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Does the American Empire Deserve to Die? Questions for Thinkers on the Left and Right Concerning the USA
November 2, 2009 I’m
halfway
through
a
reflective
book
written
by
an
old
curmudgeon.
Part
patriot,
part
historian,
all
gadfly,
Gore
Vidal
wrote
Imperial
America:
Reflections
on
the
United
States
of
Amnesia
in
2004,
just
before
the
upcoming
national
elections.
Almost
a
time
capsule
coupled
with
dire
prophecy,
the
book
is
a
sober,
sometimes
cynical
look
at
Not
a
chance. “We
hate
this
system
that
we
are
trapped
in,
but
we
don’t
know
who
has
trapped
us
or
how,”
wrote
Vidal.
“The
American
press
has
generally
shied
away
from
telling
us
about
ballot
fraud
.
.
.
.
Yet
at
the
dawn
of
the
empire,
for
a
brief
instant,
our
professional
writers
tended
to
make
a
difference.” Vidal
traced
that
“dawn”
back
to
the
Spanish-American
War
at
the
turn
of
the
20th
Century.
Yet
the
historian
in
him
also
notes
that
we’ve
always
been
empirical,
back
beyond
the
so-called
Mexican
War
more
than
50
years
before
that.
So
why
haven’t
our
professional
writers
of
today
readily
admitted
that
we
are
indeed
an
empire
and
have
been
an
empire
for
a
very
long
time,
and
yes,
that
we
indeed
“create
our
own
reality”? So
I
posed
the
question
to
various
well-known
and
respected
writers
from
the
left,
right
and
center:
Does
the
American
Empire
deserve
to
die,
and
if
NOT,
why
not? “Our
founding
fathers
never
intended
the
country
that
they
created
to
be
an
empire,”
replied
Paul
Craig
Roberts,
former
top
Reagan
Treasury
official. Roberts,
who
penned
such
un-Reaganite
columns
as
“The
Rich
Have
Stolen
the
Economy”
and
“The
US
as
Failed
State”,
added:
“The
political
system
is
unresponsive
to
the
American
people.
It
is
monopolized
by
a
few
powerful
interest
groups
that
control
campaign
contributions.
Interest
groups
have
exercised
their
power
to
monopolize
the
economy
for
the
benefit
of
themselves,
the
American
people
be
damned.” American
people
be
damned?
So
the
empire
would
then
deserve
to
die,
right? “Short
answer:
Yes,”
replied
columnist
Dave
Lindorff.
“If
Lindorff composes columns for Counterpunch.com such as “Depleted Uranium Weapons: Dead Babies in Iraq and Afghanistan Are No Joke." Some
conservative
media
heavyweights
might
disagree.
“Doug
—
I
think
the
Likewise
longtime
activist
and
9-11
truth
advocate
Devvy
Kidd
politely
replied
to
me:
“Do
I
believe
our
constitutional
republic
should
die?
Of
course
not.
Do
I
support
the
destructive
foreign
policies
over
the
past
five
or
six
decades?
Of
course
not.
A
return
to
true
constitutional
government
under
our
Constitution
will
do
just
fine.” Nice
to
see
some
people
believed
a
return
could
happen
before
we
expire,
like
“I
suppose
all
Empires
deserve
to
die
in
the
end,
usually
when
the
marginal
rate
of
return
to
inhabitants
becomes
too
burdensome,
as
with
“Key
for
me
is
that
all
empires
overreach
and
self-destruct,”
replied
columnist
Stephen
Lendman,
of
the
Centre
for
Research
on
Globalization.
“We
sure
as
hell
are
doing
it
big
time,
and
one
of
my
(radio
show)
guests
makes
an
important
point.
Having
been
a
former
high-level
insider,
she
believes
the
power
elite
has
given
up
on
“As
to
your
question,
the
first
part
would
definitely
be
yes,”
wrote
Alex
Knight,
“though
that
need
not
mean
the
death
of
Do
ALL
empires
deserve
to
die?
Or
just
some
more
than
others? George
Smith
wrote:
“The
word
‘deserves’
is
a
bit
tricky,
but
otherwise
if
you're
asking
whether
I
would
like
to
see
the
empire
die,
the
answer
is
emphatically
yes.
Empires
necessarily
entail
war
and
a
resource-consuming
military
establishment
.
.
.
The
government
has
been
very
successful
in
keeping
Americans
believing
most
of
what
it
does
is,
at
worst,
a
necessary
evil.
With
that
kind
of
support,
the
empire
can
make
the
claim
it
deserves
to
exist.”
History
is
undeniable.
All
empires
die.
No
exceptions;
only
a
matter
of
time
when.
Whether
all
empires
deserve
to
die,
even
our
own,
is
arguable.
In
any
case,
the
implication
is
that
we
the
people
do
not.
Whether
left,
right
or
centralist,
the
implication
is
that
the
republic
may
be
a
distant
memory
or
a
myth
but
a
fond
one.
No
power
of
recollection,
no
road
map
back,
no
more
Manifest
Destiny
(if
we
ever
had
one),
unless
some
serious,
SERIOUS
reunification
happens
soon.
An
ethical
revitalization,
if
one
is
ever
possible,
at
the
most
crucial
moment
in
a
tottering
empire’s
lifespan.
Personally,
I
believe
that
all
empires
deserve
to
die,
some
sooner
than
others.
Just
imagine
the
tens
of
millions
of
innocent
people
crushed
beneath
the
juggernaut
of
the
American
Empire
in
the
past
century
and
then
try
your
best
to
justify
their
deaths.
Could
you?
If
you
can,
than
yes,
Good Luck to us all, and to those nations around us.
Longtime STR contributor Douglas Herman grew up in Michigan during the glory years of the auto industry, His grandfather, a Polish immigrant, labored proudly on the Chevrolet assembly line. Mr. Herman is writing a road movie script featuring a classic American convertible. |