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Published in the June 2005 issue of The Progressive

The Scourge of Nationalism
by Howard Zinn

I cannot get out of my mind the recent news photos of ordinary Americans
sitting on chairs, guns on laps, standing unofficial guard on the Arizona
border, to make sure no Mexicans cross over into the United States. There
was something horrifying in the realization that, in this twenty-first
century of what we call "civilization," we have carved up what we claim is
one world into 200 artificially created entities we call "nations" and
armed to apprehend or kill anyone who crosses a boundary.

Is not nationalism--that devotion to a flag, an anthem, a boundary so
fierce it engenders mass murder--one of the great evils of our time, along
with racism, along with religious hatred? These ways of
thinking--cultivated, nurtured, indoctrinated from childhood on--have been
useful to those in power, and deadly for those out of power.

National spirit can be benign in a country that is small and lacking both
in military power and a hunger for expansion (Switzerland, Norway, Costa
Rica, and many more). But in a nation like ours--huge, possessing
thousands of weapons of mass destruction--what might have been harmless
pride becomes an arrogant nationalism dangerous to others and to
ourselves.

Our citizenry has been brought up to see our nation as different from
others, an exception in the world, uniquely moral, expanding into other
lands in order to bring civilization, liberty, democracy.

That self-deception started early. When the first English settlers moved
into Indian land in Massachusetts Bay and were resisted, the violence
escalated into war with the Pequot Indians. The killing of Indians was
seen as approved by God, the taking of land as commanded by the Bible. The
Puritans cited one of the Psalms, which says: "Ask of me, and I shall give
thee, the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the
Earth for thy possession."

When the English set fire to a Pequot village and massacred men, women,
and children, the Puritan theologian Cotton Mather said: "It was supposed
that no less than 600 Pequot souls were brought down to hell that day."

It was our "Manifest Destiny to overspread the continent allotted by
Providence," an American journalist declared on the eve of the Mexican
War. After the invasion of Mexico began, the New York Herald announced:
"We believe it is a part of our destiny to civilize that beautiful
country."

It was always supposedly for benign purposes that our country went to war.
We invaded Cuba in 1898 to liberate the Cubans, and went to war in the
Philippines shortly after, as President McKinley put it, "to civilize and
Christianize" the Filipino people.

As our armies were committing massacres in the Philippines (at least
600,000 Filipinos died in a few years of conflict), Elihu Root, our
Secretary of War, was saying: "The American soldier is different from all
other soldiers of all other countries since the war began. He is the
advance guard of liberty and justice, of law and order, and of peace and
happiness."

Nationalism is given a special virulence when it is blessed by Providence.
Today we have a President, invading two countries in four years, who
believes he gets messages from God. Our culture is permeated by a
Christian fundamentalism as poisonous as that of Cotton Mather. It permits
the mass murder of "the other" with the same confidence as it accepts the
death penalty for individuals convicted of crimes. A Supreme Court
justice, Antonin Scalia, told an audience at the University of Chicago
Divinity School, speaking of capital punishment: "For the believing
Christian, death is no big deal."

How many times have we heard Bush and Rumsfeld talk to the troops in Iraq,
victims themselves, but also perpetrators of the deaths of thousands of
Iraqis, telling them that if they die, if they return without arms or
legs, or blinded, it is for "liberty," for "democracy"?

Nationalist super-patriotism is not confined to Republicans. When Richard
Hofstadter analyzed American presidents in his book The American Political
Tradition, he found that Democratic leaders as well as Republicans,
liberals as well as conservatives, invaded other countries, sought to
expand U.S. power across the globe.

Liberal imperialists have been among the most fervent of expansionists,
more effective in their claim to moral rectitude precisely because they
are liberal on issues other than foreign policy. Theodore Roosevelt, a
lover of war, and an enthusiastic supporter of the war in Spain and the
conquest of the Philippines, is still seen as a Progressive because he
supported certain domestic reforms and was concerned with the national
environment. Indeed, he ran as President on the Progressive ticket in
1912.

Woodrow Wilson, a Democrat, was the epitome of the liberal apologist for
violent actions abroad. In April of 1914, he ordered the bombardment of
the Mexican coast, and the occupation of the city of Vera Cruz, in
retaliation for the arrest of several U.S. sailors. He sent Marines into
Haiti in 1915, killing thousands of Haitians who resisted, beginning a
long military occupation of that tiny country. He sent Marines to occupy
the Dominican Republic in 1916. And, after running in 1916 on a platform
of peace, he brought the nation into the slaughter that was taking place
in Europe in World War I, saying it was a war to "make the world safe for
democracy."

In our time, it was the liberal Bill Clinton who sent bombers over Baghdad
as soon as he came into office, who first raised the specter of "weapons
of mass destruction" as a justification for a series of bombing attacks on
Iraq. Liberals today criticize George Bush's unilateralism. But it was
Clinton's Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright, who told the United
Nations Security Council that the U.S. would act "multilaterally when we
can, unilaterally when we must."

One of the effects of nationalist thinking is a loss of a sense of
proportion. The killing of 2,300 people at Pearl Harbor becomes the
justification for killing 240,000 in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The killing
of 3,000 people on September 11 becomes the justification for killing tens
of thousands of people in Afghanistan and Iraq.

What makes our nation immune from the normal standards of human decency?

Surely, we must renounce nationalism and all its symbols: its flags, its
pledges of allegiance, its anthems, its insistence in song that God must
single out America to be blessed.

We need to assert our allegiance to the human race, and not to any one
nation. We need to refute the idea that our nation is different from,
morally superior to, the other imperial powers of world history.

The poets and artists among us seem to have a clearer understanding of the
limits of nationalism.

Langston Hughes (no wonder he was called before the Committee on
Un-American Activities) addressed his country as follows:

You really haven't been a virgin for so long
It's ludicrous to keep up the pretext . . .
You've slept with all the big powers
In military uniforms
And you've taken the sweet life
Of all the little brown fellows . . .
Being one of the world's big vampires
Why don't you come out and say so
Like Japan, and England, and France
And all the other nymphomaniacs of power.

Henry David Thoreau, provoked by the war in Mexico and the nationalist
fervor it produced, wrote: "Nations! What are nations? . . . Like insects,
they swarm. The historian strives in vain to make them memorable." In our
time, Kurt Vonnegut (Cat's Cradle) places nations among those unnatural
abstractions he calls granfalloons, which he defines as "a proud and
meaningless association of human beings."

There have always been men and women in this country who have insisted
that universal standards of decent human conduct apply to our nation as to
others. That insistence continues today and reaches out to people all over
the world. It lets them know, like the balloons sent over the countryside
by the Paris Commune in 1871, that "our interests are the same."


Howard Zinn's latest work (with Anthony Arnove) is "Voices of a People's
History of the United States."

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