America’s Blinders
By Howard Zinn
03/20/06 "The
Progressive" -- April 2006 Issue -- Now that most
Americans no longer believe in the war, now that they no longer
trust Bush and his Administration, now that the evidence of
deception has become overwhelming (so overwhelming that even the
major media, always late, have begun to register indignation),
we might ask: How come so many people were so easily fooled?
The question is important because it might help us understand
why Americans—members of the media as well as the ordinary
citizen—rushed to declare their support as the President was
sending troops halfway around the world to Iraq.
A small example of the innocence (or obsequiousness, to be more
exact) of the press is the way it reacted to Colin Powell’s
presentation in February 2003 to the Security Council, a month
before the invasion, a speech which may have set a record for
the number of falsehoods told in one talk. In it, Powell
confidently rattled off his “evidence”: satellite photographs,
audio records, reports from informants, with precise statistics
on how many gallons of this and that existed for chemical
warfare. The New York Times was breathless with admiration. The
Washington Post editorial was titled “Irrefutable” and declared
that after Powell’s talk “it is hard to imagine how anyone could
doubt that Iraq possesses weapons of mass destruction.”
It seems to me there are two reasons, which go deep into our
national culture, and which help explain the vulnerability of
the press and of the citizenry to outrageous lies whose
consequences bring death to tens of thousands of people. If we
can understand those reasons, we can guard ourselves better
against being deceived.
One is in the dimension of time, that is, an absence of
historical perspective. The other is in the dimension of space,
that is, an inability to think outside the boundaries of
nationalism. We are penned in by the arrogant idea that this
country is the center of the universe, exceptionally virtuous,
admirable, superior.
If we don’t know history, then we are ready meat for carnivorous
politicians and the intellectuals and journalists who supply the
carving knives. I am not speaking of the history we learned in
school, a history subservient to our political leaders, from the
much-admired Founding Fathers to the Presidents of recent years.
I mean a history which is honest about the past. If we don’t
know that history, then any President can stand up to the
battery of microphones, declare that we must go to war, and we
will have no basis for challenging him. He will say that the
nation is in danger, that democracy and liberty are at stake,
and that we must therefore send ships and planes to destroy our
new enemy, and we will have no reason to disbelieve him.
But if we know some history, if we know how many times
Presidents have made similar declarations to the country, and
how they turned out to be lies, we will not be fooled. Although
some of us may pride ourselves that we were never fooled, we
still might accept as our civic duty the responsibility to
buttress our fellow citizens against the mendacity of our high
officials.
We would remind whoever we can that President Polk lied to the
nation about the reason for going to war with Mexico in 1846. It
wasn’t that Mexico “shed American blood upon the American soil,”
but that Polk, and the slave-owning aristocracy, coveted half of
Mexico.
We would point out that President McKinley lied in 1898 about
the reason for invading Cuba, saying we wanted to liberate the
Cubans from Spanish control, but the truth is that we really
wanted Spain out of Cuba so that the island could be open to
United Fruit and other American corporations. He also lied about
the reasons for our war in the Philippines, claiming we only
wanted to “civilize” the Filipinos, while the real reason was to
own a valuable piece of real estate in the far Pacific, even if
we had to kill hundreds of thousands of Filipinos to accomplish
that.
President Woodrow Wilson—so often characterized in our history
books as an “idealist”—lied about the reasons for entering the
First World War, saying it was a war to “make the world safe for
democracy,” when it was really a war to make the world safe for
the Western imperial powers.
Harry Truman lied when he said the atomic bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima because it was “a military target.”
Everyone lied about Vietnam—Kennedy about the extent of our
involvement, Johnson about the Gulf of Tonkin, Nixon about the
secret bombing of Cambodia, all of them claiming it was to keep
South Vietnam free of communism, but really wanting to keep
South Vietnam as an American outpost at the edge of the Asian
continent.
Reagan lied about the invasion of Grenada, claiming falsely that
it was a threat to the United States.
The elder Bush lied about the invasion of Panama, leading to the
death of thousands of ordinary citizens in that country.
And he lied again about the reason for attacking Iraq in
1991—hardly to defend the integrity of Kuwait (can one imagine
Bush heartstricken over Iraq’s taking of
Kuwait?), rather to assert U.S. power in the oil-rich Middle
East.
Given the overwhelming record of lies told to justify wars, how
could anyone listening to the younger Bush believe him as he
laid out the reasons for invading Iraq? Would we not
instinctively rebel against the sacrifice of lives for oil?
A careful reading of history might give us another safeguard
against being deceived. It would make clear that there has
always been, and is today, a profound conflict of interest
between the government and the people of the United States. This
thought startles most people, because it goes against everything
we have been taught.
We have been led to believe that, from the beginning, as our
Founding Fathers put it in the Preamble to the Constitution, it
was “we the people” who established the new government after the
Revolution. When the eminent historian Charles Beard suggested,
a hundred years ago, that the Constitution represented not the
working people, not the slaves, but the slaveholders, the
merchants, the bondholders, he became the object of an indignant
editorial in The New York Times.
