A White Man’s Fear in a Frightened America
By Frank Nuessle
August 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Reading Ta-Nehisi Coates’ new book, “Between
the World and Me” about his experience of being black in White
America has touched a place of deep-seated fear and unacknowledged
anguish buried deep inside of me. Why would
I, a sixty something, tall, blue eyed, well educated, white man who
has lived a privileged life in White America, be so afraid?
I think it’s because Coates is right when he
points out that we “American Dreamers” espouse Freedom for All,
while at the same time, we build our privileged lifestyle ‘on the
backs of our fellow humans.’ In more recent times, technology has
freed us ‘to plunder not just the bodies of humans but the body of
the earth itself.” The hypocrisy of America’s actions in the world
stand clearly opposed to our vision of our country as “the greatest
and noblest nation ever to exist, a lone champion standing between
the white city of democracy and the terrorists, rapists, barbarians,
and other enemies of civilization.”
It frightens me that we Dreamers might reap what
we have sown. If so, all of us, the rich and the poor, the innocent
and the guilty, will suffer the consequences. How does America wake
up to these consequences and escape from our current dream that is
so divorced from reality?
Today America has no language, no story, for such
a renewal. The rejuvenation of hope and belief in our democratic
system is hampered because we live out of false belief about the
nature of our humanness. Our cultural belief, which has spawned
naked capitalism, is that we humans are just animals with more
sophisticated brains, so that life is merely a constant struggle for
survival and then you die. These beliefs are fed to us daily by
mass media along with the false belief that America is still the
shining exemplar of democratic values where honesty and hard work
pays off. This is simply not true.
Many of our citizens recognize that exploitation
of nature, other countries and each other does not constitute a
galvanizing national purpose, but there is no national conversation
to validate that belief. Our old story, the American dream of
continued prosperity, of American exceptionalism, is no longer
believable, yet we still live out of that dead belief. The
contrast between the reality of life on the street for the middle
and lower classes in America and that of the rich, ruling elite is
stark and growing ever more extreme.
Because the story spun by our national leaders and
our national media is just not believable, people are retreating
into their own more comfortable belief systems which often are
simply self-reinforced cocoons of pseudo scientific nonsense, or
religious dogma or Social Darwinist market fundamentalism, or some
combination of all of the above. The fact is that in this time of
massive change, people are scared and won’t admit it, so they
retreat into denial. For some, these belief systems are also
wrapped in willful ignorance
Willful ignorance is a phenomenon that has been
growing year by year and has reached a level where it is a serious
threat to our national well being and that of the world at large.
It is hard to believe, but one poll showed that a majority of
Republicans in Louisiana believe that President Obama is responsible
for the failed Katrina Hurricane response, despite the fact that it
occurred three years before he became President. These beliefs and
attitudes revolve around an apparent inability to deal with reality
so people make up stories in order to make themselves feel better.
To be clear, these stories are often caused by national media
sources which themselves are being driven by ideology rather than
truth.
As the philosopher, John Ralston Saul, has
written, “We suffer from an addictive weakness for large illusions -
A weakness for ideology”. An Ideology is a system of abstract
thought, a worldview, or a way of looking at the world. When one
is operating out of an ideology, it is like having on blinders to
other perspectives of the truth. “Don’t confuse me with facts, my
mind is made up.” Power in America is tied to the pursuit of
all-inclusive truths and utopias which are repeated endlessly by the
media. As a result, our citizens are incapable of recognizing
these attitudes as a flight from reality - an embracing of ideology.
The unshakeable belief that we are on the road to truth— and
therefore to the solution to our problems— prevents us from
identifying an obsession as an ideology.
America’s latest all-powerful ideology is the
marketplace and technology. With all ideologies, the ‘Day of
Judgment’ is imminent and terrifying. Saul points out that
Marxism, Fascism and the marketplace all resemble each other in that
they are all political ideologies that are hooked on science and
technology as the path to utopia. All ideologies have a utopia at
the end of their illusory rainbow.
Utopia is a word coined by Thomas More in 1516
from two Greek words: ‘no’ and ‘place’. To live within an ideology
is to have Utopian expectations and to live in limbo - To live
nowhere. To live in a utopia is to live where the illusion of
reality is feed by the highly sophisticated rational part of the
mind. It is also to live in a state that denies the more complete
picture of what it means to be human, to be connected to each other
and to the planet because the rational mind offers only a small part
of the real human reality.
Rather than a national dialogue that simply pits
one utopian based ideology against another, America needs to find a
new conversation, a new story, a new narrative, that is based in a
grounded reality. We aren’t even close, as exhibited by the
current conversation among our 2016 Presidential contenders.
Their battling ideologies, of either a
paternalist, socialist government or an economic system based on
market fundamentalism, seem to cumulatively produce our
deteriorating national health, our constant anxiety, defensiveness,
and our never ending fears, while our consumer-based society offers
up endless ways to medicate or drug away those fears.
Let’s face it. Instilling fear in the population
is great for business. Fear is also a proven means for tightening
political control by furthering our dependence on the ruling elite
who also happen to be the richest 1%.
Coates writes that “The Dreamers will have to
learn to struggle, to understand that the field for their Dream, the
stage where they have painted themselves white, is the deathbed of
us all.” Once again I fear that he is right.
No wonder my fear for our nation, for myself and
for my loved ones runs so deep.
Frank Nuessle is Adjunct Faculty (retired) in
the Organizational Dynamics Graduate Program at the University of
Pennsylvania. He is currently on the board of The Pennsylvania
Public Banking Project and is researching a book on how
organizational design can open humans to a high order paradigm shift
- a fundamentally different way of seeing reality – so we can stop
destroying the earth. First published
at
Common Dreams