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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Anti-Americanism: The anti-imperialism of fools
By David North and David Walsh
22 September 2001
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author
A section of middle class commentators has reacted to the horrific
attack on New York City and Washington with cynicism and callousness.
What took place on September 11? A group of individuals apparently
inspired by Islamic fundamentalism, one of the most reactionary
ideologies on the face of earth, smashed two airplanes into the
World Trade Center and a third into the Pentagon, while a fourth
hijacked plane crashed in western Pennsylvania. The result of
this carnage was the death of more than 6,000 human beings, the
overwhelming majority of them civilians, representing the greatest
loss of life in a single day on American soil since the Civil
War.
This was a heinous political crime whose predictable outcome
has been to strengthen the capitalist state, fan the flames of
right-wing chauvinism and clear the way for US military intervention
in Central Asia.
The socialist future of mankind depends upon the awakening
of the most humane and generous instincts of the working people
of the world. What happened on September 11the awful deaths
of thousands of innocent people, among them office workers, firemen,
janitors, and business peopleprofoundly offends those instincts.
In our first statement on the tragedy [The
political roots of the terror attack on New York and Washington]
the World Socialist Web Site initiated an analysis of the
events deep political roots. Our abhorrence of the terror
attack does not signify any lessening of opposition to the US
government, or any intention to absolve American officials of
their responsibility for the building up of the Islamic fundamentalist
forces. Having said that, however, the reprehensible response
of certain petty bourgeois opinion makers to the event underscores
the gulf that divides socialist opposition to imperialism from
vulgar anti-Americanism.
A case in point is an article that appeared in the Guardian,
the British daily newspaper, on September 18, authored by Charlotte
Raven, a former member of the Militant Tendency, editor of the
now-defunct Modern Review and currently a semi-celebrity
and professional cynic. The piece is headlined, A bully
with a bloody nose is still a bully, the bully in question
being the US. In the first place, the September 11 tragedy was
not a bloody nose, it was a catastrophe. Thousands
of people were incinerated instantly when the airplanes hit the
buildings, thousands more died when tons of rubble collapsed on
them. Anyone who was emotionally unaffected by the terror and
suffering experienced by tens of thousands as a result of this
attack has no right to call himself or herself a socialist.
Raven writes: It is perfectly possible to condemn the
terrorist action and dislike the US just as much as you did before
the WTC went down. Many will have woken up on Wednesday with that
combination of emotions... America is the same country it was
before September 11. If you didnt like it then, theres
no reason why you should have to pretend to now. Ravens
references to the US, full stop, is no slip of the
pen. It is repeated throughout the article. She never once uses
the phrase the US government or the US ruling
elite, or an equivalent. Using nationality as an epithet
is always reactionary. Confronted with the most monstrous government
in history, Hitlers Nazi regime, socialists never descended
to referring with contempt to Germany or the
Germans.
To present the US as some predatory imperialist
monolith, as Raven and others do, can only confuse and disorient.
It not only serves as a barrier to genuine internationalism, it
overlooks the contradictory character of American history and
society. What does it mean to dislike the US? What
sort of social element speaks like this? The United States is
a complex entity, with a complex history, elements of which are
distinctly ignoble, elements of which are deeply noble. The US
has passed through two revolutionsthe American Revolution
and the Civil Warthe mass battles of the Depression and
the struggle for Civil Rights. The contradiction between the democratic
ideals and revolutionary principles on which the nation was founded
and its social and political realities has always been the starting
point of the struggle for socialism in the United States.
The US was, if one considers the relationship between theory
and politics, the product of the great Enlightenment. It established
political principles, embodied in the Declaration of Independence
and the Constitution, rather than religion or ethnicity, as the
basis of national identity. This origin of the nation in the struggle
for abstract idealsdemocracy, republicanismreverberated
across the globe. The American Revolution played no small role
in inspiring the events that transformed France a decade later.
Even after 200 years, the United States is still fighting through
the political and historical implications of its own founding
principles. The American population, polyglot and highly diverse,
is obsessed with ideological problems, although its approach is
often maddeningly pragmatic. As the popular response to the Bush
hijacking of the 2000 election demonstrated, there remains a deep
commitment to elementary democratic principles. A low level of
class consciousness and the failure of masses of Americans to
generalize from their experiences, however, provides the ruling
elite the opportunity to play on precisely these democratic notions
in order to blind layers of the population temporarily as to the
true nature of its plans. For Bush and his ilk defending
freedom and democracy is merely a code phrase for the right
of the American elite to have its way around the world. To the
ordinary American citizen, these words mean something quite different.
The sinister reality of the US governments new war
against terrorism, with its grandiose aim of reorganizing
an entire region of the world in line with American geopolitical
interests, will make its way into popular consciousness providing
the necessary work is conducted by socialist internationalists.
