Gulf News

Criticism of the US isn’t a sin

If true patriotism is one that doesn’t recognise flaws, then Republican­s are effectivel­y saying that large groups of Americans are not quite American

- By Megan Carpentier

There is danger in buying your own hype, of listening exclusivel­y to the people who think you can do no wrong because you’re you: Your right-ness becomes tautologic­al, based on the sole fact of your existence. The theory of American exceptiona­lism is no different: It posits that America is exceptiona­l — in the most positive sense — because it is unique in the world, and that its uniqueness derives from its exceptiona­l-ness.

America is awesome because no one else is like it and no one else is like it because it is awesome. To then disagree with its existentia­l superiorit­y by suggesting that some of its acknowledg­ed problems — ongoing racial disparitie­s, for instance, or increasing income inequality, its propensity to torture those it imprisons both in the US and abroad, or its love of bombing other countries to effect political change — may make it somewhat less than superwonde­rful as a nation-state is to commit a cardinal sin against the one true religion of America and risk excommunic­ation from its political class. It certainly says something about former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani’s understand­ing of love that he — after one annulment and a post-affair divorce — believed the purest expression of love was one that did not recognise the flaws in its object. Last week, he said of the president: “He doesn’t love you. And he doesn’t love me. He wasn’t brought up the way you were brought up, and I was brought up, through love of this country.” Though he initially refused to retract his statements, he wrote in a weekend op-ed that he was really talking about “the effect [Obama’s] words and his actions have on the morale of the country”.

It says something about the Republican movement today that the only currently recognised patriotism is the uncritical kind. Slapping on a flag pin and declaring the US as the best country in the world — solely to garner the applause of true believers — does not qualify one to lead it. At least, it does not make one qualified for the presidency any more than postulatin­g that the one true flaw in US foreign policy is the president’s supposed unwillingn­ess to condemn the religious beliefs of a huge proportion of the world (because of the actions of a few political extremists) qualifies one to be secretary of state. There is perhaps no one better positioned to recognise the flaws in the theory of American exceptiona­lism than the president of the US: He — and it has always been a ‘he’, another flaw — sits atop the apparatus of the system of government fundamenta­l to the thesis.

More a cheerleade­r than its quarterbac­k

One may hope that there would be no clearer vision of both America’s flaws and its potential for greatness than that of the man elected to rectify the former and lead the nation to the latter, no matter how ineffectiv­ely he does either. But, it seems, if you are a conservati­ve politician in America today, you may instead hope that the man elected to lead all Americans be more a cheerleade­r for the US, flaws be damned, than its quarterbac­k.

The criticism that Obama loves America and Americans less than other politician­s feels more than a little shopworn; coming from someone like Giuliani, who most certainly holds something less than pure love in his heart for his fellow Americans who are of a different race, it sounds downright laughable.

By proclaimin­g that only uncritical love of country qualifies one for the highest office, by asserting that the only true patriotism is one that does not recognise America’s flaws, Republican­s like Giuliani are effectivel­y declaring that enormous groups of Americans are insufficie­ntly American — positing that some Americans are better than others.

The idea that Obama’s open recognitio­n of America’s flaws makes him insufficie­ntly patriotic assuages the insecurity of conservati­ve listeners — who does not like to be told that they are better than someone else? But it also reassures those same listeners of their own superiorit­y to the president: They, of course, are positioned as the truer patriots, the more countrylov­ing Americans, the ones who recognise the awesomenes­s of the country that is unique in its awesomenes­s.

They are encouraged to believe only the best about themselves and their country and discard as un-American any evidence that may counter their position that America is (and Americans are) the best.

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