Exceptional
Americans Manifest Their Destiny:
And
to Hell with the Consequences...
by
Jason Miller
Contrary to the “catapulted propaganda”, Enron, Haditha, and Abu Ghraib
were not isolated incidents or the work of a “few bad apples”. American
savagery and oppressive behavior pervades our society and predates our
nation’s birth. Building its patriarchal wealth on the backs of Black slaves
and cheap labor while acquiring its territory through Native American
genocide, predatory exploitation of non-Anglos, the poor, women, and the
working class emerged as a pillar of
America’s socioeconomic “success” before we even declared our
independence.
With the advent of the Industrial Age, transcontinental railroads, and the
rapid proliferation of Capitalism, an increasingly empowered young nation with
an insatiable lust for more land, resources, and profits began to seek prey
beyond its borders. At the close of the Nineteenth Century, the American Eagle
spread its wings as it began mimicking the rapacious behavior of its Western
European ancestors.
With the sun finally preparing to set on the British Empire, the days of
conquest and expansion dawned for the nascent American Empire. Pathologically
hubristic notions like Manifest Destiny and American Exceptionalism served to
dehumanize indigenous people to justify invasion, theft and murder as acts of
necessity to bring civilization to “primitives”.
In his latest book, Overthrow,
former New York Times Bureau Chief Stephen Kinzer chronicles America’s
exploits as an empire and imperialist nation.
What is it that they are spreading?
The Bush Regime’s launch of the Project for the New American Century with
the invasion of Iraq was not really out of character for the United States.
While it was certainly executed with more blatant disregard for international
law than America’s previous imperial endeavors, it typifies the American
sanctimonious belief that it can do no wrong.
George Bush was simply reiterating America’s long-standing mendacious
rationale for its exploitative behavior when he stated:
“What I'm trying to suggest to
you that this program is a part of a strategic goal, and that is to protect
this country in the short-term and protect it in the long-term by spreading
freedom.”
Consider some of the freedoms the United States is spreading:
1. Freedom to work under miserable conditions for a pittance.
2. Freedom to exist in an environment permeated with depleted uranium.
3. Freedom to sell precious resources to soulless multinational corporations
at garage sale prices.
4. Freedom to experience a Kafkaesque nightmare including arrest with no
charges, no trial to determine guilt or innocence, the endurance of torture,
and indefinite detention.
5. Freedom to realize the inherent inferiority of one’s culture, religion,
and language, and to cast them aside like sacks of rank-smelling garbage.
6. Freedom to be maimed or killed if one dares to reject the “gifts” of
these freedoms.
America’s corporate media propaganda machine has managed to maintain a
fastidiously manicured façade for many years. Despite appearing to exist as a
champion of democracy, equality, freedom, and human rights, the reality of the
United States was, and is, that its socioeconomic and governmental systems are
racist, bigoted, ruthless and plutocratic in nature.
Democracy has never
existed in the United States. A de facto aristocracy has dominated our
constitutional republic dating back to the Continental Congress. Capitalism is
a brutal, pitiless economic system that encourages and rewards greed,
selfishness, exploitation, and annihilation of the competition.
Obsessed with materialism, conspicuous consumption, convenience, physical
appearance, and winning, many Americans gorge themselves on the abundant
fruits of Capitalism, oblivious to the fact that billions of human beings live
in abject poverty and misery to make their feast possible.
America is a nation of the wealthy, by the wealthy and for the wealthy. Its
ruling elite class is buttressed by the poor and working people who have been
rendered politically impotent by the allure of conspicuous consumption (which
further enriches the elite), the illusion of democracy, and the extremely
remote possibility that one of them could be the next Bill Gates.
Wearing its cloak of benevolence, America is an abstract embodiment of the
proverbial wolf in sheep’s clothing. Governed by avaricious profiteers
produced and enabled by a ruthless system that brings out the worst in
humanity, the United States is a predacious nation innocently posing as a
bastion of human rights and democracy.
Running out of real estate (and
victims)
Overthrow captures
the essence of the zeitgeist in America in the late Nineteenth Century with an
apt quote from American historian Frederick Jackson Turner:
For nearly three centuries the
dominant fact in American life has been expansion. With the settlement of the
Pacific Coast and the occupation of the free lands, this movement has come to
a check. That these energies of expansion will no longer operate would be a
rash prediction; and the demands for a vigorous foreign policy, for an
inter-oceanic canal, for a revival of our power upon the seas, and for the
extension of American influence to outlying islands and adjoining countries,
are indications that the movement will continue.
According to Kinzer’s historical analysis, the United States cut its
imperial fangs on Mexico in the 1840’s, but Hawaii marked America’s
initial push beyond the North American continent. Two American missionaries,
Amos Starr Cooke and Samuel Castle zealously worked to convert native Hawaiian
“savages” into “civilized” Christians, but eventually abandoned their
missionary work for the profits of the sugar trade. Cooke and Castle were the
fathers of the White American aristocracy in Hawaii. This group eventually
came to wield powerful economic and political influence on the islands by
virtue of the huge sugar plantations they owned. Manipulation of a pliable
Hawaiian monarch whom they had educated enabled them to engineer land reform
which stripped indigenous people of their traditional communal form of land
ownership.