In many ways all the vast problems in the struggle for socialism
find their most complex expression in America. How could that
not be the case? If one cannot find points of departure for a
higher form of social organization in the US, in what corner of
the globe are they to be found? Whats more, the individual
who sees no basis for socialism in America clearly has given up
on the prospects of world socialism altogether. The Marxist has
always been distinguished from the common or garden variety radical
by his or her deep confidence in the revolutionary potential of
the American working class. In this regard, the US ruling elite
has a much greater insight into the true nature of American society
than the blinkered radical. The American bourgeoisie inveighs
night and day against socialism and communism, in a manner far
out of proportion to the threat currently posed by the socialist
movement in the US, because it understands or at least senses
instinctively that in the most advanced capitalist society, all
things being equal, socialism offers such a rational and attractive
alternative.
America is, at once, the most advanced and the most backward
of societies. Its culture attracts and repels, but always fascinates.
Official society and many ordinary Americans deny the very existence
of distinct social classes, and yet the country is riven by the
most profound and ever-deepening social differentiation. These
social contradictions will only be exacerbated, as the economic
developments of this week have already shown, as the war drive
proceeds.
The US has produced Franklin, Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln,
as well as extraordinary working class and socialist leaders.
Its immense contradictions are perhaps exemplified by the figure
of Jefferson, the slave-owner who wrote one of the greatest and
most sincere hymns to human freedom.
Raven continues, resorting to the terminology of Postmodernist
drivel: When America speaks from its heart, it retreats
into a language that none but its true-born citizens can begin
to understand. At the root of this is an overwhelming need to
control meaning. America cant let the world speak for itself.
It was taken unawares last Tuesday and part of the trauma of that
event was the shock of being forced to listen to a message that
it hadnt had time to translate. The subsequent roar of anger
was, amongst other things, the sound of the US struggling to regain
the right to control its own narrative.
If Raven is speaking of George W. Bush and other servants of
American imperial interests, then the first sentence has no meaning.
Such people clearly dont speak from the heart on this or
any other occasion; they are in the business of lying and deceiving.
But pardon us for pointing out that, in fact, when America,
in the form of its greatest political and cultural representatives,
has spoken from its heart, millions around the world
have listened and understood, beginning in the aftermath of July
4, 1776. The most advanced British workers certainly paid attention
to the issuing of the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1,
1863. One could mention the appeals to the international working
class on behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti and numerous other examples.
And such instances, we hazard to predict, will occur in the future
too.
One might add that the finest products of American culture
have also attracted and moved masses of people around the world,
from Poe and Whitman, Melville and Hawthorne, in the 19th century,
to Dreiser, Fitzgerald, Richard Wright and others in the 20th.
Nor should one entirely forget the influence of American music,
popular and otherwise. A few people, one imagines, have heard
it speaking from the heart. This to say nothing of contributions
with international implications in film, painting, sculpture,
dance and architecture. Raven apparently counts upon her readers
being so consumed by subjective venom and their own self-importance
that they overlook obvious historical and cultural realities.
It has always been an essential task of socialists in the US
to awaken the positive and generous instincts that are so deeply
embedded in the American population. There are, after all, two
Americas, the America of Bush, Clinton and the other scoundrels,
and another America, of its working people. Revolutionary internationalists
have continuously insisted on this. James P. Cannon, the leader
of the American Trotskyists, devoted a speech to this theme in
July 1948. Of the Two Americas he observed: One
is the America of the imperialistsof the little clique of
capitalists, landlords, and militarists who are threatening and
terrifying the world. This is the America the people of the world
hate and fear. There is the other Americathe America of
the workers and farmers and the little people. They
constitute the great majority of the people. They do the work
of the country. They revere its old democratic traditionsits
old record of friendship for the people of other lands, in their
struggles against Kings and Despotsits generous asylum once
freely granted to the oppressed.
The struggle against the policies and designs of the American
government requires, in the first instance, the exposure of the
latters claim that it is the true voice and representative
of the people. Socialists are obliged to explain that the US ruling
elite is carrying out anti-democratic and rapacious policies,
with inevitably tragic consequences, in the pursuit of which it
falsely invokes the name of the American people.
All this of course is a closed book to the smug middle class
philistine and snob, satisfied to make use of words and phrases
that come most easily to hand. Ravens variety of anti-Americanism
is no more original than it is insightful. It is available cheaply
and in large quantities in middle class circles in Britain, France,
Germany and, for that matter, in the United States. It is available,
so to speak, on tap. Such an outlook has the virtue
of appearing oppositional, while not committing its adherent to
any course of political action that might cause inconvenience.
It is a form of pseudo-socialism, the phony anti-imperialism
of cynics and fools.
This article is available as a PDF-formatted
leaflet
See Also:
Where is the Bush administration taking
the American people?
[22 September 2001]
Why the Bush administration wants war
[14 September 2001]
Democratic rights in America: the first
casualty of Bush's anti-terror war
[19 September 2001]
No truce in the corporate war at home
US air industry launches massive attack on jobs
[20 September 2001]
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