Holiday Hypocrisy
By Stephen Lendman
01/14/07 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Borrowing the line from Gilbert &
Sullivan's HMS Pinafore: "Things are seldom as they
seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream." It's as true here
in the US today as it was in 19th century England, and
its message explains how to understand and view our
affairs of state and why the title of this essay was
chosen - to reflect on our national federal holidays
that, in fact, represent something much different than
the stated reasons we commemorate them for. Eleven such
holidays are reviewed below moving chronologically
through the year post-New Year's Day discussed briefly
at the end because it's part of the Christmas holiday
season celebration.
Martin Luther King Day
Martin Luther King was a Baptist minister, political
activist, renowned orator, Nobel Peace Prize laureate
and the most noted leader of the American civil rights
movement until his assassination in Memphis on April 4,
1968, two months before Robert Kennedy met the same fate
in a Los Angeles hotel a day after he won the Democrat
primary in his campaign for the office of president that
year. In mid-January, King's January
15 birthday is commemorated as a federal holiday as it
has been since it was for the first time on January 20,
1986 after Ronald Reagan reluctantly signed the
legislation authorizing it in November, 1983. He did it
in spite of his personal opposition, only capitulating
after the bill authorizing it was passed in both Houses
of Congress with veto-proof margins.
After King's death in 1968, Representative John Conyers
introduced a bill in the House to make his birthday a
national holiday. It was a long struggle from then till
it was finally achieved because of racist opposition in
the Congress against honoring a black man led by former
Senator Jesse Helms who accused Dr. King of having
communist ties as well as making other outlandish slurs
against his good name and accusing him of opposing the
Vietnam war which he certainly did with passion and
eloquence that may have led to his death.
Helms was a hard-liner throughout his public life
(like too many others in the Congress then and now), and
his career was characterized by mean-spiritedness and a
lifelong opposition to democracy, diversity and
affirmative action as well as his racist support for
segregation and efforts to deny black people their
constitutionally mandated rights. Some may also remember
his 1990 reelection campaign waged against Harvey Gantt,
the first black mayor of Charlotte, NC, in which Helms
disgracefully used a racist ad to counter his opponent's
lead in the polls. It was called "Hands" and showed a
pair of white hands crumpling a job-rejection letter
with a narration explaining he was best qualified and
needed the job a racial quota gave to a less deserving
black man. It worked, overcoming Gantt's lead and helped
reelect Helms undeservedly.
Martin Luther King Day is the only national holiday
commemorating an African American, but it took over 15
long years of campaigning to get it authorized and over
two more before it was first observed. It took even
longer for Dr. King's day to be finally recognized in
all 50 states for the first time on January 17, 2000. It
likely only happened at all because the Congress finally
was moved to act after receiving a petition with six
million signatures that was the largest number ever
collected supporting a national issue. Sadly, it
happened because an assassin's bullet took his life much
too soon.
To this day, the question remains: who killed Martin
Luther King, but it's not hard to imagine why. James
Earl Ray was accused of being the lone assassin, at
first pleaded guilty in 1969 after being arrested
earlier and held in jail for eight months. He was
sentenced to 99 years in prison, never got a trial, and
retracted his guilty plea three days after making it
claiming his lawyer deceived him - to no avail. The case
was closed and his fate was sealed even though later
evidence uncovered casts great doubt on his guilt. He
nonetheless spent the rest of his life in prison dying
on April 23, 1998 at age 70. Today his name is hardly
ever mentioned in the dominant media nor is any attempt
made to clear it, which is no surprise.
But if Ray didn't do it, who then had a motive and might
have. Every year commemorating his birth, we note and
honor Dr. King's memorable "I have a Dream" speech while
ignoring the most important of his dreams including the
speeches he made supporting them. King was the foremost
of our nation's civil rights advocates, but he also
wanted to end the country's long history of exploitative
materialism and culture of militarism supporting it. He
wanted everyone's civil rights respected and honored but
also was dedicated to pursuing social justice, promoting
non-violence, and was unreservedly against war, becoming
increasingly vocal in his opposition to the one raging
in Vietnam using powerful language like calling the US
government "the greatest purveyor of violence in the
world."
King had already won great victories in his civil rights
battles with the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
and Voting Rights Act of 1965 that for the first time
gave African Americans the rights guaranteed them under
the Constitution that Jim Crow laws in the South denied
them for decades. It was his public stand on the other
great issues driving him that caused those in power
concern. No King commemorative today ever mentions his
memorable "Beyond Vietnam" speech delivered to clergy
and the public on April 4, 1967, one year to the day
before he was assassinated in Memphis. It was an heroic
and spellbinding moment with Dr. King at his eloquent
best calling for an end to the war and violence. It also
may have been a defining moment in his life that had a
single year left in it.
King knew he lived on the edge because of his beliefs
and his ability to reach and profoundly influence a vast
audience in the country and throughout the world. He
rightfully believed his life was in danger and it might
just be a matter of time before it was taken. We don't
know for sure who, in fact, killed him if it wasn't
James Earl Ray which seems very unlikely based on the
best evidence now known. We do know who had motive,
cause and easy opportunity to do it most any time or
place. We also know if the US government was behind it,
what part of it likely got the assignment.
It may have been the FBI with its long record of abuse
against targeted enemies of the state that includes
extensive documentation of its Cointelpro operations
from the 1950s till the early 1970s but likely never
stopped and has to be more active than ever now in the
age of George Bush and its culture of illegal
surveillance, witch-hunting, and imperial justice. In
earlier years, the FBI targeted organizations and
individuals on the left as well as those considered
radical including non-violent ones like The Black
Panthers, the American Indian Movement, and Dr. King's
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and Dr.
King himself because of Director J. Edgar Hoover's
obsession with the civil rights leader and his
near-fanatical efforts to defame and defile him.
The CIA has an even more disturbing record of
lawlessness as part of its overall mandate to collect
and analyze intelligence about foreign governments,
corporations, organizations and individuals as well as
conduct whatever covert, "black bag," or extrajudicial
state-sponsored assassinations assigned it that in half
a century ran into the hundreds.
