Saying
goodbye to patriotism
Robert Jensen
School of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2001
A talk delivered to the Peace Action National Congress, November 10,
2001.
A version was published in Witness Magazine, March 2002, pp.
16-20.
Also posted on ZNet
, Counterpunch, and
Common Dreams web
site.
by Robert Jensen
This summer I wrote a
book review for an academic journal -- one of those terribly important
pieces of writing that will be read by tens and tens of people, some of them
actually people outside my own family. The book is about the history of governmental
restrictions on U.S. news media during war, and it’s a good book in
many ways. But I faulted the author for accepting the American mythologyabout
the nobility of our wars and their motivations. I challenged his uncritical
use of the term patriotism, which I called “perhaps the single most
morally and intellectually bankrupt concept in human history.”
By coincidence, the galley proofs for the piece came back to me for review
a few days after September 11. I paused as I re-read my words, and I thought
about the reaction those words might spark, given the reflexive outpouring
of patriotism in the wake of the terrorist attacks. I thought about
the controversy that some of my writing had already sparked on campus and,
it turned out, beyond the campus. I thought about how easy it would be to
take out that sentence.
I thought about all that for some time before deciding to let it stand. My
reason was simple: I think that statement was true on September 10, and if
anything, I’m more convinced it is true after September 11.
I also believe that nestled in the truth of that assertion is a crucial question
for the U.S.-based peace movement, one that we cannot avoid after 9-11:
Are we truly internationalist? Can we get beyond patriotism? Or, in the end,
are we just Americans?
That is a way, I think, of asking whether we are truly for peace and justice.
I realize that framing of the question may seem harsh. It may rub the wrong
way people who want to hold onto a positive notion of patriotism.
I mean the statement to be harsh because I believe the question is crucial.
If in the end we are just Americans, if we cannot move beyond patriotism,
then we cannot claim to be internationalists. And, if we are not truly internationalist
in our outlook -- all the way to the bone -- then I do not think we truly
call ourselves people committed to peace and justice.
Let me try to make the case for this by starting with definitions.
My dictionary defines patriotism as “love and loyal or zealous support
of one’s own country.” We’ll come back to that, but let’s
also look beyond the dictionary to how the word is being used at this moment
in history, in this country. I would suggest there are two different, and
competing, definitions of patriotism circulating these days.
Definition #1: Patriotism as loyalty to the war effort.
It’s easy to get a handle on this use of the word. Just listen to the
president of the United States speak. Or watch the TV anchors. Or, as I have
done, be a guest on a lot of talk radio shows. This view of patriotism is
pretty simple: We were attacked. We must defend ourselves. The only realway
to defend ourselves is by military force. If you want to be patriotic,you
should -- you must -- support the war.
I have been told often that it is fine for me to disagree with that policy,
but now is not the time to disagree publicly. A patriotic person, I am told,
should remain quiet and support the troops until the war is over, at which
point we can all have a discussion about the finer points of policy. If I
politely disagree with that, then the invective flows: Commie, terrorist-lover,
disloyal, unpatriotic. Love it or leave it.
It is easy to take apart this kind of patriotism. It is a patriotism that
is incompatible with democracy or basic human decency. To see just how intellectually
and morally bankrupt a notion it is, just ask this question: What would we
have said to Soviet citizens who might have made such an argument about patriotic
duty as the tanks rolled into Prague in 1968? To draw that analogy is not
to say the two cases are exactly alike. Rather, it is to point out that a
decision to abandon our responsibility to evaluate government policy andsurrender
our power to think critically is a profound failure, intellectuallyand morally.
Definition #2: Patriotism as critique of the war effort.
Many in the peace-and-justice movement, myself included, have suggested that
to be truly patriotic one cannot simply accept policies because they arehanded
down by leaders or endorsed by a majority of people, even if it isan overwhelming
majority. Being a citizen in a real democracy, we have saidover and over,
means exercising our judgment, evaluating policies, engagingin discussion,
and organizing to try to help see that the best policies areenacted. When
the jingoists start throwing around terms like “anti-American”
and “traitor,” we point out that true patriotism means staying
true to the core commitments of democracy and the obligations that democracy
puts on people. There is nothing un-American, we contend, about arguing for
peace.
That’s all clear enough. As I have said, I have used that line of argument
many times. It is the best way -- maybe the only way -- to respond in public
at this moment if one wants to be effective in building an antiwar movement.
We all remind ourselves, over and over, that we have to start the discussion
where people are, not where we wish people were. If people feel “love
and loyal or zealous support of one’s own country,” then we have
to be aware of that and respond to it.
