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Contributors
Daniel Pipes- Contributor
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the
presidentially-appointed board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace,
and a prize-winning columnist for the New York Sun and The
Jerusalem Post. His most recent book, Miniatures:
Views of Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction
Publishers) appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on
the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a chance
to sign-up to receive his new materials as they appear. [go
to Pipes index]
Hating
America's Success
Resenting our accomplishments…
[Daniel Pipes] 10/13/04
"The creation of the United States of America is the central event
of the past four hundred years." Thus does Walter A. McDougall
of the University of Pennsylvania begin the first volume of his
acclaimed new American history, Freedom Just Around the Corner (HarperCollins).
Not surprisingly, this central event has evoked
a wide range of opinions. Tens of millions of immigrants have
voted with their
feet to slough off prior allegiances and join the boisterous
experiment that makes "life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness" its official goal.
The result has been an astounding success. "We dominate
every field of human endeavor from fashion to film to finance," writes American columnist Charles Krauthammer. "We rule the world
culturally, economically, diplomatically and militarily as no
one has since the Roman Empire." As one symbol of this dominance,
the outside world is so affected by the forthcoming U.S. presidential
election, polls are now taken of who non-Americans would vote
for, if they could.
There is, of course, a dark side to this extraordinary success
too, and it includes envy, fear, and resentment. In a wise, pungent,
and (given its negative subject matter) enjoyable study, Barry
Rubin and Judith
Colp Rubin review this other side in Hating
America: A History (Oxford). In the book, they accomplish three
main things.
First, they provide a host of nonsensical assessments of the
United States going way back, some amusingly absurd, others vicious.
- Comte
de Buffon, renowned French scientist (1749): The American "heart
is frozen, their society cold, their empire cruel."
- Talleyrand,
French politician (1790s): It is a country of "32
religions and only one dish … and even that [is] inedible."
- Alexis
de Tocqueville, French social philosopher (1835): "I
know of no country in which there is so little independence of
mind and real freedom of discussion."
- Sigmund
Freud,
Austrian psychiatrist (1930s): "America
is a mistake, a gigantic mistake."
- George
Bernard Shaw, British playwright (1933): "An
asylum for the sane would be empty in America."
- Henry
Miller,
American novelist (1945): America is "a
fruit which rotted before it had a chance to ripen."
- Harold
Pinter,
British playwright (2001): The United States is "the most dangerous power the world has
ever known."
Second, the Rubins trace the surprisingly variegated
history of anti-Americanism, a play in five acts. In the eighteenth
century,
a widely credited "degeneration theory" argued for
America's inherent inferiority. Animals and humans from Europe,
it posited, dwindle in size and shrivel mentally in the New World's
wastelands.
The period 1830-80 witnessed a focus on the alleged failure
of the American experiment. Democracy had produced a miserable
polity, society, and culture, one on the verge of collapse. The
United States threatened as a bad example that might be emulated.
America's rise to power, 1880-1945, saw fears
develop that the American model might dominate the world. Each
American military
victory – in 1898 (over Spain), 1918 (World War I), and
1945 (World War II) – caused this anxiety to take on new
urgency.
America's stature as one of two superpowers during the Cold
War, 1945-90, further enhanced those fears. Whereas the Soviet
Union had limited appeal or influence beyond its military prowess,
American hegemony threatened via such seemingly innocuous matters
as fast food, movies, clothes, and computer programs.
The United States emerged in 1990 as the unique
post-Cold War "hyperpower," fulfilling
the worst nightmare of anti-Americans, who blamed it for all
of the world's ills and engaged in unprecedented spasms of America-hatred.
Finally, the authors' catalogue of hundreds of
pages of fury clarifies the motives behind anti-Americanism.
From very early
on, the spacious skies and amber waves of grain offered a freer,
richer, and more tempting alternative, compelling those who stayed
behind to rationalize their choice. (In domestic American terms,
it's like justifying not having moved to California.) Anti-Americanism
is the Doppelgänger (evil twin) of America's seductiveness
and power.
To a limited degree, the hostile effort has succeeded. A sustained
French campaign against Coca-Cola in the 1950s lowered consumption
of that potable below anywhere elsewhere in Western Europe. Polls
today show wide global disapproval of the United States.
Ultimately, however, the rants, shouts and insults fade away,
defeated by America's serving as a benign force on the world
stage and its accomplishments in enabling its citizenry's pursuit
of happiness. CRO
This piece first appeared at the NewYork Sun
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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