[blind-democracy] Taking Down the Flag (No, Not Just That One. The Other One, Too)

  • From: Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 30 Jul 2015 22:31:13 -0400

Taking Down the Flag (No, Not Just That One. The Other One, Too)
Published on
Thursday, July 30, 2015
by
Common Dreams
Taking Down the Flag (No, Not Just That One. The Other One, Too)
by
Robert C. Koehler

Over the course of this country's history, the American flag has been far,
far too tolerant of genocide, slavery and war. (Photo: DVIDSHUB/flickr/cc)
The flag in front of Home Depot was at half-mast and I felt myself wondering
why in an awkward, despairing way.
The nation and the news cycle were still thrashing in the wake of the
Chattanooga killings and I figured, oh, it's for the soldiers - but all that
realization did was intensity the troubled feelings the spectacle had
aroused. This is America, where you can shop and mourn . . . but it wasn't
just that.
I suddenly thought about Sandra Bland's apparent suicide in a Texas jail
cell and, from there, I thought about a year's worth of video footage of
racism-scarred arrests and violence and, beyond that, the brutal stupidity
of the wars we wage and two dozen or more vet suicides every day - this was
all in the space about 20 seconds, while I was parking my car - and by the
time I reached the entrance of the big box, I found myself asking: Why
should the flag ever NOT be at half-mast?
And that was just the beginning. The flag, the flag . . .
Maybe it's part of the problem.
Reflecting on the recent controversy that erupted in South Carolina over the
flying of the Confederate flag in front of the state capitol, following
white supremacist Dylann Roof's murder of nine people there, George Payne,
writing at the website The Deconstructed Globe, asked:
"But why not take down the United States flag as well? After all, the two
atomic bombs that eviscerated Nagasaki and Hiroshima were not dropped in the
name of the Confederate flag. Nor were the wars in Korea, Vietnam,
Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Afghanistan and Iraq fought to preserve
the national security of the 'Stars and Bars.'"
Could it be that we're forcing schoolchildren to pledge their allegiance to
a divisive - poisonous - symbol? Could it be that honoring it, waving it,
saluting it holds together an allegiance to moral superiority and unending
global conflict?
Lee Drutman, writing some years ago about the psychology behind the American
flag, discussed several studies which concluded that viewing the flag
primarily invoked in participants feelings of nationalism - aggressive
national superiority - rather than an inclusive patriotism.
The flag "makes people think that some people and some countries are better
than others, a mode of thinking," he wrote, quoting one of the studies,
"that makes people 'feel more entitled to express prejudice.'"
Thinking about lowering such a flag to half-staff to honor someone who has
died makes all this even more troubling. It takes the focus away from the
honoree and places mourning and grief in a context of aggression and the
common enemy. This is war. And for a nation at war, step one everlasting is
the dehumanization of the enemy of the moment.
"Our thoughts and prayers as a Nation are with the service members killed
last week in Chattanooga."
So begins President Obama's recent proclamation mandating that American
flags be lowered for four days.
"We honor their service. We offer our gratitude to the police officers and
first responders who stopped the rampage and saved lives. We draw strength
from yet another American community that has come together with an
unmistakable message to those who would try and do us harm: We do not give
in to fear. You cannot divide us. . . ."
It goes on, but what I feel is that these words already begin to divide us.
Indeed, they slice an "us" out of all humanity and reduce mourning to rage.
And this mixture of mourning and rage is a toxic, addictive brew, keeping a
nation ever-prepared for war. Nations are born of war. Certainly this nation
is.
"When the first English settlers moved into Indian land in Massachusetts Bay
and were resisted, the violence escalated into war with the Pequot Indians,"
historian Howard Zinn wrote for the Progressive some years ago. "The killing
of Indians was seen as approved by God, the taking of land as commanded by
the Bible. . . .
"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.'"
And speaking of the birth of a nation, consider that this year marks the
100th anniversary of D.W. Griffith's silent movie classic, The Birth of a
Nation, once an icon of Americana. It tells the story of how the Ku Klux
Klan saved the South from the predatory ambitions of emancipated slaves.
"The critics were raving," author Dick Lehr told NPR in an interview earlier
this year. "People were on their feet cheering at the climax of the film,
when the Klan is seen as a healing force - restoring order to the chaos of
the South during Reconstruction."
This movie wasn't merely a fabulous recruiting tool for the KKK, which
underwent a huge membership surge after the movie came out; it was an emblem
of national greatness, revered by mainstream white America which, for at
least 50 years after the movie's release - and certainly throughout my
childhood and youth - remained clueless about the toxicity of the movie's
racism. Its central place in American culture, its cohesive power, rivaled
that of the flag itself.
Over the course of American history, the flag has been far, far too tolerant
of genocide, slavery and war. It has defined a nation by its hatreds and
waves proudly over the military-industrial complex. Let's lower it slowly
and look to a different future.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
License
Robert C. Koehler

Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally
syndicated writer. His new book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound is now
available. Contact him at koehlercw@xxxxxxxxx or visit his website at
commonwonders.com.
Taking Down the Flag (No, Not Just That One. The Other One, Too)
Published on
Thursday, July 30, 2015
by
Common Dreams
Taking Down the Flag (No, Not Just That One. The Other One, Too)
by
Robert C. Koehler
. 17 Comments
.
. Over the course of this country's history, the American flag has
been far, far too tolerant of genocide, slavery and war. (Photo:
DVIDSHUB/flickr/cc)
. The flag in front of Home Depot was at half-mast and I felt myself
wondering why in an awkward, despairing way.
. The nation and the news cycle were still thrashing in the wake of
the Chattanooga killings and I figured, oh, it's for the soldiers - but all
that realization did was intensity the troubled feelings the spectacle had
aroused. This is America, where you can shop and mourn . . . but it wasn't
just that.
. I suddenly thought about Sandra Bland's apparent suicide in a Texas
jail cell and, from there, I thought about a year's worth of video footage
of racism-scarred arrests and violence and, beyond that, the brutal
stupidity of the wars we wage and two dozen or more vet suicides every day -
this was all in the space about 20 seconds, while I was parking my car - and
by the time I reached the entrance of the big box, I found myself asking:
Why should the flag ever NOT be at half-mast?
. And that was just the beginning. The flag, the flag . . .
Maybe it's part of the problem.
Reflecting on the recent controversy that erupted in South Carolina over the
flying of the Confederate flag in front of the state capitol, following
white supremacist Dylann Roof's murder of nine people there, George Payne,
writing at the website The Deconstructed Globe, asked:
"But why not take down the United States flag as well? After all, the two
atomic bombs that eviscerated Nagasaki and Hiroshima were not dropped in the
name of the Confederate flag. Nor were the wars in Korea, Vietnam,
Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Afghanistan and Iraq fought to preserve
the national security of the 'Stars and Bars.'"
Could it be that we're forcing schoolchildren to pledge their allegiance to
a divisive - poisonous - symbol? Could it be that honoring it, waving it,
saluting it holds together an allegiance to moral superiority and unending
global conflict?
Lee Drutman, writing some years ago about the psychology behind the American
flag, discussed several studies which concluded that viewing the flag
primarily invoked in participants feelings of nationalism - aggressive
national superiority - rather than an inclusive patriotism.
The flag "makes people think that some people and some countries are better
than others, a mode of thinking," he wrote, quoting one of the studies,
"that makes people 'feel more entitled to express prejudice.'"
Thinking about lowering such a flag to half-staff to honor someone who has
died makes all this even more troubling. It takes the focus away from the
honoree and places mourning and grief in a context of aggression and the
common enemy. This is war. And for a nation at war, step one everlasting is
the dehumanization of the enemy of the moment.
"Our thoughts and prayers as a Nation are with the service members killed
last week in Chattanooga."
So begins President Obama's recent proclamation mandating that American
flags be lowered for four days.
"We honor their service. We offer our gratitude to the police officers and
first responders who stopped the rampage and saved lives. We draw strength
from yet another American community that has come together with an
unmistakable message to those who would try and do us harm: We do not give
in to fear. You cannot divide us. . . ."
It goes on, but what I feel is that these words already begin to divide us.
Indeed, they slice an "us" out of all humanity and reduce mourning to rage.
And this mixture of mourning and rage is a toxic, addictive brew, keeping a
nation ever-prepared for war. Nations are born of war. Certainly this nation
is.
"When the first English settlers moved into Indian land in Massachusetts Bay
and were resisted, the violence escalated into war with the Pequot Indians,"
historian Howard Zinn wrote for the Progressive some years ago. "The killing
of Indians was seen as approved by God, the taking of land as commanded by
the Bible. . . .
"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.'"
And speaking of the birth of a nation, consider that this year marks the
100th anniversary of D.W. Griffith's silent movie classic, The Birth of a
Nation, once an icon of Americana. It tells the story of how the Ku Klux
Klan saved the South from the predatory ambitions of emancipated slaves.
"The critics were raving," author Dick Lehr told NPR in an interview earlier
this year. "People were on their feet cheering at the climax of the film,
when the Klan is seen as a healing force - restoring order to the chaos of
the South during Reconstruction."
This movie wasn't merely a fabulous recruiting tool for the KKK, which
underwent a huge membership surge after the movie came out; it was an emblem
of national greatness, revered by mainstream white America which, for at
least 50 years after the movie's release - and certainly throughout my
childhood and youth - remained clueless about the toxicity of the movie's
racism. Its central place in American culture, its cohesive power, rivaled
that of the flag itself.
Over the course of American history, the flag has been far, far too tolerant
of genocide, slavery and war. It has defined a nation by its hatreds and
waves proudly over the military-industrial complex. Let's lower it slowly
and look to a different future.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
License
/author/robert-c-koehler
/author/robert-c-koehler /author/robert-c-koehler
Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally
syndicated writer. His new book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound is now
available. Contact him at koehlercw@xxxxxxxxx or visit his website at
commonwonders.com.


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  • » [blind-democracy] Taking Down the Flag (No, Not Just That One. The Other One, Too) - Miriam Vieni