Since it was created in 1947, the CIA's record has been
documented in detail including in the works of author,
researcher and former State Department employee William
Blum in his books Rogue State and Killing Hope detailing
the shameful record of US foreign policy and the CIA's
role in it since WW II. It includes carrying out
state-sponsored assassinations including those against
foreign leaders unwilling to surrender their nation's
sovereignty to ours based on imperial management with no
outliers allowed - reason enough to remove them with CIA
operatives often assigned the task but taking care to do
it with enough discretion to make it look like the long
arm of Washington was uninvolved.
Through the years the methods used have included a
"rogue element's bullet, a hard to detect poison or an
"unfortunate" plane crash that was the method of choice
to murder Panamian president Omar Torrijos in 1981 and
Ecuadorian president Jaimi Roldos in a helicopter crash
the same year. Sometimes other "plane accidents" are
like the one CIA-trained Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA)
personnel, led by Ugandan-born and US-trained Paul
Kagame (at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas' Command and General
Staff College), arranged with surface-to-air missiles to
shoot down the aircraft carrying Rwandan President
Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundi President Cyprien
Ntaryamira on April 6, 1994 that led to the ethnic
slaughter that year. It elevated "our guy" Major-General
Kagame to power and later to be president of Rwanda
where he let US forces operate freely in the country
using it as a base to pursue the greater prize
Washington sought in the resource-rich Congo (DRC)even
though it took hundreds of thousands of innocent lives
to do it and millions in Congo where war for its spoils
still continues but gets little attention.
Probably the best known and most infamous
state-sponsored assassination was the CIA-orchestrated
coup and murder of Chilean president Salvador Allende on
another September 11 in 1973. It ended the most vibrant
democracy in the Americas replacing it with the brutal
17 year dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet, who
unfortunately died on December 10 without ever having to
answer for his crimes against humanity. So far neither
have those in authority at CIA or higher-ups in the
Nixon administration like Henry Kissinger. He played a
key role in the coup plot, ironically the same year he
won a Nobel Peace Prize, as National Security Advisor
and Secretary of State and now must check with the State
Department for legal advice before traveling abroad for
assurance he won't be served with a warrant for his
arrest and detention.
That kind of record through the years shows CIA and its
operatives may have been behind the murder of Martin
Luther King to remove a powerful voice whose influential
opposition to war and support for non-violence and
social justice conflicted with this government's agenda
of imperial conquest for power and profit.
If one or more FBI, CIA or other US government assassins
murdered Martin Luther King, the federal holiday
commemorating his birth mocks him and stands as a
shameless deceptive act dishonoring all he stood and
worked for in his short 39 year life. It also makes his
day of observance an act of collective guilt by the
nation responsible for ending a noble life that might
have accomplished far more if he'd had a chance to
continue pursuing the goals he hoped to achieve but
never got the chance. Maybe that was the whole idea and
the reason he wasn't allowed to go on with his work.
Presidents' Day
Presidents' Day is observed on the third Monday of
February, was formerly celebrated as Washington's
Birthday, and now states have the option to use either
designation or some other one if they choose as Alabama
does commemorating Washington and Jefferson Day. They
can also pick another day as Georgia does observing
Washington's birthday the day after Christmas.
The period around this time is often used as an occasion
for schools to teach students the history of US
presidents, especially Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln
and some of our other noted ones. If only that occasion
were used to teach real history (like found in Howard
Zinn's A People's History of the United States) instead
of the fiction leading young minds to believe these
historic leaders were larger than life heros, noble in
purpose and service to the nation in its highest office,
and now deserving to be revered and remembered with a
few further immortalized in granite sculpture carving at
the Mount Rushmore National Memorial on stolen Lakota
Sioux land in South Dakota's Black Hills.
No past president gets more reverential treatment than
our first, the general who led the Continental Army
against the British in the nation's war of liberation
from the Crown. He became our first president by
coronation because he ran unopposed twice, and he's now
known as the "Father of the Country" because he was its
leader in war and then "selected" as its first head of
state. Students are never taught that Washington
expressed great aspirations referring to the new nation
as a "rising empire" even at its birth and backed his
sentiments with deeds to help make it one. He did it
during the Revolutionary War by his savage acts against
native Indians, all of whom he considered subhumans (or
American Untermenschen). He compared them to wolves and
"beasts of prey" and called for their total destruction
much like the way George Bush today calls for defeating
"terrorists" less well-defined than the ones
Washington's had in mind and went about destroying
ruthlessly.
He dispatched General John Sulivan and 5,000 troops to
attack the noncombatant Onondaga people in 1779 with
orders to destroy all their villages, homes, fields,
food supplies, cattle herds and orchards in a scorched
earth campaign to annihilate them. He wanted to kill as
many as possible and did. He also wanted their land
(like Bush today wants Iraq's oil) and took it by force,
including from the Onieda people who aided Washington
when he most needed help at Valley Forge. The truth
about the nation's "Father," kept out of young minds in
school, was our first president and all others after him
pursued a policy of genocide against the nation's
original inhabitants who lived mainly in peace for
thousands of years on the lands we came uninvited to and
took from them.
It began in 1492 when Columbus and those with him first
arrived in what's now Haiti exterminating virtually the
entire estimated eight million native Arawak, or Taino,
people. The genocidal slaughter of all North, South and
Central American Indian peoples followed reducing their
population by about 100 million or as much as 98% of
their original numbers. This is our shameful legacy of a
new nation conceived as a great democratic experiment
never tried before in the West outside of ancient Athens
for a few decades but only for a privileged minority in
it then and now.
It was never intended to be one for the nation's
indigenous peoples. Their presence impeded what came to
be known by the 1840s as the our "Manifest Destiny," or
virtual divine right, to expand west and south seizing
all the land from coast to coast south of Canada from
the people living on it who were exterminated as well as
Texas and the northern half of Mexico we wanted
including the prized possession of California.
