Is Nationalism Bad?
Below is an interesting article by a WWII bombardier. I happen to mostly agree with him. Historically, nationalism has hurt people more than it has helped, which he points out. But I’m not so sure that complete absence of nationalism, which he seems to endorse, is always a good thing. And in the context of a real world with countries, nationalism is inevitable. We shouldn't suppress this expression because it is exploited by some. People have feelings of nationalism and we have no right to deny these feelings, but we should certainly debate its virtue.
Nationalism also has this awful tendency to blind people's judgment. Decisions based on nationalism often leads to logic where ends justify the means, a logic I’m generally against. For that reason alone, I would be okay to do without it.
Put Away the Flags
by Howard Zinn
On this July 4, we would do well to renounce nationalism and all its symbols: its flags, its pledges of allegiance, its anthems, its insistence in song that God must single out
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 (
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
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."
On the eve of the Mexican War, an American journalist declared it our "Manifest Destiny to overspread the continent allotted by
It was always supposedly for benign purposes that our country went to war.
We invaded
As our armies were committing massacres in the
We see in
Yet they are victims, too, of our government's lies.
How many times have we heard President Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld tell the troops that if they die, if they return without arms or legs, or blinded, it is for "liberty," for "democracy"?
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
And nationalism is given a special virulence when it is said to be blessed by
We need to refute the idea that our nation is different from, morally superior to, the other imperial powers of world history.
We need to assert our allegiance to the human race, and not to any one nation.
Howard Zinn, a World War II bombardier, is the author of the best-selling "A People's History of the United States" (Perennial Classics, 2003, latest edition). Email to: pmproj@progressive.org
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