On January 17, 1893 the Marines landed in Hawaii with a small contingency. In
a bloodless coup, the 6220 Whites (on an archipelago populated by 41,000
native Hawaiians and 28,000 Asian laborers) seized control of the government
and appointed none other than Sanford Dole (cousin to pineapple magnate James
Dole) to lead. By 1897 the United States had formally annexed Hawaii.
Remember the Maine….And a few
hundred thousand Filipinos
Fueled by the mainstream media lie that Spain had caused an explosion aboard
the USS Maine, a battleship President McKinley had dispatched to Cuba in 1898,
the United States declared war on Spain, won, and quickly acquired Puerto
Rico, Cuba, and the Philippines in the process. Despite the Teller Amendment
in which Americans had promised Cuban sovereignty, President McKinley
justified American rule of Cuba through the “law of belligerent right over
conquered territory.” The Platt Amendment eventually became the US tool to
give outward appearances of Cuban autonomy without actually ceding full
self-determination.
Having defeated Spain in the Philippines, Americans encountered another enemy.
It seems the indigenous people were prepared to forcefully resist their new
masters. Viewing the Philippines as crucial to its business interests in Asia,
the United States fought vigorously to retain its new colony. Sending an
occupation force of 126,000 (eerily similar to the number of troops in Iraq),
America suffered fewer than 5,000 casualties. At least 16,000 Filipino troops
and 250,000 civilians were slaughtered by the United States military. Rampant
and blatant atrocities committed by American soldiers were white-washed by a
compliant mainstream media and farcical Senate hearings in which Henry Cabot
Lodge justified American torture, cruelty and murder by characterizing
Filipinos as “semi-civilized
people with all the tendencies and characteristics of Asiatics.”
Better dead than red? Not
necessarily….
Throughout its history as an imperial power, the perpetuation of United States
corporate interests abroad has been its primary motivation. However, no
analysis of America’s malignant impact on the world would be complete
without addressing its fixation with crushing movements and governments
showing even a hint of Socialist or Communist tendencies.
Champions of American Capitalism triumphantly proclaim that the totalitarian
and barbaric regimes of Stalin and Mao are “absolute proof” that any
socioeconomic system based on “leftist” ideologies dooms its people to
torture, despotism, and mass murder. Stalin and Mao were indeed murderous
dictators, but the evolution of their regimes do not negate the possibility of
a socioeconomic system placing a reasonable degree of power in the hands of
the working class and affording a more equitable distribution of wealth.
In fact, critical analysis reveals that the manifestation of Capitalism in the
United States has been as morally repugnant and vicious as the regimes the
champions of our system love to cite as evil. Those believing otherwise are in
deep denial.
Domestically, Americans enslaved millions (3.9 million according to the 1860
census) and committed genocide against the millions of indigenous inhabitants
whose land they stole. Aside from the egregious crimes committed against
non-Anglos at home, America’s system of Capitalism exists as the virtual
antithesis of the “Communist” systems of Mao and Stalin in terms of
inhumanity. Instead of pointing its malevolence inward on its “own”, the
United States has committed its wholesale slaughter abroad (i.e. 3 million in
Vietnam, hundreds of thousands in Central America, and at least a million
Iraqis, including the victims of the Gulf War and the brutal economic
sanctions). Anglo exemption from slavery, genocide, and slaughter explains why
American Capitalism has outlasted the “Communism” of
Russia and China.
Portrait of a truly ugly American
Kinzer devotes a chapter of Overthrow
to former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who could
easily have been the poster-child for American Capitalism and its inherent
hypocrisy and malevolence. Dulles easily warrants his own chapter. He exerted
tremendous influence on US foreign policy throughout the Cold War and
orchestrated a number of the interventions detailed in Overthrow.
Kinzer writes of Dulles (who in private life had been a highly successful
attorney representing multinational corporations for the firm of Sullivan
& Cromwell):
“He had been shaped by three
powerful influences: a uniquely privileged upbringing, a long career advising
the world’s richest corporations, and a profound religious father. His
deepest values, beliefs, and instincts were those for the international elite
in which he had spent his life….”
“According to the most exhaustive
book about Sullivan & Cromwell, the firm thrived on its cartels and
collusion with the new Nazi regime, and Dulles spent much of 1934 publicly
supporting Hitler….Soon after World War II ended, Dulles found in Communism
the evil he had been so slow to find in Nazism.”
Out of the frying pan….
In Overthrow,
Kinzer does more than simply detail the horrific consequences to the victims
of America’s imperial interventions. He also reminds us of the
self-destructive nature of America’s foreign policy. Perhaps the most timely
and poignant example is that of Iran.
In 1951, Mohammad Mossadegh became Iran’s democratically elected prime
minister. To alleviate the abject poverty of many of his people, he quickly
moved to nationalize the oil industry to utilize the profits to benefit
Iranians. The British, who had significant oil interests in
Iran, raised serious objections to Mossadegh’s actions despite the obscene
oil profits they had made over the years in Iran, his offer to compensate them
for the oil infrastructure they had built, and the British government’s
recent nationalization of its own coal and steel industries.
