Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mccarthy isn’t ignorant of history; he just can’t handle truth

- Marcos Bretón Marcos Bretón is a columnist for The Sacramento Bee.

When former House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy made the incredible remark that the United States has never sought land after winning a war, except to bury its war dead, he was pilloried on social media and mainstream media for being ignorant.

Mccarthy, a California Republican who announced Wednesday that he would not be seeking another term in office, proudly shared his untruth on social media last week. For the record, his exact words were: “In every single war that America has fought, we have never asked for land afterwards,” Mccarthy boldly belts in the video. “Except for enough to bury the Americans who gave the ultimate sacrifice for that freedom we went in for.”

Politifact gave Mccarthy’s comment a “pants on fire” rating, the lowest rating they give. Why wouldn’t they?

Mccarthy’s own home state was once the spoils of war between Mexico and the United States. Yes, Mccarthy’s birthplace is land seized by the United States after a war.

Mccarthy’s comment wasn’t ignorance and it wasn’t particular­ly partisan either. He was repeating political propaganda in the service of historical erasure, an American affliction that has been bipartisan for generation­s.

Like many American leaders and influencer­s of various political stripes, Mccarthy was pushing the myth of American exceptiona­lism by making the prepostero­us claim that the United States achieved its dominance immaculate­ly instead of through land grabs attained by waging war, threatenin­g war, or menacing weaker combatants with economic might.

From the conquered territorie­s of California, Florida, Puerto Rico, the Philippine­s and Hawaii to lands seized by force from Native Americans, we know — or we should know — the United States has repeatedly seized land by force.

It’s common for liberal commentato­rs to mock Mccarthy as a spineless buffoon, but what he said was neither funny nor easily dismissed. Rather, Mccarthy described a modern version of a lie as old as our national founding.

The ultimate American brainwashi­ng of Manifest Destiny was that our nation under God was ordained to conquer North America, and so it did.

American aggression in pursuit of land or valuable and strategic assets has always been justified by the lies we’ve told ourselves and history we’ve rewritten to glorify our more violent ambitions.

What lies are more powerful than those that become unquestion­ed truths promoted by our government, Hollywood and inadequate history books fed to American schoolkids?

The lie that Mccarthy told is the same lie that drives the rage against “critical race theory,” or any examinatio­n of slavery in the United States. It’s the same lie at the heart of current efforts to ban books or pack school boards with activist ideologues across America.

It’s a lie that has shrouded undeniable truths in American history and has left some of us learning about that history long after we had completed our “education” in American schools. I’ll never forget being a 31-year-old man standing in a Mexico City museum where I came upon a mural depicting the U.s.-mexico war from a perspectiv­e I had never considered.

The artwork I saw is painted on the ceiling of a castle in Mexico City, which was attacked by American forces in the latter stages of the U.s.-mexico war. In this piece of art, the Americans were neither heroic nor morally innocent.

They were invaders, combatants and conquerors. It blew my mind because nothing in my formal education or in my cultural references had ever depicted American troops that way. I grew up in the shadow of the Vietnam War, which was deeply unpopular, but even then our folly was based on trying to stop “the spread of communism” in Southeast Asia.

But elsewhere, it’s a different story. When I traveled to Guatemala, some locals could barely hide their contempt for me and the other Americans with me. The driver we hired, Alfonso, spoke of his anger toward the U.S. for destabiliz­ing his country by backing a coup in 1954 that toppled a democratic­ally elected president and replaced him with a military dictatorsh­ip.

Decades of dysfunctio­n and unrest followed in Guatemala and throughout Central America, unrest that has contribute­d to the flood of migrants now massing on the U.s.-mexico border. There seems to be almost no connection in the minds of many Americans between the destructiv­e U.S. foreign policies and the migrants who fled countries upended by those policies.

This disconnect is rooted in the lie that Mccarthy told. That lie has created a sense of historical ignorance in many of us who don’t know or don’t care about the U.S. seizing lands in pursuit of its own strategic interests, and the damage caused by American boots on the ground.

To say these things plainly is to be accused of hating America. That’s because as a nation, we may “hold these truths to be self-evident,” but we still can’t handle some of them.

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