Our culture demands, in its very language, that we accept a
commonality of interest binding all of us to one another. We
mustn’t talk about classes. Only Marxists do that, although
James Madison, “Father of the Constitution,” said, thirty years
before Marx was born that there was an inevitable conflict in
society between those who had property and those who did not.
Our present leaders are not so candid. They bombard us with
phrases like “national interest,” “national security,” and
“national defense” as if all of these concepts applied equally
to all of us, colored or white, rich or poor, as if General
Motors and Halliburton have the same interests as the rest of
us, as if George Bush has the same interest as the young man or
woman he sends to war.
Surely, in the history of lies told to the population, this is
the biggest lie. In the history of secrets, withheld from the
American people, this is the biggest secret: that there are
classes with different interests in this country. To ignore
that—not to know that the history of our country is a history of
slaveowner against slave, landlord against tenant, corporation
against worker, rich against poor—is to render us helpless
before all the lesser lies told to us by people in power.
If we as citizens start out with an understanding that these
people up there—the President, the Congress, the Supreme Court,
all those institutions pretending to be “checks and balances”—do
not have our interests at heart, we are on a course towards the
truth. Not to know that is to make us helpless before determined
liars.
The deeply ingrained belief—no, not from birth but from the
educational system and from our culture in general—that the
United States is an especially virtuous nation makes us
especially vulnerable to government deception. It starts early,
in the first grade, when we are compelled to “pledge allegiance”
(before we even know what that means), forced to proclaim that
we are a nation with “liberty and justice for all.”
And then come the countless ceremonies, whether at the ballpark
or elsewhere, where we are expected to stand and bow our heads
during the singing of the “Star-Spangled Banner,” announcing
that we are “the land of the free and the home of the brave.”
There is also the unofficial national anthem “God Bless
America,” and you are looked on with suspicion if you ask why we
would expect God to single out this one nation—just 5 percent of
the world’s population—for his or her blessing.
If your starting point for evaluating the world around you is
the firm belief that this nation is somehow endowed by
Providence with unique qualities that make it morally superior
to every other nation on Earth, then you are not likely to
question the President when he says we are sending our troops
here or there, or bombing this or that, in order to spread our
values—democracy, liberty, and let’s not forget free
enterprise—to some God-forsaken (literally) place in the world.
It becomes necessary then, if we are going to protect ourselves
and our fellow citizens against policies that will be disastrous
not only for other people but for Americans too, that we face
some facts that disturb the idea of a uniquely virtuous nation.
These facts are embarrassing, but must be faced if we are to be
honest. We must face our long history of ethnic cleansing, in
which millions of Indians were driven off their land by means of
massacres and forced evacuations. And our long history, still
not behind us, of slavery, segregation, and racism. We must face
our record of imperial conquest, in the Caribbean and in the
Pacific, our shameful wars against small countries a tenth our
size: Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, Afghanistan, Iraq. And the
lingering memory of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It is not a history
of which we can be proud.
Our leaders have taken it for granted, and planted that belief
in the minds of many people, that we are entitled, because of
our moral superiority, to dominate the world. At the end of
World War II, Henry Luce, with an arrogance appropriate to the
owner of Time, Life, and Fortune, pronounced this “the American
century,” saying that victory in the war gave the United States
the right “to exert upon the world the full impact of our
influence, for such purposes as we see fit and by such means as
we see fit.”
Both the Republican and Democratic parties have embraced this
notion. George Bush, in his Inaugural Address on January 20,
2005, said that spreading liberty around the world was “the
calling of our time.” Years before that, in 1993, President Bill
Clinton, speaking at a West Point commencement, declared: “The
values you learned here . . . will be able to spread throughout
this country and throughout the world and give other people the
opportunity to live as you have lived, to fulfill your God-given
capacities.”
What is the idea of our moral superiority based on? Surely not
on our behavior toward people in other parts of the world. Is it
based on how well people in the United States live? The World
Health Organization in 2000 ranked countries in terms of overall
health performance, and the United States was thirty-seventh on
the list, though it spends more per capita for health care than
any other nation. One of five children in this, the richest
country in the world, is born in poverty. There are more than
forty countries that have better records on infant mortality.
Cuba does better. And there is a sure sign of sickness in
society when we lead the world in the number of people in
prison—more than two million.
A more honest estimate of ourselves as a nation would prepare us
all for the next barrage of lies that will accompany the next
proposal to inflict our power on some other part of the world.
It might also inspire us to create a different history for
ourselves, by taking our country away from the liars and killers
who govern it, and by rejecting nationalist arrogance, so that
we can join the rest of the human race in the common cause of
peace and justice.
Howard Zinn is the co-author, with Anthony Arnove, of “Voices of
a People’s History of the United States.”
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