By James Rothenberg
August 27, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Dyed-in-the-wool
patriots know that the United States of America is
God’s gift to the world. Policymakers have risen the
story to doctrinal status. It’s referred to as
American Exceptionalism, and it basically means if
we say it or do it, it’s ok.
It’s a nice thing to be backed up with this
doctrine when you have ambitious plans for the rest
of the world. And nobody else has it. Only the
United States of America. In fact, the rest of the
world can’t even imagine having a doctrine like it,
but it doesn’t doubt that we act like we have it.
Is there a plausible explanation for this widely
asserted doctrine? In other words, taken seriously
as an idea, what, in the American historical
experience, as distinguished from that of other
states, could account for this difference?*
The argument in support begins with the country’s
founding documents and the beautiful ideals
expressed in them. Much effort has been put into the
manufacture of a steady, upward national trajectory
from these revolutionary ideals, thereby idealizing
the present as well.
The explanatory power in this case is limited in
that it can only account for things that do not
contradict the story it is attempting to prove. This
is bound to be unsatisfying for anyone investigating
the links from past to present who finds a great
deal of contradiction. An opposing view to the
utilitarian version that is sold to Americans can be
argued from the same standpoint, that of American
Exceptionalism, to yield a non-utilitarian version
with historical relevance.
What makes us exceptional, and what has it led
to? The United States is the only western country
where slavery was legal from the day it was founded.
The U.S. republic was founded in 1776, with legal
slavery. As just one alternate example, the French
republic was founded in 1789, the same historical
era as the U.S., but without legal slavery. After
more than 200 years of evolution, the two states are
quite different. In two areas of public policy,
France has federal universal health care, a legal
communist party, the Parti Communist Francaise,
and a large, and at least until the 1990’s,
communist industrial union, the Confédération
Générale du Travail.*
As an example of how slavery, as a historical
experience, may affect the evolution of a state, we
can cite the absence of universal medical care in
the United States.*
In slavery, the slave is the property of the
owner and the maintenance of the slave, as property,
is the responsibility of the owner and,
specifically, not the state. In the evolution of
such a state away from slavery, where the slave
evolves into an employee and the slave owner into an
employer, the slave owner’s provision of medical
care to slaves would naturally evolve into the
employer providing medical care as a fringe benefit
to employees. In such a state, evolved from slavery,
it would be alien for the state to provide universal
medical care to its citizens.*
Another U.S. historical experience which can be
traced to its evolution from slavery is the violent
U.S. reaction to communism. The slave era analogue
would be the slave owner’s violent reaction to the
pre-Civil War abolition movement.*
Going on, the slave owner had to be deeply
suspicious of the slave because of the natural
resistance toward being a captive. Escape was always
a possibility. Group activity was especially
suspicious as it might signal rebellion. Slaves
either accepted their complete subordination to the
master or were dealt harsh punishment. Since they
were worth more alive than dead, beatings had to be
administered with cost in mind.
With the end of legal slavery, the legal control
and punishment of the former slave population was
passed onto local, state, and federal enforcement
agencies. The evolution of this is an outsized
criminal system (by far the world’s largest)
notoriously known for incarcerating a strikingly
large number of black prisoners. In a bizarre echo
of the past, it is economically more sound to keep
these prisoners alive than to execute them.
The slavery experience was not one of shared
economic interest. To a black under slavery, there
was no economic interest outside of the tightly
controlled owner/slave relationship. The owner’s
economy was the slave’s economy. Any question of
“economic interest” belonged strictly to the owner.
In transitioning from an owner/slave relationship
to an employer/employee relationship, the employer
takes on the role of the owner in regard to the
economic interest of the employee. Is it
inexplicable why so many people vote against their
economic interest? Not if it’s seen as today’s
capitalists enjoying the same mastery over the
economic system that former slave owners once
enjoyed. The modern wage earner in the U.S. has been
conditioned to accept the pay grade and to let
economics run as a matter of course. Today’s wage
earner has no economic interest…not that they can
see.
By having chosen as a starting point the same
year, 1776, but instead of building from a set of
professed ideals incorporated in founding documents
we build out from the corporeal reality of a slave
nation, a different trajectory emerges and American
Exceptionalism is turned on its head.
What country would dare birth itself in language
unsoothing to the ear? Better to watch what it does.
And by choosing another year, 1945, a chance
emerges.
In that year, the United States again marks
itself as the exception among nations in that it
becomes the only country to ever drop atomic bombs
on cities full of people. Hiroshima and Nagasaki
provided the experimental proof of what the blasts’
initial heat output — hotter than the surface of the
sun — could do to a city and its inhabitants, while
the Soviet Union learned the lengths a country could
go to when it no longer felt obliged to have “a
decent respect to the opinions of mankind”. Winston
Churchill was so moved by the weapon’s tangible
display that he suggested dropping one on the
Kremlin.
How has this exceptional national experience
affected the evolution of the United States in its
foreign policy, and how does it differ from
countries that have never dropped atomic bombs on
cities?
As a result of their defeat, Japan adopted a
pacifist constitution and Germany enacted very
liberal asylum laws. The United States went on to
develop more atomic bombs. It is a matter of U.S.
state policy to keep the nuclear threat alive in all
disputes. No other nuclear capable state threatens
their offensive use.
As a result of its established military
superiority, the United States expanded its base
footprint. Today it has overseas military bases in
every country that it commands, around 800 in 80
countries, comprising 90-95% of the world’s foreign
military bases. Put another way, the U.S. total of
overseas bases is 9-19 times more than all the rest
of the world’s countries combined.
The Soviet Union, the country that played the
greatest role in the defeat of Nazi Germany, didn’t
make it into the 21st century. With no more rivals
in sight, the United States pushed the NATO bloc
steadily east toward Russia. Now, with a real chance
at world domination, peaceful coexistence and
cooperation was not an option. Throughout all the
post WW2 years, the foreign invasions and
interventions never ceased, from Korea and Vietnam
to Iraq, Libya and Syria.
The U.S. is no longer restrained by international
laws and conventions or, for that matter, even U.S.
law. Having put idealistic notions aside, the world
is what the United States says it is. Indefinite
detention is what it says it is. Torture is what it
says it is. And planning, initiating, and waging a
war of aggression against a sovereign nation is what
it says it is.
The Declaration of Independence held certain
truths to be self-evident. Truth, as a concept, is
an intellectual tool useful in winning arguments,
and this is how it is used in the Declaration.
As seen from the perspective of a state evolved
from strict power concepts, truth is the weapon of
the weak. This explains why purveyors of American
Exceptionalism have no need to resort to it.
(Note) *These five paragraphs are taken from
a private communication with Otto Hinckelmann (otto5.com)
that provided the concept for the essay. The
author’s contribution is one of embellishment.
James
Rothenberg writes on U.S. social and
foreign policy.
jrothenberg3@gmail.com