Also excluded from our grand vision were the many
millions of black African captives sold into slavery and
sent to their harsh fate in the new world "democracy"
where those surviving the oppressive Middle Passage
voyage, at the cost of 50 million lives lost some
believe, were held in brutal bondage as human property
to serve against their will or be sold like commodities
to another master.
This is the true legacy of Presidents' Day. It
commemorates the nation's leaders who led the nation
making it grow by a state policy of genocide and
imperial expansion for wealth and power at the expense
of those in the way of the privileged class whose only
concern for ordinary people was and still is the use
they could get from them. Try finding that history in a
secondary or college text (unless Howard Zinn or a few
others wrote it) or mentioned in the
corporate-controlled media the next time this day of
dishonor is observed.
Easter
Easter is a day of great religious significance, but
only for Christians who worship Jesus of Nazareth or
Jesus Christ. It's not observed by many around the
country or world of other religious faiths or none at
all. Still, in the US, Christian observances take on
special meaning in a nation first settled and founded by
those of Christian faith even though most came for
secular reasons, not to escape religious persecution.
The Founders believed church and state should be
separated, and Jefferson first spoke of "a wall of
separation" between the two in 1802 after freedom of
religion was mandated in the First Amendment to the
Constitution that came into force in 1791.
Still, throughout our history, many believed the nation
was a Christian one and tried to tear down the
separation wall the Founders erected. That view became
especially prominent since the ascendancy of
neoconservative influence, beginning with the election
of Ronald Reagan in 1980, as these hard-liners want the
country governed by Christian principles, including
Judaic ones as well, but give short shrift to others and
demonizing them the way Islam is now condemned as
something synonymous with "terrorism" and "Islamofascism."
In the US today, all Christian holidays of importance
get prominent mention and due reverence paid them,
especially Christmas and Easter, the two holiest days in
the Christian calendar. Prominent Jews, too, aren't
ignored, many have near-equal status with Christians,
and most non-Jews in the country know about special
Jewish holy days like the Yom Kippur Day of Atonement
and Rosh Hashanah New Year even if they're not sure why
they're commemorated.
But try finding any mention of a Muslim holy day other
than a general recognition of Ramadan (established in
the year 638) without explanation of what the month-long
observance in the 9th month of the Islamic calendar
signifies. This period is considered the most important
and blessed month of the Islamic year, and it's believed
there are about as many Muslims in the US as Jews as
well as about 1.8 billion of them worldwide (compared to
an estimated 13.3 million Jews overall in 2002), a
number surely large enough to warrant its adherents
respect but instead only finds them wrongly condemned as
a collective Antichrist and threat to national security.
Easter is commemorated between late March and late April
(and early April to early May in Eastern Christianity
little known about in the US) and is also known as
Resurrection Day. It's the most important religious
feast of the Christian liturgical year and thus gets due
prominence in prayer and public displays of religious
observance. But Americanized flair goes much further
taking full advantage of a chance to commercialize
almost anything. So around this period there are Easter
Sunday parades and other non-religious promotional
activities and expressions that always manage to be
emphasized - even on the day celebrating the
resurrection of Jesus Christ, which observers believe
occurred on the third day following his death by
crucifixion between 27 and 33 AD. The Roman Catholic
Church gives this period special recognition with an
eight day feast called the Octave of Easter. It's also
the time of year when the Jewish seven day period of
Passover is commemorated, marking the Exodus of the
Israelites from enslavement in Egypt, that also now gets
more prominent mention in the country as part of the
effort to market anything, even important religious days
and periods of observance, but only ones celebrated by
Christians and Jews.
In a nation obsessed with and addicted to a culture of
consumerism, even marketing the Almighty is fair game.
Easter then, like other holidays and special days in the
calendar, is just another day to be exploited for profit
along with it being observed for the event and
significance it commemorates. It's a subject left for
the end of this essay when its most frenzied expression
arrives between Thanksgiving and the New Year
celebration. It's the time of year when corporate
America's only interest in the spirit of the season is
how to make a buck out of it - as many as possible
because that's the make-or-break time of year they rely
on and must do well in to have the year overall be
successful for owners and/or shareholders. So with
Thanksgiving dinner still being digested, they
practically scream "let the holiday shopping begin," and
let it continue right into the new year almost unabated.
It happens on Easter as well, whether it's new outfits
for the season, a day or two on the town, vacation
travel or any other way the business community can
exploit an occasion to get the public to part with its
resources spent on everything imaginable people never
knew they needed or wanted until the power of round the
clock advertising convinced them their lives would be
unfulfilled without them. Discussion of this subject
will be picked up later in this essay to show it's quite
acceptable to exploit a religious holy day for profit
even if it corrupts the reason it's commemorated that
should be an occasion for solemnity and not for the
consumerism that defiles it. But corporate bottom lines
aren't enhanced by religious reverence or observance -
at least not until the big business finds ways to sell
its wares in places and at times of worship and can get
away with it. It's hard to imagine they're not trying to
figure out how to do it.
Memorial and Veterans Days
Because both days are related, they're discussed under a
single heading. The first, Memorial Day, is commemorated
on the last Monday in May and was first observed in 1866
and called Decoration Day beginning in 1868. Usage of
Memorial Day wasn't common until after WW II and wasn't
the holiday's official name until federal law called it
that in 1967. The day is an occasion to honor the
nation's men and women who died in military service to
the country. More on that in a moment.
Veterans Day was formerly known as Armistice Day, or
Remembrance Day in Europe, that originally commemorated
the end of WW I on the 11th hour of the
11th day of the 11th month of the year in 1918 when the
guns went silent, or were supposed to. It was first
observed in the US in 1919 and made a legal holiday here
in 1938. In June, 1954, Congress enacted legislation
changing the holiday's name to Veterans Day.
Both holidays would never be needed in a nation
dedicated to peace, but one committed to perpetual war
for an unattainable peace dishonors its youth in life
and disingenuously honors those who died in imperial
wars for conquest and plunder. Nations waging wars only
guarantee more of them in an endless cycle of violence,
militarism, brutality and shameless inhumanity to those
made to suffer and die in combat theaters - so the
privileged who get to stay home can profit from them.
