The
National Anthem’s False Notes
By Pierre
Tristam
September
11, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "FlagerLive"
-
One August
morning in a small French town in Normandy 250 years
ago, a crucifix that stood as a monument in the
heart of town was found mutilated. People were
upset. They wanted blood. (Irony has never been
Catholics’ strongest suit.) No one had any idea
who’d done it, so it was necessary to invent a
suspect.
The mob
chose a 20-year-old aristocrat, the Knight of La
Barre, who was known to run around town doing
irreverent things with a couple of equally
free-thinking late adolescents. The proof of his
guilt was simple: during a religious procession, he
refused to take off his cap and stand respectfully.
Blasphemy! La Barre was interrogated, tried, and
tortured, his head was chopped off in front of an
immense and cheering crowd and he was burned.
Substitute
dogma for freedom and the cruelty and stupidity of
men has no bounds. I was reminded of the treatment
of La Barre by the entirely predictable controversy
surrounding an NFL quarterback’s decision not to
stand up for the national anthem before a game. No
one is calling for Colin Kaepernick’s head, at least
not literally, but he’s been all but guillotined
nonetheless, and for what? For finally deciding, as
too few athletes do, to show that he’s not
exclusively an object of entertainment making $12
million a year. He decided to protest police
brutality and racism his way, with a quiet act that
doesn’t take away from anybody else’s right to
believe what they will.
Muhammad
Ali had done the same to protest Vietnam, refusing
to be inducted into the army and converting to
Islam: “I ain’t got no quarrel with the Vietcong. No
Vietcong ever called me nigger,” he told America,
which did not forgive this black man for having an
opinion, let alone a political opinion, let alone
one snubbing the military and the white world that
supposedly allowed him to be who he was. He
lost his title for seven years at the height of his
fitness and was excommunicated from the graces of
American public opinion. He stood his ground (“My
principles are more important than the money or my
title”) and eventually proved to be a more honorable
hero than many of the honored frauds that, all of
them flag-saluting and star-spangled-singing, gave
us Vietnam, J. Edgar Hoover’s police state, Henry
Kissinger’s
genocides and Nixon’s Watergate right about
then.
Not much
appears to have changed: “What should horrify
Americans is not Kaepernick’s choice to remain
seated during the national anthem,” that other
Muslim Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
wrote in the Post, “but that nearly 50 years
after Ali was banned from boxing for his stance and
Tommie Smith and John Carlos’ raised fists caused
public ostracization and numerous death threats, we
still need to call attention to the same racial
inequities. Failure to fix this problem is what’s
really un-American here.”
Reflecting
America’s whiter shade of pale, an incensed letter
writer in The New York Times this week said he was
tired of athletes “putting down the country that has
given them the opportunity to get to where they
are,” as if those athletes had been spectators to
their own opportunity. I can see Orwell headlining
that letter: “Freedom is servitude.” But that’s
where we are nowadays. America may have been founded
by protest—and little of value by way of civil and
human rights has ever been achieved but
through protest–but protesters are now the
ungrateful bastards of the republic, loudmouth
pussies who don’t have the grace to shut up and be
glad they have the protection of the military, or
the decency to take cops’ beatings and killings
politely, without talking back.
Why
confront racism and police injustice when you can
hold an inquisition on who’s patriotic and who’s
not, who’s behind our military and who’s not? When
you can just scream U-S-A, U-S-A, the new anthem of
goons too challenged by multisyllabic words or
complete sentences to propose more reasoned
arguments? And when all else fails, let it come down
to that gibberish equivalence: compared to soldiers
and the flag that represents them, apparently to the
exclusion of everyone else, you, civilian whiner,
are nothing.
Measuring
the role of a principled athlete like Kaepernick—or
that of any citizen, for that matter—in defending
and protecting America against the role of soldiers
in the field can’t be a rational comparison,
especially in a militaristic society that fetishizes
uniforms and rarely corrects an implied contempt by
jingoes for civilians not lucky enough to have
soaked up and dished out the gore of combat. But to
suggest that civilians in their Leaves of Grass
varieties don’t in their own way nurture and
protect the nation reduces all but combatants to a
servility that has no other purpose but be
worshipful of its armed protectors. It turns the
military not only into an end in itself, but into
the only end worth celebrating. It’s what
has reduced the playing of the national anthem into
a show of respect for the military above all, as if
the nation the military was protecting were not the
only valid and defensible reason for the military to
exist.
Kaepernick’s stand isn’t a dangerous slog in an
Afghan hamlet. But stand for stand, it’s doing more
to advance American principles than any slog by any
soldier anywhere in Afghanistan or Iraq—two losing,
pointless wars that continue to demonstrably damage
American security and corrupt its ideals far more
than protect them. We’re so busy pretending to be
pacifying the Middle East from terror that we’re not
only blind to the terrors young black men face on
American streets. We judge them blasphemers and
America-haters the moment they take as peaceful a
stand as sitting (where would civil rights be
without sit-ins?), demonize those who defend them,
and conveniently censor their stand by making noise
about something radically different, to hijack the
conversation.
How
sadistically ironic that Kaepernick’s condemnation
centers on the national anthem, that celebration of
the “land of the free and home of the brave” that
has somehow, like the Pledge of Allegiance, turned
into a modern-day loyalty oath, a dogma. Or that
he’s had to defend himself against a whisper
campaign that he’s really doing all this because he
converted to Islam (he did not) or because his
girlfriend is Muslim (she is), as if, in this land
of the free, Muslims don’t have the right to protest
and be patriotic at the same time. As if
Americanism were an exclusive brand, which is really
what’s at the heart of this controversy: it’s part
of that ongoing resurgence of nationalist rancor,
that emerging minority of hate whose mercenaries
want to judge who belongs and who doesn’t, who’s an
acceptable American and who’s a heretic. But it
is a minority, as indicated by the noble
response of Kaepernick’s employers, who are standing
by their quarterback, and by President
Obama’s defense of Kaepernick.
They’re
saying the same thing. How one shows love of country
is not definable by whether you doff your cap or
not, or whether you stand up for the anthem or
caress your smartphone. Particularly when your
gesture is not as rote as standing for the anthem
because you always have, because everyone else is
doing it, or because it’s the “right” thing to do,
even if you can’t articulate the first thing about
rights, as Kaepernick’s flag-worshipping tormentors
prove with every insult they hurl at him.
Kaepernick
has been making a painful point. Call him a
blasphemer if you like, as that mob did with La
Barre for an act of defiance that, a generations
later, helped power a revolution. “All great truths
begin as blasphemies,” George Bernard Shaw reminds
us. Kaepernick’s act is, let us hope, one of those
blasphemies.
Pierre Tristam
is FlaglerLive’s editor. Reach him by email
here or
follow him
@PierreTristam.
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