Examining
American Exceptionalism
By Stephen J. Bergstrom
May 25, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Saker"
-
On the
surface, American exceptionalism appears to
represent a boldly-stated concept but when
contrasted to the subtleties of personal experience,
the lessons and flow of history and individual
geographically-rooted place, horribly small-minded
and delusional, conceivable only as a statement by a
crazed, power-hungry overlord to an underling.
Synchronized
beautifully in 2004 by a senior aide to Bush Jr. to
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Ron Suskind
writing in the New York Times Magazine, American
Exceptionalism is,
”…an empire
now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And
while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as
you will — we’ll act again, creating other new
realities, which you can study too, and that’s how
things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . .
and you, all of you, will be left to just study what
we do…” (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/17/magazine/17BUSH.html).
To begin
examination, let’s take a closer look at basic
definitions (courtesy of Merriam-Webster).
Exceptional:
- not
usual
-
unusual or uncommon
-
unusually good
ism:
- the
act, practice, or process of doing something
-
behavior like that of a specified kind of person
or thing
- unfair
treatment of a group of people who have a
particular quality
Exceptionalism:
- the
condition of being different from the norm; also
- a
theory expounding the exceptionalism especially
of a nation or region
Combining
the above, we realize that exceptionalism equates to
perception or a perceiving of self that endows the
perceiver with uncommon power.
In the case
of the United States, seeming high-level leadership
self-perceives that the U.S. is “exceptional” (i.e.,
unusual or unusually good in possession of the
ability to act) and does not need to conform to
normal rules or general principles. In worldly
terms, the U.S. exits the brotherhood of nations and
is empire among middling servant states.
Voicing American Exceptionalism
U.S.
President Barack Obama speaking at the 2009 NATO
Summit, Strasbourg, France,
“I
believe in American exceptionalism…we have a core
set of values that are enshrined in our
Constitution, in our body of law, in our democratic
practices, in our belief in free speech and
equality, that, though imperfect, are exceptional…”
U.S.
President Barack Obama speaking to West Point’s
graduating class 2014,
“America
must always lead on the world stage…The United
States is the one indispensable nation…I believe in
American exceptionalism with every fabric of my
being…”
Then actor and to-be President, Ronald Reagan at the
First Conservative
Political Action Conference, 1974,
“…We
cannot escape our destiny, nor should we try to do
so. The leadership of the free world was thrust upon
us two centuries ago in that little hall of
Philadelphia. In the days following World War II,
when the economic strength and power of America was
all that stood between the world and the return to
the dark ages, Pope Pius XII said, ‘The American
people have a great genius for splendid and
unselfish actions. Into the hands of America God has
placed the destinies of an afflicted mankind.’
We are
indeed, and we are today, the last best hope of man
on earth.”
_________
The City on
the Hill: Finding the Roots to American
Exceptionalism
First
Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony John
Winthrop (1588-1649) represented early American
Puritanical Tradition. Addressing a bevy of puritan
emigrants waiting to disembark the Arabella to
create the first settlement in what would become the
first of the New England states, Winthrop declared,
“…we shall find that the
God of Israel is among us, when ten of us shall be
able to resist a thousand of our enemies…for we must
Consider that we shall be as a City upon a Hill, the
eyes of all people are upon us…”
(https://thehistoricpresent.wordpress.com/2010/06/28/the-city-upon-a-hill-and-puritan-hubris/)
That
forenamed city destined to be recast time and again
by America’s political leadership and undoubtedly
favored by those behind that leadership, first by
Reagan in his same above speech;
“Standing on the tiny deck of the Arabella in 1630
off the Massachusetts coast, John Winthrop said, ‘We
will be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all
people are upon us, so that if we deal falsely with
our God in this work we have undertaken and so cause
Him to withdraw His present help from us, we shall
be made a story and a byword throughout the world.’
Well, we have not dealt falsely with our God…”
President-elect John F. Kennedy said, in an address
to the Massachusetts Legislature on January 9, 1961,
“During
the last 60 days I have been engaged in the task of
constructing an administration…. I have been guided
by the standard John Winthrop set before his
shipmates on the flagship Arabella [sic] 331 years
ago, as they, too, faced the task of building a
government on a new and perilous frontier. ‘We must
always consider,’ he said, ‘that we shall be as a
city upon a hill—the eyes of all people are upon
us.’”
