So why, I asked, don’t you to want to help out people across town who
have the same needs, even if they’re strangers? His answer came
instantly: Because I know my neighbors work hard and do all they can to
take care of themselves. I don’t know about those people across town.
He didn’t have to say more (though he did).
Tomgram: Ira Chernus, Obama Trapped by Myth
In New York City, my hometown, as in so many cities across
the country, a hard-pressed local government and a desperate transit
authority are cutting back on services while hiking prices for
a deteriorating subway and bus system. For night workers and those out
in the lonely, dark early morning hours, some bus lines are simply being eliminated.
Meanwhile, in one small settlement of 14,000 people in embattled
Helmand Province in southern Afghanistan, a single marine platoon is spending on
average $400,000 a month on “reconstruction projects.” The Marines
have, according to a BBC reporter who visited, “put up street lights,
cleaned irrigation channels, handed out radios, paved the bazaar, built
bridges, and are currently building a new school.” Do I feel safer?
In the U.S., policemen and firemen are being laid off, and the budgets of police and fire departments cut back or, in a few small places, eliminated.
In Afghanistan, the U.S., having already invested $20 billion in
building up the Afghan police and military, is now planning to spend $11.6 billion more this year alone, $12.8 billion in
2012, and more than $6 billion a year thereafter. According to
Washington's latest scheme, the Afghan security forces will be increased
to 378,000 men in a poverty-stricken land, which means committing U.S.
tax dollars to the project into the distant future. Do you feel safer?
In the United States, teachers are being laid off, class-sizes are on the rise, and tuition at public colleges is soaring. In Afghanistan, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) claims to have built or refurbished 524 schools and to be completing another 130 of them. Do you feel safer now?
In the U.S., basic infrastructure has been fraying, bridges collapsing, natural gas pipelines exploding, and projects like a commuter-rail tunnel connecting New Jersey to New York City are being canceled or
put off. In Afghanistan and Pakistan, giant American-funded building
projects are revving up (for which locals are being hired), especially a
giant embassy/citadel in Kabul at the cost of $511 million (with nearly $200 million more
going to the expansion of consular establishments elsewhere in that
country). Meanwhile in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, another monster
U.S. citadel-cum-regional-command-center is being built for nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars. Do you feel safer yet?
In the United States, according to the
director of the Argonne National Laboratory, the aging national power
grid “resembles the patchwork of narrow, winding, badly maintained
highways of the 1920s and 1930s” before they were rebuilt as the
interstate highway system and cries out for “strategic upgrading.” In
Afghanistan, USAID has just awarded the
Black & Veatch Corporation “a no-bid contract worth $266 million...
to pump more power into Kandahar and Helmand provinces.” Meanwhile the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is investing $227 million in
diesel-generator power plants and electrical-system upgrades for
southern Afghanistan. Finally feeling a little safer?
Oh, and in case you think that these reconstruction projects are
actually making Afghans feel safer, many of them are ill-built, visible
boondoggles, and already crumbling. The cost of 15 large-scale
reconstruction programs in Afghanistan studied by McClatchy News ballooned
from slightly more than one billion dollars to just under three billion
dollars “despite the government’s questions about effectiveness or
cost.” A previous Black & Veatch project to build a diesel-fueled
power plant in Kabul for $100 million, for instance, ended up costing
$300 million and was a year behind schedule. Schools have reportedly
been constructed so shoddily that they would have no hope of
withstanding an earthquake and, according to theWashington Post,
“roads, canals, and schools built... as part of a special U.S. military
program are crumbling under Afghan stewardship.” Does anyone feel
safer?
Think about this as TomDispatch regular Ira Chernus explores what he
calls America’s myth of national insecurity. (To catch Timothy
MacBain's latest superb TomCast audio interview in which Chernus
discusses “us versus them” and “us with them” myths, click here or, to download it to your iPod, here.) Tom
How the Power of Myth Keeps Us Mired in War:
Why Are We Still in Afghanistan?
by Ira Chernus
I knew the rest of the
story: Why should I give my hard-earned money to the government so they
can hand it out to strangers who, for all I know, are good-for-nothing
loafers and mooches? I want to be free to decide what to do with my
dough and I’ll give it to responsible people who believe in taking care
of themselves and their families, just like me. I’ll give my money to
the government only to protect us from strangers in distant lands who
don’t believe in the sacred rights of the individual and aim to take my
freedom and money away.
What a story it is -- a tale of mythic proportions! As an historian
of religions, I was trained to appreciate, even marvel at the myths
people tell to make sense out of the chaos of their lives. So I can’t
help admiring the conservative myth: so simple yet all encompassing,
offering clear and easy-to-grasp answers that cut through the everyday
complexities besetting us all.
Of course, the answers are far too simplistic, as stupid (in my
opinion) as they are dangerous. But I was also trained to be
non-judgmental and to admire the power of a myth even when I find it
morally abhorrent. And this one is impressive, with its classic
good-guys-versus-bad-guys plot line turned into a stark political tale
of freedom versus slavery.
White Americans, going back to early colonial times, generally
assigned the role of “bad guys” to “savages” lurking in the wilderness
beyond the borders of our civilized land. Whether they were redskins,
commies, terrorists, or the Taliban, the plot has always remained the
same.
Call it the myth of national security -- or, more accurately, national insecurity,
since it always tells us who and what to fear. It’s been a mighty (and
mighty effective) myth exactly because it lays out with such clarity
not just what Americans are against, but also what we are for, what we
want to keep safe and secure: the freedom of the individual, especially
the freedom to make and keep money.