But increasingly, I feel uncomfortable arguing for patriotism, even withthis
second definition. And as I listen to friends and allies in the peace-and-justice
movement, I have started to wonder whether that claim to patriotism-as-critical-engagement
is indeed merely strategic. Or is it motivated by something else? Are welooking
for a way to hold onto patriotism because we really believe in it?
I think it is valuable to ask the question: Is there any way to define
the term that doesn’t carry with it arrogant and self-indulgent assumptions?
Is there any way to salvage patriotism?
I want to argue that invoking patriotism puts us on dangerous ground andthat
we must be careful about our strategic use of it.
At its ugliest, patriotism means a ranking of the value of the lives of people
based on boundaries. To quote Emma Goldman: “Patriotism assumes that
our globe is divided into little spots, each one surrounded by an iron gate.
Those who had the fortune of being born on some particular spot, consider
themselves better, nobler, grander, more intelligent than the living beings
inhabiting any other spot. It is, therefore, the duty of everyone livingon
that chosen spot to fight, kill, and die in the attempt to impose hissuperiority
upon all others.”
People have said this directly to me: Yes, the lives of U.S. citizens are
more important than the lives of Afghan citizens. If innocent Afghans have
to die, have to starve -- even in large numbers -- so that we can achieve
our goals, well, that’s the way it is, and that’s the way itshould
be. I assume no argument here is needed as to why this type of patriotism
is unacceptable. We may understand why people feel it, but it is barbaric.
But what of the effort to hold onto a kinder and gentler style of patriotism
by distinguishing it from this kind of crude nationalism? We must ask: What
are the unstated assumptions of this other kind of patriotism we have been
defending? If patriotism is about loyalty of some sort, to what are we declaring
our loyalty?
If we are pledging loyalty to a nation-state, we have already touched onthe
obvious problems: What if that nation-state pursues an immoral objective?
Should we remain loyal to it? The same question is obvious if our loyalty
is to a specific government or set of government officials. If they pursue
immoral objectives or pursue moral objectives in an immoral fashion, what
would it mean to be loyal to them?
Some suggest we should be loyal to the ideals of America, a set of commitments
and practices connected with the concepts of freedom and democracy. That’s
all well and good; freedom and democracy are good things, and I try to not
only endorse those values but live them. I assume everyone in this room does
as well.
But what makes those values uniquely American? Is there something about the
United States or the people who live here that make us more committed to,
or able to act out, the ideals of freedom and democracy -- more so than,say,
Canadians or Indians or Brazilians? Are not people all over the world-- including
those who live in countries that do not guarantee freedom tothe degree the
United States does -- capable of understanding and actingon those ideals?
Are not different systems possible for making real thoseideals in a complex
world?
If freedom and democracy are not unique to us, then they are simply human
ideals, endorsed to varying degrees in different places and realized to different
degrees by different people acting in different places? If that’s true,
then they are not distinctly American ideals. They were not invented here,
and we do not have a monopoly on them. So, if one is trying to express acommitment
to those ideals, why do it in the limiting fashion of talkingof patriotism?
Let me attempt an analogy to gender. After 9-11, a number of commentators
have argued that criticisms of masculinity should be rethought. Yes, masculinity
is often connected to, and expressed through, competition, domination, and
violence, they said. But as male firefighters raced into burning buildings
and risked their lives to save others, cannot we also see that masculinity
encompasses a kind of strength that is rooted in caring and sacrifice?
My response is, yes, of course men often exhibit such strength. But do not
women have the capacity for that kind of strength rooted in caring and sacrifice?
Do they not exhibit such strength on a regular basis? Why of course theydo,
most are quick to agree. Then the obvious question is, what makes thesedistinctly
masculine characteristics? Are they not simply human characteristics?
We identify masculine tendencies toward competition, domination, and violence
because we see patterns of different behavior; we see that men are more prone
to such behavior in our culture. We can go on to observe and analyze theways
in which men are socialized to behave in those ways. We do all thatwork,I
would hope, to change those behaviors.
But that is a very different exercise than saying that admirable human qualities
present in both men and women are somehow primarily the domain of one ofthose
genders. To assign them to a gender is misguided, and demeaning tothe gender
that is then assumed not to possess them to the same degree. Onceyou start
saying “strength and courage are masculine traits,”it leads to
the conclusion that woman are not as strong or courageous. Tosay “strength
and courage are masculine traits,” then, is tobe sexist.
The same holds true for patriotism. If we abandon the crude version of patriotism
but try to hold onto an allegedly more sophisticated version, we bump upagainst
this obvious question: Why are human characteristics being labeledas American
if there is nothing distinctly American about them?