People don't want wars but can always be made to support
and fight in them using the proven method of choice that
always works - fear based on shameless lies and
deception by governments with hidden motives unrevealed
because who would go along with them if they did. Only
by deceitfully scaring people enough to believe the
nation's security is threatened will they support
foreign wars and fight in them thinking they have no
other choice. When traumatized enough, those wanting
peace can be convinced to go along with the most
outlandish schemes planned that if ever explained would
be condemned and never supported.
If people only knew the wisdom of iconic investigative
journalist IF Stone, they'd know in times of war, or
events leading to it, truth is the first casualty. He
told young journalists that "All governments are run by
liars and nothing they say (about anything) should be
believed, and on another occasion shortened it saying,
"All governments lie."
Serial lying is the defining characteristic of the Bush
administration, but all others earlier were duplicitous
as well including the one led by the Republican former
president just passed whose short two and a half year
tenure only gave him less time to commit fewer crimes of
war and against humanity. He managed to do his best with
the time he had, yet we honor him instead of exposing
his shameless acts deserving condemnation.
It's almost like it's preordained and in the country's
DNA that this nation is warrior state sending its
expendable youth to fight and die in foreign wars but
not for national security, honor or the rights of free
people anywhere. It's always for wealth and power that
conquest and plunder afford the privileged who get to
stay home safe and in comfort letting others do their
dying and then shamelessly hold a day of remembrance
honoring them for their sacrifice. This is the long
tradition of this nation that since inception in 1776
has been at war with one or more adversaries every year
without exception from that time to the present.
These two federal holidays warrant special condemnation.
They represent a galling legacy of endless wars and
false patriotic glorification of them including the
so-called "good" one about which there was nothing good
at all. Choosing days to honor the dead who sacrificed
everything is a sacrilege and failure to note they died
in vain on the alter of power and privilege for the few.
Their deaths assure an unending cycle of violence and
killing with legions of nameless, faceless grave sites
ahead known only to those experiencing unconscionable
loss.
These commemorative days stand above the others as
symbols of this nation's depravity and ultimate crime
against humanity and wasted lives it's taken. They
ignore what Lincoln hoped for at Gettysburg in November,
1863 when he said "we here resolve that these dead shall
not have died in vain, that this nation under God shall
have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the
people, by the people, for the people shall not perish
from the earth." He knew the horror of war and
understood for that to be they must end. He also feared
they would not and had to reflect that future wars would
take their leaders to new battlefields in an endless
cycle of death and destruction wars always guarantee.
Future commemorations of past wars should chart a new
course - a vow pledging they'll end, and this nation
resolves never again. Remembrance should then be an act
of contrition and path to redemption, honoring the
living, and taking a sacred oath of non-violence
promising to stand by it for all time. It should be a
solemn dedication to equity and social justice for all
in a state of peace renouncing wars and the shameless
holidays in their honor. One day they'll be no more wars
because no one will go fight in them. When it comes,
days of memorial and honoring veterans will end replaced
by a Peace Day honoring the living and sacredness of
life so those past dead finally won't have died in vain.
Pray it comes soon.
Independence Day
Along with Christmas, no federal holiday is more
celebrated than the day of the nation's independence
from the British Crown declared on July 4, 1776. Coming
in the summer with good weather across the country, it's
a day of parades, outings, and baseball at all levels
that many years ago nearly always meant so-called major
league double-headers that was a big occasion for young
boys growing up in "big league" cities whose dads took
them out for an endless day at the ballpark. It's also a
day of commemorative and exulting fireworks and other
expressions celebrating the nation's history, liberation
and traditions - not the truths about them but the
acceptable illusions taught in school and extolled by
the dominant media and their disingenuous allies in
academia and the clergy who go along propagating the
nation's myths.
Young minds are never taught the nation's real history,
just what's falsely glorified with all ugly parts about
important events and leaders responsible for them
suppressed to assure a new generation of "good citizens"
is properly trained, just like the ones preceding it,
assuring those in it will be loyal to the state because
they believe the mythology about the country schools at
all levels teach is the greatest on earth.
We should commemorate the glorious achievement of our
Founders and their Revolution that liberated the nation
from a repressive British monarchy and aristocracy
replacing it with an experimental system of government
never tried before in the West outside its imperfect
form in Athens in ancient Greece for a few decades.
After the war of liberation, the Founders met in 1787,
in the same Philadelphia State House where the
Declaration of Independence was signed
11 years earlier, to frame our historic Constitution and
later our Bill of Rights ratified in 1791.
It was historic and glorious, but much was left undone
and to be desired. Only white male property owners got
the most fundamental of all rights in a democracy until
1850 - the right to vote that should have been federally
mandated for all male and female adults in the country
but wasn't. In addition, slavery was a national shame
until the 13th Amendment freed black people, who were
just property until 1865. But they still never got real
liberties until the civil rights legislation of the
1960s completed what the Constitution and its Amendments
left undone. Even so, from then to the present, African
Americans and others of color have always had far fewer
rights and privileges than the nation's whites, and
shamefully our society is as segregated today as it was
in the
1960s before the landmark civil rights laws were passed
guaranteeing this would never happen again. It did, and
it's hardly a reason for people affected and all others
of conscience to celebrate on July 4 or any day.
The nation's native Indians have even less to celebrate,
the small number of them remaining of the
100 million or so throughout the Americas slaughtered
without mercy from the very earliest days before the
nation was liberated from the British Crown. Native
Americans lived on these lands for thousands of years in
relative peace. It wasn't until white settlers and
"Western civilization" arrived that everything changed
for the worst.
When the first European settlers came in the late 15th
century, they were accepted and at times aided by the
nation's first peoples who preferred peace to conflict.
But native graciousness wasn't returned in kind, and it
led to the great push West and South and near total
extermination of the many great Indian nations given no
rights or quarter in our grand new democratic experiment
for the privileged few. It was only in 1924 that
indigenous peoples got any rights with the passage of
the Indian Citizenship Act when there were hardly any
left to enjoy what little they got grudgingly. Getting
no rights at all were the many millions never born
because their ancestors were slaughtered in cold blood
leaving no new generations to follow.
