The Stars and Stripes flap from the Murfin house for Independence
Day. In fact most years I put the Flag
out for Memorial Day and it stays up
until Veterans Day—or if it hasn’t gone to shreds and the weather isn’t too miserable—until Thanksgiving.
A lot of lefties and progressive folk
I know are shocked that an old rebel like me, a Wobbly and a Draft resister,
a street corner soap-boxer, and habitual protestor, would drape his home in a symbol of oppression.
The late radical historian Howard Zinn. |
Howard
Zinn summed up their point of view in a widely
circulated essay:
On this July 4, we would do well to renounce nationalism and all
its symbols: its flags, its pledges of allegiance, its anthems, and its insistence in song that God
must single out America to be blessed.
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.
It is an argument he, and many others, have been making for a long
time. I understand it. I really
do. I hold no truck with simple
nationalism. I know my history as almost as well as did Professor
Zinn. It is a short jump from jingoism
to jackboots. And I can sing the dark litany of massacre
and oppression that has accompanied
the twisted notions of American Exceptionalism through the
years, as well as any human.
But oppression and blood lust are not just American phenomena. We have just given it our own peculiar twist. They are part
and parcel of the human condition
and exist everywhere. To paraphrase
a hymn beloved by peace folk:
My country’s streams run redder than the cardinal,
And soldiers’ boots tread every hill and vale,
But other lands have bloody streams and carnage.
And soldier’s boots trod everywhere the frail.
(Adapted from This is My Song by Lloyd Stone)
This is not an excuse. All peoples must come to grips with the particular
burdens of their history. Humanity demands that we all atone for our sins and—much more importantly—strive to prevent their re-occurrence.
But the reason I fly the flag, the
reason I could read the Declaration of Independence aloud one
year protesting that the McHenry County Peace Group was excluded from the local Independence Day parade with absolutely
no intent of irony or condescension,
is because there are elements of our
common heritage worthy of celebration. The words of the Declaration, whatever the personal
failings of its slave-holding author,
still challenge us to be better.
And those words stand not
alone. They stand in a great tradition of utterances and documents,
official and insurrectionary, which mark what Abraham Lincoln once called, “the better angles of our nature.” Tom Paine, James Madison, Ralph Waldo Emerson,
Henry David Thoreau, Theodore Parker, Fredrick Douglas, Julia Ward Howe, Susan
B. Anthony, Emma Lazarus, Eugene V. Debs, Franklin Roosevelt, Martin Luther
King, Cesar Chavez, and hundreds more stand in this tradition.
It is this peculiarly American call for equality
and justice, these impossibly lofty goals that lure us
onward despite the disappointment
and the contradictions, I are what I
honor when I put out the flag.
Especially this year when those
values are under attack as never before
by those who usurp and twist the symbols of our common heritage in the service of oppression.
I
REFUSE TO LET THE BASTARDS HAVE IT!
This is a familiar argument. I hear it almost every time I refuse to stand for the national anthem or recite the pledge of allegiance. We are told to set aside the failings of this nation, and instead, honor the aspirations the founders wrote into the Declaration, Constitution, Federalist Papers, and so on. If we read these inspirational or perhaps aspirational documents in the context of their historical occurrence, we see that when they spoke of freedom, it was freedom from paying the toll to the troll who sat upon a throne in London. Their goal was Liberty, the liberty of wealthy property owners to become inordinately wealthy. The owning of slaves was part of that Liberty, not at all inconsistent with it. The weight of 240 years of slavery, genocide, war, oppression, and inequality under law, indicates that these are the inevitable outcomes of the original aspirations, rather than aberrations. So enjoy the holiday. Let the blood soaked banner fly from every pole. My flag is still black.
ReplyDelete