If people want to argue that such terminology is justified because thosevalues
are realized to their fullest degree in the United States, then there’s
some explaining to do. Some explaining to the people of Guatemala and Iran,
Nicaragua and South Vietnam, East Timor and Laos, Iraq and Panama. We would
have to explain to the victims of U.S. aggression -- direct and indirect--
how it is that our political culture, the highest expression of the ideals
of freedom and democracy, has managed routinely to go around the world overthrowing
democratically elected governments, supporting brutal dictators, fundingand
training proxy terrorist armies, and unleashing brutal attacks on civilians
when we go to war. If we want to make the claim that we are the fulfillment
of history and the ultimate expression of the principles of freedom and justice,
our first stop might be Hiroshima. We might want to explain that claim there.
If we are serious about peace and justice in the world, we need to subject
this notion of patriotism to scrutiny. If we do that, I would suggest, it
is clear that any use of the concept of patriotism is bound to be chauvinistic
at some level. At its worst, patriotism can lead easily to support for barbarism.
At its best, it is self-indulgent and arrogant in its assumptions about the
uniqueness of U.S. culture.
None of what I have said should be taken as a blanket denunciation of the
United States, our political institutions, or our culture. People often tell
me, “You start with the assumption that everything about the United
States is bad.” Of course I do not assume that. That would be as absurd
a position as the assumption that everything about the United States is good.
I can’t imagine any reasonable person making either statement. That
does raise the question, of course, of who is a reasonable person. We might
ask that question about, for example, George Bush, the father. In 1988, after
the U.S. Navy warship Vincennes shot down an Iranian commercial airlinerin
a commercial corridor, killing 290 civilians, Bush said, “I willnever
apologize for the United States of America. I don’t care whatthe facts
are.”
I want to put forward the radical proposition that we should care what the
facts are. We should start with the assumption that everything about theUnited
States, like everything about any country, needs to be examined andassessed.
That is what it means to be a moral person.
There is much about this country a citizen can be proud of, and I am in fact
proud of those things. The personal freedoms guaranteed (to most people)in
this culture, for example, are quite amazing. As someone who regularlytries
to use those freedoms, I am as aware as anyone of how precious theyare.
There also is much to be appalled by. The obscene gaps in wealth betweenrich
and poor, for example, are quite amazing as well, especially in a wealthy
society that claims to be committed to justice.
In that sense, we are like any other grouping of people. That doesn’t
mean one can’t analyze various societies and judge some better than
others by principles we can articulate and defend -- so long as they aretruly
principles, applied honestly and uniformly. But one should maintaina bitof
humility in the endeavor. Perhaps instead of saying “The UnitedStates
is the greatest nation on earth” -- a comment common among politicians,
pundits, and the public -- we would be better off saying, “I live in
the United States and have deep emotional ties to the people, land, and ideals
of this place. Because of these feelings, I want to highlight the positive
while working to change what is wrong.” That is not moral relativism
-- it is a call for all of us to articulate and defend our positions.
We can make that statement without having to argue that we are, in some essential
way, better than everyone else. We can make that statement without arrogantly
suggesting that other people are inherently less capable of articulatingor
enacting high ideals. We can make that statement and be ready and willing
to engage in debate and discussion about the merits of different values and
systems.
We can make that statement, in other words, and be true internationalists,
people truly committed to peace and justice. If one wants to call that statement
an expression of patriotism, I will not spend too much time arguing. ButI
will ask: If we make a statement like that, why do we need to call it anexpression
of patriotism? What can we learn by asking ourselves: What makesus, evenpeople
in the peace-and-justice community, want to hold onto thenotion ofpatriotism
with such tenacity?
When I write or talk with the general public and raise questions like these,
people often respond, “If you hate America so much, why don’t
you leave?”
But what is this America that I allegedly hate? The land itself? The people
who live here? The ideals in the country’s founding documents? I do
not hate any of those things.
When people say to me “love it or leave it,” what is the “it”
to which they refer?
No one can ever quite answer that. Still, I have an answer for them.
I will not leave “it” for a simple reason: I have nowhere else
to go. I was born here. I was given enormous privileges here. My place in
the world is here, where I feel an obligation to use that privilege to be
part -- a very small part of, as we all are only a small part -- of a struggle
to make real a better world. Whatever small part I can play in that struggle,
whatever I can achieve, I will have to achieve here, in the heart of thebeast.
I love it, which is to say that I love life -- I love the world in whichI
live and the people who live in it with me. I will not leave that “it.”