Even today, in the 21st century, over 80 years since
Indian people got citizenship including the right to
vote, no peoples overall in the "land of the free" have
fewer rights as citizens or live in more desperate
poverty and despair unaddressed and virtually ignored
than the original inhabitants of this vast continent for
whom justice long delayed is justice never gotten. No
day is ever held honoring these courageous people
acknowledging their sacrifice for what the privileged
few now enjoy.
Why would any of them, even as citizens, have reason to
commemorate the date of the nation's "liberation" that
for them only meant the continuance of their destruction
and denial of their proud cultures. Today the traditions
of our original inhabitants are unknown by the greater
public, they're untaught in schools, and they're ignored
by the dominant media that only disgracefully mock and
demonize Indian people in films and society as drunks,
beasts, primitives and savages, noble or otherwise. What
native American could respect a government speaking only
with forked tongue and acting like real savages making
and breaking treaties, taking their lands, destroying
their welfare and finally their lives. The kind of
"liberation" this nation brought to the people of Iraq
for the past
16 years, we gave our original inhabitants for 500 years
"liberating" them, like Iraqis today, from their liberty
and lives.
Others in the nation also have little to celebrate on
this or any other day. Today it's truer than ever in an
age of extreme greed, unprecedented wealth disparity,
galling corruption and virtual abandonment of the rule
of law by an administration and Congress uncaring about
the rights of ordinary people anywhere. Through lies,
deceit and contempt for humanity, they created a state
of permanent war and disregard for the needs and human
and civil rights of the majority. They also ignored and
exacerbated conditions for the growing millions of poor,
persecuted and deprived, who have no reason for joy on
our day of "liberation" that gave them no rights or
"free" society fruits few of them ever enjoy. Today,
tens of millions of poor people, especially those of
color, are practically condemned as criminals for their
disadvantaged state, through no fault of their own, in a
corrupted racist society worshiping wealth, privilege
and all the interests of capital at the expense of those
having none.
Newly arrived immigrants also have little to celebrate,
especially the unwanted and exploited ones of color from
the South forced to come here because their nation's
leaders and ours destroyed their lives at home by the
oppressive NAFTA trade pact enacted to enrich corporate
giants at the expense of ordinary working people, mostly
living south of the border in Mexico.
Muslims from everywhere, including citizens already
here, have little to celebrate as well, in a nation
defiling Islam in the age of George Bush equating them
all with "terrorists" threatening the nation's security.
Thousands threatening no one have been illegally hounded
in witch-hunt roundups since 9/11, held in secret
detention, unjustly deported, and given no rights
including due process to clear their names. Their
"crime" is their faith and color in a nation
constitutionally mandating all its people can worship
freely now no longer valid and abandoned along with all
demonized, unwanted, poor and deprived peoples condemned
for who they are because they're not white and
privileged - the only race and class in the country
exempt from the harshness directed against all others.
Shame on the nation on its day of "liberation" and all
others that strayed from its founding principles never
granted to all and still only offered a chosen few.
Labor Day
Labor Day is commemorated on the first Monday in
September each year since the first one was celebrated
in New York in 1882. Around the world outside the US,
socialist and labor movements are observed on May 1 to
recognize the social and economic achievements of labor
movements and working class people in them. This day
gets limited attention in the US, but where it's
observed here it's commonly to commemorate the Haymarket
Riot of May 4, 1886 in Chicago that followed the May 1
general strike in the city for an eight hour day leading
to the violence that broke out on the 4th.
Labor Day became a national federal holiday when
Congress passed legislation for it in June, 1894, a time
when working people had few rights. It took many painful
years of struggle and strife before they got any of the
ones finally achieved grudgingly from management only
wanting to exploit them for profit. Only by organizing,
taking to the streets, going on strike, holding
boycotts, battling police and National Guard forces
supporting management against working people, paying
with their blood and lives did they finally gain an
eight hour day, a living wage, on-the-job benefits and
the pinnacle of labor triumph in the 1930s with the
passage of the Wagner Act establishing the National
Labor Relations Board (NLRB) guaranteeing labor had the
right to bargain collectively on equal terms with
management for the first time ever.
All of it was won from the bottom up. Management gave
nothing until forced to and neither did the federal
government always siding with business interests unless
and until enough people power forces Washington to yield
legislatively or face possible serious work stoppages or
even a national insurrection - all this in a democracy
claiming to represent all people, the great majority of
whom happen to be ordinary working ones.
Since a worried Congress passed the landmark 1935 Wagner
Act and Franklin Roosevelt signed it into law in dire
economic times when those in power feared the worst, the
state of organized labor rights has declined, especially
post-WW II. They then went steeply in reverse during the
Reagan years when the administration openly showed
disdain for working people in its one-side support for
management. It continued unabated, under Republican and
DLC Democrat administrations, and today stands at a
multi-generational low ebb. Since coming into office in
2001, the Neanderthal George Bush neocon administration
intensified its assault on the social contract
government once had with its people and has been openly
contemptuous of ordinary workers with little interest in
their rights and welfare.
Since the years of labor's ascendency, corporate America
in league with government shamelessly denigrated unions
and the rights of working people to organize in them. In
1958, one-third of the work force was unionized, but now
the figure is barely above 12%, and it's below 8% among
non-governmental employees or the lowest it's been in
seven decades. Worse, most jobs are low-pay service
sector ones because the nation's manufacturing base and
many higher-paying jobs in finance and technology have
been offshored to developing nations where workers can
be hired for a fraction of the salaries paid here or as
virtual serfs at below poverty wages to fill legions of
factory jobs in countries where fair practice worker
standards don't exist.
Nonetheless, on the first Monday each September this
nation remembers its working people with a
federally-mandated holiday in their "honor." Some honor
when it's disingenuously given at the same time worker
rights are ignored, forgotten, and uncared about by a
government beholden to capital and defiling ordinary
wage earners deceived on this day with meaningless bread
and circus droppings leaving out what working people
need most: good jobs at good pay, essential benefits
with them, and a government that really cares by doing
what counts most - fighting for their rights every day.
