lives.”
They effectively exclude the victims of the
U.S.’s highest officials. When most people
use #BlackLivesMatter, they seem to be
saying that all black U.S. lives matter when
taken unlawfully by the government. And when
most people who use #AllLivesMatter use it,
they seem to be saying all U.S. lives matter
when taken at the hands of police
authorities — not just black U.S. lives. But
the formulation effectively excludes the
lives of millions of people who U.S.
officials have deemed expendable for reasons
of state.
Coates
also claimed: “What you have to understand is,
Donald Trump’s very essence, his very identity,
is the anti-Obama. … I mean, there was a piece,
I think, like just last week in BuzzFeed. It was
talking about, you know, Trump’s foreign policy.
And his basic deal is: ‘Is Obama for it? Well,
I’m against it.'”
No
Advertising
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Grants
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Is
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Media
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This
shows remarkable ignorance or deceit about the
continuity of U.S. foreign policy in recent
decades, which obviously extends to include
Obama and Trump. This is especially the case for
someone who lives outside the United States.
Certainly, the branding and rhetoric is
different, but it’s supposed to be the job of
“public intellectuals” to see beyond that, not
calcify it.
There
are many ramifications of the nationalistic
blinders that are dutifully imposed by so many.
Take the discussion of the ACLU’s role in
defending the white supremacists marching. The
“both sides” here are: We should care so much
about bigotry and violence that we should
curtail the right of gun wielding white
supremacists to march wherever they want. The
other side is: Our devotion to free speech is so
great that we should even allow this.
They both ring hollow to me. It is not at all
clear that what is happening will root out
structural racism; it has been at the level of
symbols, which is where the establishment wants
it to remain contained. Nor do I see a serious
commitment to freedom of speech being displayed
by the ACLU and others, as serious infringement
of freedom of speech occur with hardly an
objection. Partisan establishment apparatchiks
dominate media at virtually every level, with
government facilitation.
Google,
Facebook, Twitter
and others have effectively taken over much of
the town square and are increasingly skewing
what speech gets heard. Such is the nature of
corporate power, backed by the state, right now.
The likely “collateral damage” of such “debates”
will be critics of U.S. empire. Consider that as
the
national ACLU seemed to be backtracking from
their position,
the California ACLU put out a statement that
read in part “First
Amendment does not protect people who incite or
engage in violence.”
Who is going to be the likely victim of this?
White supremacists — or someone who explains why
Hezbollah might want to lob missiles at Israel?
The line that the California ACLU seeks to draw
would seemingly ironically lynch John Brown,
whose actual execution was overseen by none
other than Robert E. Lee in blue uniform.
Twitter
suspended hundreds of thousands of accounts last
year allegedly linked to ISIS,
with hardly a word of protest.
Hezbollah’s Al-Manar television channel —
possibly the most anti-ISIS outlet going — is
banned in the U.S. without outcry; with barely a
note.
The
very discussion about “hate groups” is perverse.
The entire political culture in the U.S. lives
off of hate. The pro Hillary Clinton rhetoric is
“Love Trumps Hate”, but Clinton, like Trump,
feeds off hate. There certainly are explicitly
white supremacist groups. And there can be some
distinction made between them and the merely
implicitly structurally racist establishment.
But the Democratic and Republican Parties would
implode in a minute if it were not for the
hatred of the other.
What’s
needed is that freedom of speech triumph and in
today’s world it’s not clear if that is
compatible with the nation state and corporate
power in their current construct. In its present
form and use, the internet is ceasing to be
“world wide web” — it is constricted in a myriad
of ways by national boundaries and unaccountable
corporate diktat that need to be questioned if
not obliterated in our contemporary world.
The
taking down of Confederate monuments poses a
some opportunity — a groundswell of democratic
grassroots action could happen. But the tearing
down needs to be built upon. In Baltimore, faced
with the prospect of activists taking down
Confederate statues, city officials abruptly
arranged for their overnight disappearance.
Local artists put a sculpture of an African
American woman atop the pedestal in their place.
This
hints at a greater solution to the immediate
controversy over Confederate monuments. I recall
the first time I saw, or at least comprehended,
a Confederate memorial — with Lee or some other
general atop a horse, I think in New Orleans. I
thought the solution would be not to remove
them, but to build around them. A tree could
hover above with strange fruit hanging down, for
example.
This
would diminish the “beauty” that Donald Trump
sees in the Confederate statues while
acknowledging the history, both in its illusion
as to what it pretends to depict — and the
reality of the selective erection of such
statues.
Indeed, perhaps we need more — not fewer —
monuments to the Civil War, to all wars. If done
right, they would actually be monuments for
peace. Consider
the nature of war, the consequences, the
actual reality of mangled corpses beneath
the “great men” atop their horses.
But there are perils at every turn. When the
U.S. Treasury decided to put Harriet Tubman on
the $20 bill last year, many welcomed it. But it
seemed to me to be a subtle but real step to
co-opting the legacy of the Underground Railroad
to one that could be used to help justify
“humanitarian interventionism” — ie, U.S.
militarism with some bogus moral pretext
attached. That is, the language of the U.S.
Civil War could be used to “free” people around
the world as the State Department sees fit, as
now with
Venezuela. As
Simon Bolivar said: “The United States seems
destined by Providence to plague America with
torments in the name of freedom.”
Ironically, some denouncing Trump’s “fascist”
proclivities have taken refuge in the actions of
corporate bosses who have resigned from
the American Manufacturing Council that Trump
launched earlier this year. As
Noam Chomskyand
others have long noted, corporate structure is
totalitarian. The saviors here are part of the
threat. Perhaps doubly so since the Council was
a corporate-government cooperative entity.
The
pretexts and posturing run throughout public
discourse in the U.S., as it’s dominated by
apparatchiks around Trump and around the
Democratic Party. Only an ever vigilant parsing
of the deceits and actions that are rooted in
principles and a sense of the global commons
will see us through.
Special thanks to Berkley Bragg.
Sam Husseini
is founder of
VotePact.org,
which advocates principled left-right
cooperation to break the duopoly. He’s also the
founder of
CompassRoses.org,
an art project to make apparent the one world we
inhabit.
This article was first published by
Counterpunch
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.