While the existence of the Soviet Union as a rival world power precluded the
use of direct military intervention by the United States, John Foster Dulles
contrived a plan to crush the Socialist “ambitions” of Mossadegh.
Disseminating propaganda through America’s mainstream media (including the New
York Times and Time
Magazine) which portrayed Mossadegh as a Communist while
simultaneously utilizing the CIA to create a subversive environment in Iran,
the United States succeeded in toppling Mossadegh and replacing him with the
Shah of Iran. Representing US and Western business interests with great
enthusiasm until he was deposed by radical Islamic elements in 1979, the Shah
ruled Iran autocratically. SAVAK, his intelligence agency, tortured and
murdered thousands of Iranian dissidents.
Like Hugo Chavez is in Venezuela, Mossadegh was anathema to American
Capitalism. Leaders of developing countries who threaten the flow of capital
to the Empire by diverting it to their own people quickly become enemies of
the United States. The irony is that the replacement rulers America installs
to preserve its economic interests are almost always corrupt and murderous
dictators who foster deep hatred of the United States. Ultimately, Washington
finds itself grappling with reactionary regimes which are overtly hostile to
the United States, like the current leadership in Iran.
Like a good neighbor…
Kinzer devotes several chapters of Overthrow
to America’s numerous interventions in Central and
South America over the last century. Virtually all were launched to protect
American corporate interests by crushing Leftist governments and installing
business friendly despots like Pinochet in Chile. Corporations like the United
Fruit Company and presidents like Ronald Reagan were responsible for the
deaths of hundreds of thousands of Hispanics throughout Central America.
Let them burn
Kinzer also provides an enlightening analysis of the Vietnam debacle. In
contrast to the tissues of lies propagated by America’s media and textbook
authors, Ho Chi Minh was not a threat to US interests. He was too busy
striving for independence from Japan while facing recolonization by France.
Neither China nor the Soviet Union (the “Communist” powers the ruling
elite of the United States professed to fear so greatly because of their
“conspiracy to spread Communism”), was interested in aligning themselves
with Minh because of his nationalism.
When Ho Chi Minh spoke to a large group of supporters in Hanoi in 1945, he
stated these subversive “Communist principles”:
“All men are created equal.
They are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights. Among these
are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Minh greatly admired the United States and even appealed to the American
government for help.
America ignored Minh’s pleas for help. Instead, the United States chose to
take up where France left off and go to war with him. It also chose to support
Ngo Dinh Diem as the leader of South Vietnam. Diem was a rotten human being
and surrounded himself with family members whose corruption and inhumanity
exceeded his own.
When Buddhist leaders led popular protests against the aristocratic and
authoritarian rule of Diem and his family, Thich Quang Duc, a revered
bodhisattva, burned himself to death at a busy
Saigon intersection on June 11, 1963.
New York Times
reporter David Halberstam witnessed the event and wrote:
"I was to see that sight
again, but once was enough. Flames were coming from a human being; his body
was slowly withering and shriveling up, his head blackening and charring. In
the air was the smell of burning human flesh; human beings burn surprisingly
quickly. Behind me I could hear the sobbing of the Vietnamese who were now
gathering. I was too shocked to cry, too confused to take notes or ask
questions, too bewildered to even think.... As he burned he never moved a
muscle, never uttered a sound, his outward composure in sharp contrast to the
wailing people around him."
Madame Nhu, a member of the Diem ruling family responded to the protest by
quipping:
“Let them burn. We shall clap
our hands.”
She was one of America’s proxies in Vietnam. What does that say
about the United States?
A pattern emerges….
Afghanistan and Iraq are not aberrations in United States foreign policy. Bush
and his Neocons are not “a few bad apples”. They may be more malevolent
than their predecessors, but they are not the first to advance American
corporate and plutocratic interests through lies, propaganda, invasion, and
flagrant crimes against humanity. America’s socioeconomic system has
engendered and reinforced such pathological behavior for years.
In Cannery Row,
Steinbeck’s Doc concluded:
“The things we admire in men,
kindness and generosity, openness, honesty, understanding, and feeling, are
the concomitants of failure in our system. And those traits we detest,
sharpness, greed, acquisitiveness, meanness, egotism, and self-interest, are
the traits of success.”
In America, the inmates truly run the asylum.
Stephen Kinzer’s Overthrow,
rife with well-researched examples of America’s imperial conquests from
Mexico to Iraq, further validates the assertion many other writers and I have
been making for some time now. While manifestations of the dark side of human
nature are inevitable aspects of human civilization, the American Way requires
its dedicated adherents to commit their lives to cruelty and inhumanity. If
human civilization is to survive, we need to collectively reject this
abominable mandate.
Jason Miller is a 39 year old
sociopolitical essayist with a degree in liberal arts and an extensive
self-education (derived from an insatiable appetite for reading). He is a
member of Amnesty International and an avid supporter of Oxfam International
and Human Rights Watch. He welcomes responses at willpowerful@hotmail.com
or comments on his blog, Thomas Paine's Corner, at http://civillibertarian
.blogspot.com/.