On Labor Day and all others, that kind of reverence is
off the table making a mockery of the day named for the
people it claims to honor, respect and serve but never
does.
Columbus Day
No federally mandated holiday raises public ire more
than the one commemorating Columbus, mentioned above
briefly. It honors a genocidist whose arrival on what's
now Haiti began the systematic mass slaughter of 100
million native human beings so this man and those coming
later could go home bringing "as much gold as (those
sponsoring them) need....and as many slaves as they
ask." The lure and lust for it got him
17 ships on his second voyage and 1200 men aboard them.
They were expected to bring back the riches they found
including the human ones headed for bondage. They went
from island to island in the Caribbean, took their
native Indians as captives, found no gold, but took
hundreds of human beings instead back to Spain with the
half or so of them surviving the journey put on the
block for sale like sheep or goats but treated much
worse.
The Arawak people deserved better. They were friendly
and receptive to the new arrivals, greeting them with
gifts, food and water making them feel welcome. They
were much like Indians on the mainland - friendly and
hospitable enough to make it easy for those arriving to
subjugate and kill them because they came to conquer,
enslave and steal the riches of the new land. Peaceful
Arawak people subjected to this predation got their
first taste of "Western civilization" with swords and
daggers that later were guns, cannons, and assorted
other super weapons of war matched against their simple
and crude weapons by comparison for hunting, not
warfare. It wasn't hard guessing who'd prevail.
It all got worse after the beginning and lasted 500
years with the deadly cost to native Americans already
explained. Still we celebrate the serial killer who
began it all, call him heroic, and honor his name and
legacy on the second Monday each October as we've done
since the first celebration was held in San Francisco in
1869. Today parades and other celebratory events are
held in his honor that include speeches by politicians
who desecrate the grave sites of the millions sent to
them beginning with this man who slaughtered the first
ones as a predatory participant in what was the start of
the greatest genocide ever.
Instead of commemorating October 12 as the day this man
arrived in the new world (now the second Monday in
October), Americans should condemn it as a day that will
live in infamy as it is by the few native survivors
whose ancestors perished by his hand and the many who
followed for conquest and plunder.
Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is celebrated in the US on the fourth
Thursday of November giving thanks to the Almighty for
the year's blessings and bounty. But most people
wouldn't imagine its intent by the way they spend the
day replete with self-indulgent overeating of
traditional foods for the full four day weekend period
when there are family gatherings, parades and, most
important for ravenous merchants, the official start of
the Christmas holiday shopping season beginning the day
after the Thanksgiving and continuing till Christmas eve
as long as stores remain open that are about as long as
people want them to.
This holiday, like all the others, is also replete with
mythology taught young minds in school about the
Pilgrims inviting native Indians to share their bounty
in a show of brotherhood and friendship with an array of
foods the early settlers never heard of that were
indigenous to the Americas and introduced to them by
local native people. The Pilgrims had nothing to do with
this tradition that began with Eastern Indians observing
fall harvest celebrations for centuries before the first
settlers arrived - never called Thanksgiving even after
they did.
While George Washington had days for national
thanksgiving, modern celebrations of the holiday only
date from the Civil War in 1863 when Abraham Lincoln
wanted a way to boost morale and patriotic fervor of the
Union Army at a time it needed it. He tried doing it by
proclaiming Thanksgiving a national holiday for the
first time. It had nothing to do with the Pilgrims nor
were they ever mentioned until 1890, and the term
Pilgrim was never even used until the 1870s. So much for
tradition.
The Thanksgiving holiday is also a way to promote
American ethnocentrism and cultural superiority over all
others by claiming the Almighty views our society as
special the way ideological Zionists feel Jews are "the
chosen people." It's a short step from these views to
judging all others everywhere as inferior, especially
ones ranked low in the racial, religious, ethnic or
cultural pecking order - like blacks, Latinos
(especially from countries like Mexico), and today's
number one demon target - all Muslim "radicals and
extremists" meaning all of them are by implication and
are "Islamofascist" terrorists as well.
Worse, they and others are what "we" say they are in a
time of "universal deceit" when "telling the truth is a
revolutionary act," as Orwell told us. He also said in
our kind of society "war is peace, freedom is slavery,
and ignorance is strength." The public believing it is a
testimony to the power of the dominant media Orwell
understood in his day over half a century ago before the
age of television. If he were living today he'd be
aghast at what now goes on where the dominant
corporate-controlled media and PR allies act as national
thought-control police programming the public mind into
compliance with whatever the country's power structure
wants us to believe - to its advantage and against ours.
Giving thanks on a special day of Thanksgiving also
serves another purpose. It has special religious
overtones that in the US are Christian ones as this
country always was a Christian nation with over
three-fourths of the people in it identifying themselves
of that faith. It's been that way even with the
traditional separation of church and state, but today
the thinking and influence of fundamentalist
Christianity in American Protestantism poses a special
threat to those outside it. This extremist movement
became dominant in the 1980s under Republican rule and
reemerged even more virulently with the election of
George Bush. What's disturbing and dangerous is that
hard-right ideologues like Pat Robertson, who thinks
it's all right to assassinate foreign heads of state he
dislikes like Hugo Chavez, are close to the seat of
power where their views hold great sway.
The US was founded as a secular state, and the
Constitution's First Amendment guaranteeing freedom of
religion has been interpreted by the Supreme Court as
requiring a "wall of separation" between church and
state prohibiting the government from adopting any
religion or denomination as official and requiring the
government to avoid undue involvement in religion, its
trappings or expressions.
That status is now in jeopardy following the
introduction of the "Constitution Restoration Act of
2004" in the Congress and reintroduced in near-identical
form in 2005. If reintroduced again and adopted in the
110th Congress, it would turn the US into a de facto
theocracy even though its supporters deny that's its
intent. Don't believe them.
