| Editorial Note: The
          following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also
          include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
          Comments are in parentheses. | 
      
    	
		Why no one should be surprised when America 
		behaves as an international bully 
		By John 
		Chuckman
		ccun.org, July 8, 2008
		 
		Reflections on America's Independence 
		Day 
		 
		If you relish myths and enjoy superstition, then the flatulent speeches 
		of America’s Independence Day, July 4, were just the thing for you. No 
		religion on earth has more to offer along these lines than America 
		celebrating itself.
		 
		Some, believing the speeches but curious, ask how did a nation founded 
		on supposedly the highest principles by high-minded men manage to become 
		an ugly imperial power pushing aside international law and the interests 
		of others? The answer is simple: the principles and high-mindedness are 
		the same stuff as the loaves and the fishes.
		 
		The incomparable Doctor Johnson had it right when he called patriotism 
		the last refuge of scoundrels and scoffed at what he called the "drivers 
		of negroes" yelping about liberty. 
		 
		Few Americans even understand that Johnson's first reference was to 
		their sacred Founding Fathers (aka Patriots). I have seen a well known 
		American columnist who attributed the pronouncement to Ben Franklin, a 
		man who was otherwise admirable but nevertheless dabbled a few times in 
		slave trading himself.
		 
		Johnson especially had in mind history’s supreme hypocrite, Jefferson, 
		with his second reference. Again, few Americans know that Jefferson kept 
		his better than two hundred slaves to his dying day. I know a well 
		educated American who sincerely believed Jefferson had freed his slaves. 
		Such is the power of the myths of the American Civic Religion.
		 
		Jefferson was incapable of supporting himself, living the life of a 
		prince and being a ridiculous spendthrift who died bankrupt and still 
		owing money to others, the man of honor being a trifle less than 
		honorable in paying back the money he often borrowed. When a new silk 
		frock or set of shoes with silver buckles was to be had, Jefferson never 
		hesitated to buy them rather than pay his debts.
		 
		The date we now celebrate, July 4, is based on the Continental 
		Congress's approval of the Declaration of Independence, but in fact the 
		date is incorrect, the document was approved on July 2.
		 
		Jefferson wrote the first draft of the declaration, but it was edited by 
		the redoubtable Benjamin Franklin, and later was heavily amended by the 
		Continental Congress. Jefferson suffered great humiliation of his pride 
		and anger at the editing and changes.
		 
		Despite the document's stirring opening words, if you actually read the 
		whole thing, you will be highly disappointed.
		 
		The bulk of it has a whining tone in piling on complaint after complaint 
		against the Crown. Some would say the whining set a standard for the 
		next quarter millennium of American society.
		 
		In Jefferson’s draft it went on and on about Britain's slave trade. The 
		'slave trade' business was particularly hypocritical, trying to sound 
		elevated while in fact reflecting something else altogether. At the time 
		there was a surplus of human flesh in Virginia, and prices were soft.
		
		 
		The cause of the Revolution is also interesting and never emphasized in 
		American texts. Britain's imposition of the Quebec Act created a 
		firestorm of anti-Catholicism in the colonies. They were afraid of being 
		ruled from a Catholic colony.
		 
		The speech and writing of American colonists of the time was filled with 
		exactly the kind of ugly language one associates with extremist 
		Ulstermen in recent years. 
		 
		This combined with the sense of safety engendered from Britain's victory 
		in the French and Indian War (the Seven Years War)and the unwillingness 
		to pay taxes to help pay for that victory caused the colonial revolt.
		 
		Few Americans know it, but it was the practice for many, many decades to 
		burn the Pope in effigy on Guy Fawkes Day along the Eastern Seaboard. 
		Anti-Catholicism was quite virulent for a very long time. 
		 
		The first phase of the revolt in and around Boston was actually 
		something of a popular revolution, responding to Britain's blockading 
		the harbor and quartering troops in Boston.
		 
		The colonial aristocrats were having none of that, and they appointed 
		Washington commander over the heads of the Boston Militias who 
		volunteered and actually elected their officers.
		 
		Washington, who had always wanted to be a British regular commander but 
		never received the commission, imposed his will ferociously. He started 
		flogging and hanging. 
		In his letters home, the men who actually started the revolution are 
		described as filth and scum. He was a very arrogant aristocrat.
		 
		The American Revolution has been described by a European as home-grown 
		aristocrats replacing foreign-born ones. It is an apt description.
		 
