US Empire: American Exceptionalism Is No Shining City On a
Hill
By Gilbert Mercier
May 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "News
Junkie" - The concept of American exceptionalism
is as old as the United States, and it implies that the country has a
qualitative difference from other nations. This notion of being special gives
Americans the sense that playing a lead role in world affair is part of their
natural historic calling. However there is nothing historically exceptional
about this: the Roman empire also viewed itself as a system superior to other
nations and, more recently, so did the British and the French empires.
On the topic of American exceptionalism, which he often called
“Americanism”, Seymour Martin Lipset noted that “America’s ideology can be
described in five words: liberty, egalitarism, individualism, populism and
laissez-faire. The revolutionary ideology, which became American creed, is
liberalism in its eighteenth and nineteenth-century meaning. It departed from
conservatism Toryism, statist communitarianism, mercantilism and noblesse-oblige
dominant in monarchical state-church formed cultures.” Naturally
identifying America’s system as a unique ideology, just like calling its
successful colonial war against Britain a revolution, is a fallacy. For one,
America was never based on social equality, as rigid class distinctions always
remained through US history.
In reality, the US has never broken from European social
models. American exceptionalism implies a sense of superiority, just like in the
case of the British empire, the French empire and the Roman empire. In such
imperialist systems, class inequality was never challenged and, as matter of
fact, served as cornerstone of the imperial structure. In American history, the
only exception to this system based on social inequality was during the post
World War II era of the economic “miracle”. The period from 1945 to the mid
1970s was characterized by major economic growth, an absence of big economic
downturns, and a much higher level of social mobility on a massive scale. This
time frame saw a tremendous expansion of higher education: from 2.5 million
people to 12 million going to colleges and universities, and this education
explosion, naturally, fostered this upward mobility where the American dream
became possible for the middle class.
Regardless of real domestic social progress made in the
United States after the birth of the empire in 1945, for the proponents of
American exceptionalism — this includes the entire political class — the myth of
the US being defined as a “shining city on a hill” has always been a rationale
to justify the pursuit of imperialism. For example, when President Barack Obama
addressed the nation to justify the US military intervention in Libya, he said
that “America is different”, as if the US has a special role in history as a
force for good. In a
speech on US foreign policy, at West Point on May 28, 2014,
Obama bluntly stated: “In fact, by most measures,
America has rarely been stronger relative to the rest of the world. Those who
argue otherwise — who suggest that America is in decline or has seen its global
leadership slip away are misreading history. Our military has no peer…. I
believe in American exceptionalism with every fiber of my being.”
In his book, Democracy In America, Frenchman Alexis
de Tocqueville was lyrical in his propaganda-like adulation of American
exceptionalism, defining it almost as divine providence. “When the earth was
given to men by the Creator, the earth was inexhaustible. But men were weak and
ignorant, and when they had learned to take advantage of the treasures which it
contained, they already covered its surface and were soon obliged to earn by the
sword an asylum for repose and freedom. Just then North America was discovered,
as if it had been kept in reserve by the Deity and had risen from beneath the
waters of the deluge”, wrote de Tocqueville.
This notion, originated by the French author, and amplified
ever since, which defined the US as the “divine gift” of a moral and virtuous
land, is a cruel fairy tale. It is mainly convenient to ease up America’s
profound guilt. After all, the brutal birth of this nation took place under the
curse of two cardinal sins: the theft of Native American lands after committing
a
genocide of their population; and the hideous crime of
slavery, with slaves building an immense wealth for the few, in a new feudal
system, with their sweat, tears and blood.
Editor’s Notes:
Photographs two and five by
Vaticanus; photograph six by
Colin Poellot.
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