Support for the bill is led by Dominionists like Pat
Robertson and at least those remaining of the 28 House
and Senate sponsors like him in the last Congress, who
support tearing down the sacred wall between between
church and state so the US can be governed by Christian
dogma as they interpret it. It would make lawbreakers of
those of other faiths, or none at all, disobeying
whatever parts of Christian canon the bill designated
the law of the land - a very scary prospect for about 75
million non-Christians in the country and many others of
Christian faith who won't go along.
If adopted, this bill will remove the Supreme Court's
authority to challenge the right of anyone in or
affiliated with federal, state or local government to
acknowledge "God as the sovereign source of law,
liberty, or government" - the Christian God, that is.
Any judge at any level interpreting the Constitution
otherwise would henceforth be subject to impeachment and
prosecution in the new United States of America ruled by
the Pat Robertson types of influence in it. Anyone
jittery? It would also likely elevate the Thanksgiving
holiday to one of obligatory Christian observance, even
for non-Christians, advancing its current optional
religious overtones to mandatory status.
Already the way Thanksgiving is celebrated today in the
US is a sham. While barely thanking the Almighty for the
year's blessings and bounty, if it's done at all, no
heed is paid to the many millions of poor, deprived and
oppressed peoples around the country and world whose
desperate state is the result of our government's
actions. It also ignores the systematic dismantling of
constitutional rights at home along with the denial of
essential social services to growing millions who
otherwise aren't able to get them. And it fails to
acknowledge our own dereliction in failing to take
personal action opposing these abuses against humanity
and the rule of law because we're too distracted or
involved in other things - like over-indulging on a day
to remember our blessings.
Those giving thanks on this day should reflect on their
obligation to oppose these crimes of state and the harm
they inflict on others and our own well-being. They need
to demand real change by holding elected officials
accountable and removing those failing to act
responsibly. They also need to learn their history
discovering how it began - that the nation they call
America once was the land of its original inhabitants
for many thousands of years who lived on it mostly in
peace until we, as uninvited settlers, arrived, took it
from them and slaughtered nearly all of them in the
process for the past 500 years. It's not just thanks we
should give on this day. It's forgiveness for this
enormous crime our forebears committed most people don't
even know about shamefully.
Journalism Professor Robert Jensen has it right in his
article called No Thanks to Thanksgiving. In it he
suggests we would go a long way toward progressing
morally if we replaced our "white supremicist" annual
Thanksgiving Day tradition of overindulgence with a
"National Day of Atonement" accompanied by a
self-reflective collective fasting for the "original
sin" of our forefathers even if our own came much later
or from a different part of the world. Establishing that
as a sacred tradition would be an important step toward
a day when we might really have something to "give
thanks" for every day in a land with leaders resolved
never to repeat the crimes of the past and just as
committed to public service instead of only to an elite
part of it.
Christmas
Christmas is observed worldwide by Christians and many
others on December 25 by tradition (other than the
Eastern Orthodox Church doing it on January 7) to honor
the birth of Jesus Christ even though it's widely
acknowledged not to be his birthday. Along with its
religious significance, it's also a time for other
celebratory events like winter festivals, Kwanzaa from
December 26 - January 1 for Africans Americans
reconnecting to their African cultural and historical
heritage, and for Jews the Hanukkah Festival of Lights
commemorating their struggle for survival and for Jewish
children to serve as their Christmas with gifts from
parents just like their Christian friends get.
The Christmas season is also a time for what can only be
characterized as the national obsession of shopping and
consuming that traditionally begins the day after
Thanksgiving, runs through Christmas eve and then picks
up again and continues into January largely resulting
from a compulsion to buy and holiday gift cards,
year-end bonuses and other resources gotten or borrowed
to do it with - for all the things not received as gifts
and anything else Madison Avenue creative minds can
convince people to want then or any other time of year.
If one dominant trait characterizes American culture
above all others, it's a variant of the consumerism of
the kind economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen
called "conspicuous" in his 1899 book The Theory of the
Leisure Class. Back then Veblen wrote about the habits
of the "nouveau riche" of that era that had accumulated
great wealth and spent lavishly to display it
"conspicuously" rather than to satisfy needs. If he were
living today writing on consumerism, he'd have to write
an entirely different book in a society hugely different
from the one he knew. His title might be something like
The Theory of the Spending Class or A Society Obsessed
with Spending or Consumerism encompassing everyone able
to spend any amount above the bare subsistence level or
what's done for basic needs everyone has.
The term "consumption" originated hundreds of years ago
referring to the infectious disease now called
tuberculosis or TB. But its original meaning bears
significance in today's consumerist society even though
the kind of consumption meaning to spend that everyone
does for essentials is worlds apart from gluttonous
consumerism covered in this section that refers to
discretionary shopping and spending for things people
don't need but buy anyway with all the negative effects
on those doing it beyond their means or even within them
as well as the overall harm to a society addicted to
excess consumption.
"Consumption," the disease, or untreated TB, was called
that because it "consumed" people from within causing
them to slowly and painfully waste away and perish. The
analogy today is the great mass of consumers spending
beyond their means and relying heavily on high
interest-bearing credit cards charging up to 20% or
more. It's placed millions precariously in debt over
their heads and growing numbers becoming unable to
service it because of unexpected financial exigencies
like from uninsured medical expenses. It's resulted in a
near-plague of personal bankruptcies that in 2005
affected over 2 million people, 30% above 2004, and may
rise still higher in
2006 and succeeding years unless people curb their
spending habits. Even those surviving that fate face an
endless burden of high debt service handled by monthly
credit card and/or bank or other lending agency payments
that enrich them at the expense of borrowers never able
to get out from under an obligation grown oppressive.
This would never happen in a society free from an
addiction to spend excessively that in the US is extreme
enough to be called a national pathological dysfunction
and diagnosed as an obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
It's a psychological or psychiatric anxiety one
characterized by obsessive or repetitive thoughts and
related compulsions or tasks and the rituals employed to
relieve the obsession. In the US, it's an obsession to
shop and buy, and the compulsion is to go out, spend and
do it. When done excessively the way it is here, it fits
the clinical definition of a pathological social
disorder that turns out to be deadly for many who get
themselves in debt bondage increasingly resulting in
bankruptcy.