The President Trapped in a Myth and a War
No politician who aspires to real influence on the national level can
afford to reject that myth or even express real doubts about it, at
least in public, as Barack Obama surely knows. Not surprisingly,
President Obama has embraced the myth in his most important speeches:
The bad guys are always out there. (“Scripture tells us that there is evil in the world.”) The good guys have no choice but to fight against the evildoers. (“Force may sometimes be necessary.”)
Because
every myth has variants, though, politicians can still make choices. In
Obama’s version of the myth, the federal government can be a force for
good. So he has a domestic fight on his hands every day against
right-wingers who cast the government as an agent of darkness.
He’s not likely to stand a chance of winning that battle if he tries
to take on the myth of national security as well. Bill Clinton once put it
all-too-accurately: "When people are insecure” -- which is exactly when
they rely most on their myths -- “they'd rather have somebody [in the
White House] who is strong and wrong than someone who's weak and right."
That’s a truth everyone in the room undoubtedly had in mind back in
the fall of 2009 when the top military field commanders came to the
White House to talk about Afghanistan. Where else, after all, could our
military act out the drama of civilized America staving off the savages?
And what better-cast candidates for the role of savages could there be
than the Taliban and al-Qaeda?
The generals who run the war also had to confront another vital
question: Could they still act out some contemporary version of the myth
of good against evil? They’ve given up on the possibility of victory
in Afghanistan. So there’s no real chance to go for the classic
version of the myth in which the good guys totally vanquish the bad
guys.
But since the Cold War era, the myth has demanded only that the good
guys don’t lose -- that they merely “contain” the evildoers who “hate
our freedoms” (especially our freedom to make and keep money) and will
swoop down to destroy us if we give them the chance.
These days the generals must sense that even the containment version
of the myth is in trouble. Their predecessors failed to enact it in
Vietnam, and though the judgment of history is still out on the Iraq
War, it's looking ever more dim, too. If the U.S. loses in Afghanistan,
the American public might abandon the myth that justifies the military
establishment and its gargantuan budget. As a result, the generals
prefer to fight on eternally.
President Obama is trapped at this point. He risks losing both a war
and a presidency. Yet if he tries to ease up on the war accelerator, he
knows he’ll be pilloried by an alliance of military and right-wing
forces as a “cut-and-run” weakling.
If he’s ever tempted to forget that domestic political reality, the
mass media are always ready to remind him. Just glance at the 145,000
Google hits on “Obama wimp.” Even his liberal friends at the New York Times have asked in a prominent headline, “Is Obama a Wimp or a Warrior?”
Within the confines of the national insecurity myth, of course, those
are the only two options. If pressure is ever going to develop to get
U.S. troops out of Afghanistan, progressives will have to offer a new
option that actually speaks to Americans.
To Myth or Not to Myth
And there’s the problem. Myths are like scientific theories. No
mountain of facts and logic, however convincing, can change believers’
minds -- until a more convincing myth comes along.
A handful of progressive political thinkers are trying to persuade
the American left to understand this truth and start offering new
political myths (their technical term is “framing narratives”). George Lakoff
is probably the best known. His books are bestsellers. His articles on
websites invariably go to the top of “most read” and “most emailed”
lists. Yet he can’t seem to make much of a dent in the actual policies
and practices he’d like to change.
Progressives still shower the public with facts and arguments that
are hard to refute, as (in the case of the Afghan War) the American
people know. After all, more than 60%
of them now tell pollsters that the war was a “mistake.” Yet the war
goes on and progressives remain the most marginal of players in the
American political game because they don’t have a great myth to offer.
In fact, they’ve hardly got any good ones.
Political scientist David Ricci claims there’s not much progressives
can do about it, precisely because they already have one very successful
myth that prevents them -- oh, the irony! -- from taking the power of
myths seriously. The progressive heritage, as he tells it,
goes back to the eighteenth century Enlightenment, when the radicals of
the day decided that fact and logic were the source of all truth and
the only path to peace and freedom.
The Bible and all the other ancient tales bind us to the past, they
argued. As a result, humanity was letting dead people lock us into the
injustices that bred endless war and suffering. It was time to let human
reason open up a better future.
If progressives believe they are myth-less, though, they’re blind to
the one mythic plot they share with the rest of America: good against
evil. Progressives act out that myth on the political battlefield every
day, passionately fighting to defeat right-wing evildoers.
The problem is (and forgive me for repeating an old anti-left cliché
of the 1960s, but it’s true here): the progressives’ political myth
tells only what they’re against, not what they’re for.
In fact, deep down, most progressives do have a dim sense of their
deepest principles: the Enlightenment ideals of peace, freedom, and
equality based on the Romantic ideal of what Lakoff calls empathy, extended to all humanity and the biosphere as well.
But progressives don’t wrap their policy prescriptions in mythic language that says clearly, simply, and patriotically
what they’re for. As a result, they can’t compete with the myth of
national insecurity. They’ve got nothing to offer in its place, which
is at least one reason why, despite growing opposition to the Afghan
War, they can’t build a strong enough constituency to help -- or force
-- Obama to end it.
All they can do is demand that he sacrifice his domestic agenda, and
-- no small matter for any politician -- his second-term chances, on the
altar of principle. As a result, they end up in a political
never-never-land, which might feel good but isn’t going to save a single
Afghan life.
No individual, much less a committee, can sit down and create a new
myth. Myths grow organically from the life of a community. Progressives
would find their myth emerging spontaneously if they just spent a lot
more time thinking and talking about their most basic worldview and
values, the underlying premises that lead them to hold their political
positions with such passion.
A strong progressive myth could make it safer for a president to
change course and perhaps save his presidency. Failure to stave off the
bad guys destroyed Lyndon Johnson and gravely wounded George W. Bush. I
suspect Obama would love to have a great progressive myth keep him from a
similar fate. He won’t create it, but he’d probably be delighted to see
it appear on the horizon.
Copyright 2011 Ira Chernus