Surviving
the Fourth
of July
By Chris
Hedges
07/07/08 "Truthdig"
-- - I
survive the
degradation
that has
become
America—a
land that
exalts
itself as a
bastion of
freedom and
liberty
while it
tortures
human
beings,
stripped of
their
rights, in
offshore
penal
colonies, a
land that
wages wars
defined
under
international
law as
criminal
wars of
aggression,
a land that
turns its
back on its
poor, its
weak, its
mentally
ill, in a
relentless
drive to
embrace
totalitarian
capitalism—because
I read
books. I
have 5,000
of them.
They line
every wall
of my house.
And I do not
own a
television.
I survive
the gradual,
and I now
fear
inevitable,
disintegration
of our
democracy
because
great
literature
and poetry,
great
philosophy
and
theology,
the great
works of
history,
remind me
that there
were other
ages of
collapse and
despotism.
They remind
me that
through it
all men and
women of
conscience
endured and
communicated,
at least
with each
other, and
that it is
possible to
refuse to
participate
in the
process of
self-annihilation,
even if this
means we are
pushed to
the margins
of society.
They remind
me, as the
poet W.H.
Auden wrote,
that “ironic
points of
light flash
out wherever
the Just
exchange
their
messages.”
And if you
tire, as all
who can
think
critically
must, of the
empty cant
and
hypocrisy of
John McCain
and Barack
Obama, of
the
simplistic
and
intellectually
deadening
epistemology
of
television
and the
consumer
age, you can
retreat to
your
library.
Books were
my salvation
during the
wars and
conflicts I
covered for
two decades
as a foreign
correspondent
in Central
America,
Africa, the
Middle East
and the
Balkans.
They are my
salvation
now. The
fundamental
questions
about the
meaning, or
meaninglessness,
of our
existence
are laid
bare when we
sink to the
lowest
depths. And
it is those
depths that
Homer,
Euripides,
William
Shakespeare,
Fyodor
Dostoevsky,
George
Eliot,
Joseph
Conrad,
Marcel
Proust,
Vasily
Grossman,
George
Orwell,
Albert Camus
and Flannery
O’Connor
understood.
“The
practice of
art isn’t to
make a
living,”
Kurt
Vonnegut
said. “It’s
to make your
soul grow.”
The
historian
Will Durant
calculated
that there
have been
only 29
years in all
of human
history
during which
a war was
not under
way
somewhere.
Rather than
being
aberrations,
war and
tyranny
expose a
side of
human nature
that is
masked by
the often
unacknowledged
constraints
that glue
society
together.
Our
cultivated
conventions
and little
lies of
civility
lull us into
a refined
and
idealistic
view of
ourselves.
But look at
our last two
decades—2
million dead
in the war
in
Afghanistan,
1.5 million
dead in the
fighting in
Sudan, some
800,000
butchered in
the 90-day
slaughter of
Tutsis and
moderate
Hutus by
soldiers and
militias
directed by
the Hutu
government
in Rwanda, a
half-million
dead in
Angola, a
quarter of a
million dead
in Bosnia,
200,000 dead
in
Guatemala,
150,000 dead
in Liberia,
a quarter of
a million
dead in
Burundi,
75,000 dead
in Algeria,
at least
600,000 dead
in Iraq and
untold tens
of thousands
lost in the
border
conflict
between
Ethiopia and
Eritrea, the
fighting in
Colombia,
the
Israeli-Palestinian
conflict,
Chechnya,
Sri Lanka,
southeastern
Turkey,
Sierra
Leone,
Northern
Ireland,
Kosovo.
Civil war,
brutality,
ideological
intolerance,
conspiracy
and
murderous
repression
are the
daily fare
for all but
the
privileged
few in the
industrialized
world.
“The
gallows,”
the
gravediggers
in “Hamlet”
aptly remind
us, “is
built
stronger
than the
church.”
I have
little
connection,
however,
with
academics.
