Monday, October 20, 2008

Perpetuation of a fundamentally false national mythology

Arthur Silber has been one of the fiercest critics of U.S. foreign (and domestic) policy. In his compelling view, with which I agree, an unquestioned belief in "Amercan exceptionalism" is held by the U.S. political elites of both parties. This conviction has manifested itself time and time again and is rooted in racism.

Below are excerpts from a Silber post on the U.S. war in the Phillipines, an invasion, occupation, slaughter, and subjugation about which few Americans have any knowledge.


Large-scale public ignorance is necessary to the perpetuation of a fundamentally false national mythology. Today, more than one hundred years later, all of this is repeated again, in precisely the same form. An honest observer knows that we learn only of some of the worst atrocities committed by U.S. troops in Iraq, those that cannot be denied or covered up. There are countless acts of barbarism about which we will never learn anything. And even when we cannot deny the occurrence of monstrous acts, we minimize and "explain" them using identical, contemptibly dishonest mechanisms.

Our mythology is crucially tied to our conception of our self-worth. For most of us, it is life itself. Dispense with the lies and death ensues, at least that is how many Americans experience it psychologically. I think only a monumental shock to these illusions -- in the form of a major economic collapse, a conflict of horrifying devastation, or by some other means -- will ever pry most Americans from these dangerous and destructive fables to which they cling with increasing desperation. In the meantime, the death and destruction will go on, exactly as they have before -- and most of us will do precious little to try to stop them.