From George
H. W. Bush’s “thousand points of light” to Bill
Clinton’s “America has a special role in the eyes of
God” to John Kerry’s “…we have moved closer to the
America we can become – for our own people, for the
country, and for all the world…”, to lesser weighted
John Bolton’s “The most important thing you need is
a president who is proud of the United States of
America, who believes in American exceptionalism” to
Condy Rice’s, “When the world looks to America, they
look to us because we are the most successful
economic and political experiment in human history.
That is the true basis of American exceptionalism…”
special effort has been made to convince America she
is biblically-blessed and exceptional.
A
Truth Hidden, Half
Told
But
conviction does not always mesh with contradiction
nor will those convicted remain so in the face of
evidence, direct personal experience and the
geography of place.
Alexis de Tocqueville was one. The son of Norman
aristocrats, de Tocqueville lives a short life. Born
in Paris, July 29th, 1805, he travels to
America in 1831 and publishes the tome upon which
his fame rests,
Democracy in America, in the year of
his thirtieth birthday, 1835 and in which he
observed that America was creating ”…a distinct
species of mankind…(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/politics/american-exceptionalism/).
But in
what ways distinct?
In
Tocqueville’s eyes, Americans will be birthed first
by mindset in the Winthropian, “… Puritanical
origin…” and meshed then with “…exclusively
commercial habits…”
And in
what ways convicted?
The
American, this distinct species of mankind, de
Tocqueville asserts will become convicted, will
become aware of their personal distinctiveness
through uniqueness of place, through the,
“…country they inhabit which seems to divert their
minds from the pursuit of science, literature, and
the arts, the proximity of Europe … to fix the mind
of the American upon purely practical objects. His
passions, his wants, his education, and everything
about him seem to unite in drawing the native of the
United States earthward…”
(http://www.visionandvalues.org/2011/04/the-roots-of-tocqueville-s-american-exceptionalism/#sthash.CIhYaf5j.dpuf).
And therein
lies contradiction and echoes so much of what the
world says about America, about despising the
policies of a government etched in puritanical
righteousness and commercial industry and imported
inventiveness that exports war and fiat currency but
loving a people contradicted and tempered by place,
by the geographical, by the land, by windswept
prairies, by three coasts, by 14,000 foot
mountaintops, by desert, by waterways, by Great
Lakes as big as oceans, by the echo and remaining
presence of the country’s native Turtle Island, by
the original earth-based inhabitants, by the
combined sources of the continent’s non-corporate
literature and artistic impulses and the unbidden
anti-hero like suspicion, resistance and mockery at
the everyday level to technological boondoggle and
oversized government.
This Curious Exceptional Dilemma
In the
hands of the few, trademarked American
Exceptionalism acts as a battering ram, is a
corporate brand name front that unites evangelism,
militarism and Keynesianism, that installs
dictators, that perpetuates privately-owned fiat
currencies, that topples the same dictators to
create in name-only democracies, that trains
militants and insurgents, that funds gladio-styled
terrorism, NATO, international banking
organizations, the IMF, the World Bank,
Export-Import Banks, that emasculates Europe, that
fans and funds conflict between installed dictators
and in name-only democracies, between insurgents and
loyalists, this City on the Hill, these thousand
points of light.
But
below the surface, this thing about America that is
exceptional but not distinct from other cultures,
her land, her native roots, her resistance by
natives long thought exterminated and to be made
extinct by cavalries and cannons, by legislation, by
armed men riding trains gunning down millions of
bison, acts of terrorism and food and shelter-based
genocide, by reservation life, this America inspired
by the land, by her earthiness, influences this
unexceptional America, is non-corporate artistic,
makes small press literature, invents good things,
does not war, combats big pharma, forced
vaccinations, big ag, big biz, big banks, chemtrails,
opposes GMOs, opposes false flags, staged shootings
and propagandized media, billion dollar political
campaigns and privately-owned, fiat-issuing central
banks, hallmarks all of Exceptional Empire, writes
songs, sings, dances, drums, shapes pottery, tears
down pork barrel, fractionalized fiat currency
hydro-electric dams, honors the sacred, loves
animals, grows gardens, all as if a secret to
celebrity-promoted corporate media but known by the
hearts of many, by foreign tourists walking through
centuries old Santa Fe, traipsing through Navajo
country, watching salmon run, peering at petroglyphs
in HOPI land, known by creatives, known by seekers,
known by the evidence, becomes human,
not exceptional.
About Stephen:
Stephen J. Bergstrom possesses a BA in Literature
and Philosophy and an MFA in Creative Writing. His
Strategic Wealth,
a one-time internet best seller, detailed the
historical rise of the now entrenched worldwide
private banking system. His blog
Rue d’Awakening and Literary Fiction can be
found at StephenJBergstrom.com |