Most
professors
of
literature,
who read the
same books I
read, who
study the
same
authors, are
to
literature
what
forensic
medicine is
to the human
body. These
academics
seem to
spend more
time sucking
the life out
of books
than
absorbing
the profound
truths the
authors
struggle to
communicate.
Perhaps it
is because
academics,
sheltered in
their
gardens of
privilege,
often have
hyper-developed
intellects
and the
emotional
maturity of
12-year-olds.
Perhaps it
is because
they fear
the awful
revelations
in front of
them, truths
that, deeply
understood,
would demand
they fight
back. It is
easier to
eviscerate
the form,
the style
and the
structure
with textual
analysis and
ignore the
passionate
call for our
common
humanity.
“As long as
reading is
for us the
instigator
whose magic
keys have
opened the
door to
those
dwelling-places
deep within
us that we
would not
have known
how to
enter, its
role in our
lives is
salutary,”
Proust
wrote. “It
becomes
dangerous,
on the other
hand, when,
instead of
awakening us
to the
personal
life of the
mind,
reading
tends to
take its
place. …”
Although
Shakespeare’s
Jack
Falstaff is
a coward, a
liar and a
cheat,
although he
embodies all
the scourges
of human
frailty
Henry V
rejects, I
delight more
in
Falstaff’s
address to
himself in
the Boar’s
Head Tavern,
where he at
least admits
to serving
to his own
hedonism,
than I do in
Henry’s
heroic call
to arms
before
Agincourt.
Falstaff
personifies
a lust for
life and the
mockery of
heaven and
hell, of the
crown and
all other
instruments
of
authority.
He disdains
history,
honor and
glory.
Falstaff is
a much more
accurate
picture of
the common
soldier who
wants to
save his own
hide and
finds little
in the
rhetoric of
officers who
urge him
into danger.
Prince Hal
is a hero
and defeats
Percy while
Falstaff
pretends to
be a corpse.
But Falstaff
embodies the
basic
desires we
all have. He
is baser
than most.
He lacks the
essential
comradeship
necessary
among
soldiers,
but he
clings to
life in a
way a
soldier
under fire
can
sympathize
with. It is
to the ale
houses and
the taverns,
not the
court, that
these
soldiers
return when
the war is
done. Jack
Falstaff’s
selfish lust
for pleasure
hurts few,
while
Henry’s
selfish lust
for power
leaves
corpses
strewn
across muddy
battlefields.
And while we
have been
saturated
with the
rhetoric of
Henry V this
past July 4
holiday we
would be
better off
listening to
the truth
spoken by
Falstaff.
There is a
moment in
“Henry IV,
Part I,”
when
Falstaff
leads his
motley band
of followers
to the place
where the
army has
assembled.
Lined up
behind him
are cripples
and beggars,
all in rags,
because
those with
influence
and money,
like George
W. Bush,
evade
military
service.
Prince Hal
looks
askance at
the pathetic
collection
before him,
but Falstaff
says, “Tut,
tut, good
enough to
toss, food
for powder,
food for
powder.
They’ll fill
a pit as
well as
better. Tush,
man, mortal
men, mortal
men.”
I have seen
the pits in
the torpid
heat in El
Salvador,
the arid
valleys in
northern
Iraq and the
forested
slopes in
Bosnia.
Falstaff is
right.
Despite the
promises
never to
forget the
sacrifices
of the dead,
of those
crippled and
maimed by
war, the
loss and
suffering
eventually
become
superfluous.
The pain is
relegated to
the pages of
dusty books,
the
corridors of
poorly
funded VA
hospitals,
and
sustained by
grieving
families who
still visit
the
headstone of
a man or
woman who
died too
young. This
will be the
fate of our
dead and
wounded from
Iraq and
Afghanistan.
It is the
fate of all
those who go
to war. We
honor them
only in the
abstract.
The causes
that drove
the nation
to war, and
for which
they gave
their lives,
are soon
forgotten,
replaced by
new ones
that are
equally
absurd.