That “it” may not be specific enough for some, but it’s
the best I can do. Maybe it will help to answer in the negative, for I can
say more clearly what the “it” is not. I can describe more clearly
what is the America I do not love.
The America I love is not this administration, or any other collections of
politicians, or the corporations they serve.
It is not the policies of this administration, or any other collection of
politicians, or the corporations they serve.
The America I love is not wrapped up in a mythology about “how good
we are” that ignores the brutal realities of our own history of conquest
and barbarism.
Most of all, I want no part of the America that arrogantly claims that the
lives and hopes and dreams of people who happen to live within the boundaries
of the United States have more value than those in other places. Nor will
I indulge America in the belief that our grief is different. Since September
11, the United States has demanded that the world take our grief more seriously.
When some around the world have not done so, we express our outrage.
But we should ask: What makes the grief of a parent who lost a child in the
World Trade Center any deeper than the grief of a parent who lost a child
in Baghdad when U.S. warplanes rained death on the civilian areas of Iraq
in the Gulf War? Or the parents of a child in Nicaragua when the U.S. terrorist
proxy army ravaged that country? Soon after 9-11, I heard a television reporter
describe lower Manhattan as “Beirut on the Hudson.” We mightask,
how did Beirut come to look like Beirut, and what is our responsibilityin
that? And what of the grief of those who saw their loved ones die duringthe
shelling of that city?
We should ask: Where was the empathy of America for the grief of those people?
Certainly we grieve differently, more intensely, when people close to usdie.
We don’t feel the loss of a family member the same way as a deathof
a casual friend. We feel something different over the death of someoneweknew
compared with the death of a stranger. But we must understand thatthegrief
we feel when our friends and neighbors became victims of politicalviolence
is no different than what people around the world feel. We mustunderstand
that each of those lives lost abroad has exactly the same valueas the life
of any one of our family, friends and neighbors.
Goodbye to patriotism
September 11 was a dark day. I still remember what it felt like to watchthose
towers come down, the darkness that settled over me that day, the hopelessness,
how tangible death felt -- for me, not only the deaths of those in the towers
but also the deaths of those who would face the bombs in the war that might
follow, the war that did follow, the war that goes on.
But humans are resilient; in the darkness we tend to look for light, fora
way out of the darkness.
I believe there is a light shining out of September 11, out of all that darkness.
It is a light that I believe we Americans can follow to our own salvation.
That light is contained in a simple truth that is obvious, but which Americans
have never really taken to heart: We are part of the world. We cannot any
longer hide from that world. We cannot allow our politicians, and generals,
and corporate executives to do their dirty business around the world while
we hide from the truths about just how dirty that business really is. Wecan
no longer hide from the coups they plan, the wars they start, the sweatshops
they run.
For me, all this means saying goodbye to patriotism.
That is the paradox: September 11 has sparked a wave of patriotism, a patriotism
that has in many cases been overtly hateful, racist and xenophobic. A patriotism
that can lead people to say, as one person wrote to me, “We shouldbomb
[Afghanistan] until there’s no more earth to bomb.”
But the real lesson of September 11, which I believe we will eventually learn,
is that if we are to survive as a free people, as decent people who wanthonestly
to claim the ideals we say we live by, we must say goodbye to patriotism.
That patriotism will not relieve our grief, but only deepen it. It will not
solve our problems but only extend them. I believe there is no hope for ourselves
or for the world if we continue to embrace patriotism, no matter what the
definition.
We must give up our “love and loyal or zealous support of one’s
own country” and transfer that love, loyalty and zealousness to the
world, and especially the people of the world who have suffered most so that
we Americans can live in affluence.
We must be able to say, as the great labor leader of the early 20th century
Eugene Debs said, “I have no country to fight for; my country is the
earth, and I am a citizen of the world.”
I am with Debs. I believe it is time to declare: I am not patriotic. I am
through with trying to redefine the term patriotic to make sense. There is
no sense to it.
That kind of statement will anger many, but at some point we must begin to
take that risk, for this is not merely an academic argument over semantics.
This is both a struggle to save ourselves and a struggle to save the lives
of vulnerable people around the world.
We must say goodbye to patriotism because the kind of America the peace-and-justice
movement wants to build cannot be built on, or through, the patriotism of
Americans.
We must say goodbye to patriotism because the world cannot survive indefinitely
the patriotism of Americans.
Robert Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas atAustin,
a member of the Nowar Collective (www.nowarcollective.com)
and author of the book Writing Dissent: TakingRadical Ideas from theMargins
to the Mainstream (www.peterlangusa.com
). He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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