What Is a
Global Citizen, and Can it Save Us?
By David
Swanson
May 02, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Headlines this past week
claimed that for the first time ever more than
half of poll respondents around the world
said they saw themselves more as a global
citizen than as a citizen of a country. What did
they mean in saying that?
Well, first
of all, to lower the heart-rate of U.S. readers, we
should state that they clearly did not mean that
they were aware of a secret global government to
which they had sworn loyalty until the Dark Side
crushes all light from the Force, or until Mom,
apple pie, and sacred national sovereignty expire in
the satanic flames of Internationalism. How do I
know this? Well, for one thing, something that a
majority of the planet is aware of is the opposite
of a secret. But, more importantly, what's at issue
here is the poll respondents' attitude, not their
situation. In many nations, the responses were
almost evenly split; half the people weren't wrong,
they were just differently minded.
Still, what
did they mean?
In the
United States, rather stunningly, 22 percent of
respondents supposedly said they strongly agreed
that they saw themselves more as a global citizen,
while another 21 percent somewhat agreed. How you
can somewhat agree with a binary choice I haven't
the foggiest idea, but supposedly they did. That's
43 percent total agreeing either strongly or
somewhat in the land of flag-waving militarized
exceptionalism, if you can believe it -- or if it
doesn't actually mean much.
Canada is
slightly higher at 53 percent. But what does it
mean? Were respondents shocked into agreement with a
sensible sounding idea they'd never heard mentioned
before? Is a strong minority really enlightened
beyond the common nationalism? Russia, Germany,
Chile, and Mexico had the least identification as
global citizens. Should we look down on that?
Nigeria, China, Peru, and India had the highest.
Should we emulate that? Are people identifying with
humanity or against their country or in support of
their own desire to emigrate, or against the desires
of others to immigrate? Or are people employed by
globalized capital actually turning against
nationalism?
I've always
thought that if people would stop speaking in the
first person about the crimes of their country's
military, and start identifying with all of
humanity, we might achieve peace. So I compared the
"global citizen"
results with the
results of a 2014 poll that asked if people
would be willing to fight in a war for their
country. The results of that poll were also
stunningly encouraging, with strong majorities in
many countries saying they would not fight in a war.
But there does not appear to be a correlation
between the two polls. Unless we can find a way to
correct for other important factors, it does not
seem that being a global citizen and refusing to
fight have anything consistently in common.
Nationalistic countries are and are not willing to
fight in wars. "Global citizen" countries are and
are not willing to fight in wars.
Of course,
the willingness to fight responses are sheer
nonsense. The United States has numerous wars up and
running, recruitment offices in most towns, and 44%
of the country saying it "would" fight if there were
a war. (What's stopping them?) And, again, the
global citizen responses may be largely nonsense
too. Still, Canada does roughly as much better than
the United States in each of the two polls. Perhaps
they make the sort of sense I'm looking for but only
in North America. Asian nations, however, are both
biggest on global citizenship and most willing to
participate in wars (or to make that claim to a
pollster).
Whatever it
may mean, I take it to be wonderful news that a
majority of humanity identifies with the world. It's
up to us to now make it mean what it should. We need
to develop a belief in world citizenship that begins
by recognizing every other human on earth, and other
living things in their own way, as sharing in it. A
citizen of the globe does not expect to necessarily
have much in common with the inhabitants of some
far-off corner of the earth, but does certainly
understand that no war can be waged against fellow
citizens.
We don't
need clean elections or an end to war profits or the
expansion of the ICC to impose the rule of law on
countries outside of Africa in order to create world
citizenship. We just need our own minds. And if we
get it right in our own minds, all of those other
things had better get ready to happen.
So how do
we think like world citizens? Try this. Read an
article about a distant place. Think: "That happened
to some of us." By "us" mean humanity. Read an
article about peace activists protesting war who say
aloud "We are bombing innocent people," identifying
themselves with the U.S. military. Work at it until
you can find such statements incomprehensible.
Search online for articles mentioning "enemy."
Correct them to reflect the fact that everyone has
the same enemies: war, environmental destruction,
disease, starvation. Search for "them" and "those
people" and change it to us and we humans.
This is in
fact a massive project, but apparently there are
millions of us already identifying with it, and many
hands make light work.
To
receive updates from After Downing Street register
at
http://afterdowningstreet.org/user/register -
To subscribe to other lists go to
http://davidswanson.org/node/921 |