Stratis
Myrivilis in
his novel
“Life in the
Tomb” makes
this point:
“A few years
from now, I
told him,”
Myrvilis
wrote nearly
a century
ago,
“perhaps
others would
be killing
each other
for
anti-nationalist
ideals. Then
they would
laugh at our
own killings
just as we
had laughed
at those of
the
Byzantines.
These others
would
indulge in
mutual
slaughter
with the
same
enthusiasm,
though their
ideals were
new. Warfare
under the
entirely
fresh
banners
would be
just as
disgraceful
as always.
They might
even rip out
each other’s
guts then
with
religious
zeal,
claiming
that they
were
‘fighting to
end all
fighting.’
But they too
would be
followed by
still others
who would
laugh at
them with
the same
gusto.”
Patriotic
duty and the
disease of
nationalism
lure us to
deny our
common
humanity.
Yet to
pursue, in
the broadest
sense, what
is human,
what is
moral, in
the midst of
conflict or
under the
heel of the
totalitarian
state is
often a form
of
self-destruction.
And while
Shakespeare,
Proust and
Conrad
meditate on
success,
they honor
the nobility
of failure,
knowing that
there is
more to how
a life is
lived than
what it
achieves.
Lear and
Richard II
gain
knowledge
only as they
are pushed
down the
ladder, as
they are
stripped of
power and
the
illusions
which power
makes
possible.
Late one
night,
unable to
sleep during
the war in
El Salvador,
I picked up
“Macbeth.”
It was not a
calculated
decision. I
had come
that day
from a
village
where about
a dozen
people had
been
murdered by
the death
squads,
their thumbs
tied behind
their backs
with wire
and their
throats
slit.
I had read
the play
before as a
student. Now
it took on a
new,
electric
force. A
thirst for
power at the
cost of
human life
was no
longer an
abstraction.
It had
become part
of my own
experience.
I came upon
Lady
Macduff’s
speech, made
when the
murderers,
sent by
Macbeth,
arrive to
kill her and
her small
children.
“Whither
should I
fly?” she
asks.
I have done
no harm. But
I remember
now
I am in this
earthly
world, where
to do harm
Is often
laudable, to
do good
sometime
Accounted
dangerous
folly.
Those words
seized me
like Furies
and cried
out for the
dead I had
seen lined
up that day
in a dusty
market
square, and
the dead I
would see
later: the
3,000
children
killed in
Sarajevo,
the dead in
unmarked
mass graves
in Bosnia,
Kosovo,
Iraq, Sudan,
Algeria, El
Salvador,
the dead who
are my own,
who carried
notebooks,
cameras and
a vanquished
idealism
into war and
never
returned. Of
course
resistance
is usually
folly, of
course power
exercised
with
ruthlessness
will win, of
course force
easily
snuffs out
gentleness,
compassion
and decency.
In the end,
all we can
cling to is
each other.
Thucydides,
knowing that
Athens was
doomed in
the war with
Sparta,
consoled
himself with
the belief
that his
city’s
artistic and
intellectual
achievements
would in the
coming
centuries
overshadow
raw Spartan
militarism.
Beauty and
knowledge
could,
ultimately,
triumph over
power. But
we may not
live to see
such a
triumph. And
on this
weekend of
collective
exaltation I
did not
attend
fireworks or
hang a flag
outside my
house. I did
not
participate
in rituals
designed to
hide from
ourselves
who we have
become. I
read the
“Eclogues”
by Virgil.
These poems
were written
during
Rome’s
brutal civil
war. They
consoled me
in their
wisdom and
despair.
Virgil
understood
that the
words of a
poet were no
match for
war. He
understood
that the
chant of the
crowd urges
nearly all
to
collective
madness, and
yet he wrote
with the
hope that
there were
some among
his readers
who might
continue,
even when
faced with
defeat, to
sing his
hymns of
compassion.
… sed
carmina
tantum
nostra
valent,
Lycida, tela
inter Martia,
quantum
Chaonias
dicunt
aquila
veniente
columbas.
…but songs
of ours
Avail among
the
War-God’s
weapons,
Lycidas,
As much as Chaonian
doves, they
say, when
the
eagle comes.