In the West, but especially in the US, many tens of
millions of otherwise normal people are "obsessed" with
the need/desire to shop and accumulate all the things
they never knew they wanted or needed until the Madison
Avenue mind manipulating masters convinced them their
lives couldn't be fulfilled without them. Economist Paul
Baran once described their influence as being able to
make us "want what we don't need (all unessential
consumer goods and services) and not....what we do (like
good health care, education, clean air and water, safe
food, and good government providing essential
services)."
For those afflicted with the national neurosis of
consumerism, relief is only possible through ritual
shopping and spending, even if it means doing it with
borrowed funds at high interest rate carrying charges
and the risk of future insolvency. Clinicians would
characterize this behavior any time of year as abnormal
and harmful, but during the Christmas shopping season it
becomes a socially pathological orgy rising to the level
of an out-of-control spending frenzy.
It's also an effective societal control technique as
consumers out shopping or distracted by the vast array
of other bread and circus attractions around them (the
commercialized sights and sounds of the season to create
a buying mood), are focused away from affairs of state
and all the harm those in power do through them. While
people are glued to their TV sets or out at malls
shopping for the latest fashions, toys or trinkets, most
don't pay enough attention to their government waging
wars of aggression, destroying civil liberties and the
rule of law, cutting social services, harming the
environment, and failing in its social obligation
responsibilities to society because they conflict with
the elitist agenda of power and privilege it wants the
public knowing nothing about.
They also fail to understand their over-indulgent
consumerism feeds the corporate beast allowing it to
grow, prosper and become even more predatory in a
society based on savage capitalism, out-of-control
greed, corruption at the highest levels in business and
government using our misappropriated and stolen tax
dollars, and iron-fisted militarism and homeland
security enforcers supporting an imperial juggernaut on
the march to make the world safe for big capital that
needs armies of over-indulgent consumers to help it get
bigger. The more we shop, the further it marches in
search of new markets, resources and cheap labor
replacing the more expensive kind at home that may have
its future consumption impaired if if doesn't cut back
on the excess amount of it now.
Adam Smith, the ideological Godfather of capitalism,
understood the dangers of concentrated wealth and power
and wrote about it in his seminal work The Wealth of
Nations. He explained an "invisible hand" of unseen
forces worked best in a free (meaning fair) market with
many small businesses competing locally against each
other. He railed against the concentrated mercantilism
of his time like the British East India Company of his
native UK, where he was Scottish born, even though it
prospered quite well on ordinary consumption when there
was no such thing as the kind of consumerism endemic in
the US today.
If Smith were still living, he'd be appalled by today's
kind of monopolistic capitalism that was unimaginable in
his day, but he understood its danger in writing about
what he called the "vile maxim of the masters of
mankind....All for ourselves and nothing for other
people." Smith's work was important in its day, but in
modern Western society he'd likely have discovered there
is no "invisible hand" making markets efficient.
Today markets need countervailing government
intervention (called regulation) to make them work best
for everyone, not just the ones controlling them for
their own self-interest that's the way they work today
with corporate giants allowed freewheeling unrestrained
freedom letting them quash defenseless weak competitors
that can only survive and prosper if regulations call
for a level playing field where no one gets unfair
competitive advantage over anyone else. That doesn't
exist today as giant transnationals make their own
rules, and they're all stacked in their own favor.
Further, under today's neoliberal market rules, the
compulsion to consume exacerbates the problem. It lets
monopoly capitalism function like a giant vacuum cleaner
growing ever larger by sucking into corporate coffers
and growing bottom lines all the resources from addicted
consumers including all they can borrow in an endless
cycle of binge shopping and spending in a culture gone
mad with the need to accumulate and overindulge
especially during the Christmas holiday season.
Whatever Christmas once was, it no longer is, and it
corrupts society and the spirit of the man whose day of
birth it honors and the message of love and faith he
gave his followers. It came in his teachings, deeds and
sermons like his famous Sermon on the Mount when he said
to "turn the other cheek" and preached the central
tenets of the Ten Commandments that include loving thy
neighbor, not killing and doing unto others as you'd
want them doing to you. The consumerist US society is
one of receiving, not giving; of accepting predatory
capitalism or at least not opposing its harm; of
ignoring essential people needs and rights; of swearing
fealty to shopping and spending while turning away from
or not caring about our fellow men, women and children
throughout the year, especially at this holy time for
Christians whose thoughts should be on those most in
need and what can be done to help them.
It's a sad testimony to our society and how most in it
are easily manipulated to support what benefits those
with wealth and power at the expense of the greater good
of all others. Christmas in America is now the defiled
spirit of out-of-control excess unmindful of the unmet
needs of most others close by and around the world our
culture of savage capitalism exploits for profit. For
them, Christmas is only "Bah Humbug," and Santa only
Scrooge - all take and no give.
New Year's Day
The first day of the new year comes one week after
Christmas and is just a continuation of the long holiday
season beginning after Thanksgiving, reaching a climax
around Christmas, ebbing slightly for a day or so and
building again to a final celebratory welcoming of the
new year with another overindulgent bout of eating,
drinking, partying, and using whatever funds remain for
more discretionary spending in January and thereafter in
succeeding months gorging on nonessentials.
The new year is also a traditional time for resolutions
including some with merit like losing weight, resolving
to stop smoking and getting fit. Most are quickly
forgotten, and the most important ones are never made:
to work for peace on earth, good will toward others,
loving they neighbor, and respecting the rights of all
people everywhere, treating them as we'd want them to
treat us in a society of caring and sharing with equity
and equal justice for all. Wouldn't that be a wonderful
solemn resolution for the new year along with a sacred
commitment to keep it throughout the year and every one
thereafter once the holiday season ended. Long ago in
simpler times before the old world was called the new
one and was named America, it was that way. It can be
again if enough of us want it to be.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached
at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog
site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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