		Washington, Hamilton, Adams, and many other of the Fathers had no faith 
		in democracy. About one percent of early Virginia could vote. The 
		president was not elected by people but by elites in the Electoral 
		College. The Senate, which even today is the power in the legislature, 
		was appointed well into the 20th century. 
		 
		The Supreme Court originally never dared interpret the Bill of Rights as 
		determining what states should do. It sat on paper like an advertising 
		brochure with no force. At one time, Jefferson seriously raised the 
		specter of secession, half a century before the Civil War, over even the 
		possibility of the Bill of Rights being interpreted by a national court 
		and enforced.
		 
		The Founding Fathers saw popular voting as endangering property 
		ownership. Democracy was viewed by most the same way Washington viewed 
		the “scum” who started the Revolution around Boston. It took about two 
		hundred years of gradual changes for America to become anything that 
		seriously could be called democratic. Even now, what sensible person 
		would call it anything but a rough work still in progress.
		 
		It is interesting to reflect on the fact that early America was ruled by 
		a portion of the population no larger than what is represented today by 
		the Chinese Communist Party as a portion of that country’s population.
		 
		Yet today we see little sign of patience or understanding in American 
		arrogance about how quickly other states should become democratic. And 
		we see in Abu Ghraib, in Guantanamo, and in the CIA’s International 
		Torture Gulag that the principles and attitudes of the Bill of Rights 
		still haven’t completely been embraced by America.
		 
		Contrary to all the posturing amongst the Patriots – who few were a 
		minority at the time - about tyranny, the historical facts indicate that 
		Britain on the whole actually had offered good government to its North 
		American Colonies.
		 
		Everyone who visited the Colonies from Europe noted the exceptional 
		health of residents.
		 
		They also noticed what seemed an extraordinary degree of freedom enjoyed 
		by colonists. It was said to be amongst the freest place in the known 
		world, likely owing in good part to its distance from the Mother 
		Country. A favorite way to wealth was smuggling, especially with the 
		Caribbean. John Hancock made his fortune that way.
		 
		Ben Franklin once wrote a little memo, having noted the health of 
		Americans and their birth rates, predicting the future overtaking of 
		Britain by America, an idea not at all common at the time.
		 
		Indeed, it was only the relative health and freedom which made the idea 
		of separation at all realistic. Britain was, of course, at the time 
		viewed much the way, with the same awe of power, people view America 
		today. These well-known facts of essentially good government in the 
		Colonies made the Declaration of Independence list of grievances sound 
		exaggerated and melodramatic to outsiders even at the time. 
		 
		The combination of the Quebec Act, anti-Catholicism, dislike of taxes, 
		plus the desire to move West and plunder more Indian lands were the 
		absolute causes of the Revolution.
		 
		Britain tried to recognize the rights of the aboriginals and had 
		forbidden any movement west by the Colonies. 
		 
		But people in the colonies were land-mad, all hoping to make a fortune 
		staking out claims they would sell to later settlers. The map of 
		Massachusetts, for example, showed the colony stretching like a band 
		across the continent to the Pacific. Britain did not agree. 
		 
		George Washington made a lot of money doing this very thing, more than 
		any other enterprise of his except for marrying Martha Custis, the 
		richest widow in the colonies.
		 
		The tax issue is interesting. 
		 
		The French and Indian War (the Seven Years War) heavily benefited the 
		Colonists by removing the threat of France in the West. Once the war was 
		over, many colonists took the attitude that Britain could not take the 
		benefits back, and they refused to pay the taxes largely imposed to pay 
		the war's considerable cost.
		 
		And Americans have hated taxes since.
		 
		By the way, in the end, without the huge assistance of France, the 
		Colonies would not have won the war. France played an important role in 
		the two decisive victories, Saratoga and Yorktown. At Saratoga they had 
		smuggled in the weapons the Americans used. At Yorktown, the final 
		battle, the French were completely responsible for the victory and for 
		even committing to the battle. Washington had wanted instead to attack 
		New York – which would have been a disaster – but the French generals 
		then assisting recognized a unique opportunity at Yorktown. 
		 
		After the war, the United States never paid the huge French loans back. 
		Some gratitude. Also the United States renounced the legitimate debts 
		many citizens owed to British factors (merchant/shippers) for no good 
		reason at all except not wanting to pay. 
		 
		It was all a much less glorious beginning than you would ever know from 
		the drum-beating, baton-twirling, sequined costumes, and noise today. 
		And if you really want to understand why America has become the very 
		thing it claimed it was fighting in 1776, then you only need a little 
		solid history.  
		
		
		
		
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