Ghosts of America’s past: Reflections on Independence Day 2015
It’s the Fourth of July in America, and gay marriage has just been legalized by a Supreme Court ruling, the Confederate flag is being displayed on public property and Black churches are being set afire.
“If you could separate causes from results, if you could know
that Paine, Marx, Jefferson, Lenin were results, not causes, you
might survive,” John Steinbeck wrote in “The Grapes of
Wrath” (1939).
Meanwhile, the police continue to kill African Americans without
accountability. The government has developed flying killer robots
that are able to assassinate people from the sky. The National
Security Agency is recording the phone calls, emails, and
internet activities of millions of US citizens. Beyond American
borders, our leaders are psyching us up for bigger confrontations
with Russia and China, as US military forces pour into the
Pacific.
READ MORE: ‘Out of control’ McKinney police officer who drew gun on teens at pool party quits
The above paragraphs sound like the opening of an apocalyptic science fiction novel. However, it’s all true. And it gets worse.
The Angry, Poor Millennials Are Getting Political
Underlying it all is an economic crisis. The so-called “recovery”
has missed a big section of the country. The good-paying
industrial jobs that once defined the US “middle class” have been
eliminated. Young people with record amounts of student debt are
stuck in a low-wage economy, often living off their parents. US
popular discourse bemoans this generation of “millennials” who “just can’t
get their lives together.” Young mid-Westerners and Southerners
are fleeing to the coastal areas in order to find jobs. Life in
much of the Rust Belt has simply become unlivable.
Despite not being as inclined to buy houses and cars or get
married at the rate of previous generations, the young
millennials seem to be far more interested in politics. In 2011, they slept
in tents around the clock at Occupy camps protesting the power of
the wealthy “1 percent.” Now, a few years later, young
millennials are shutting down highways and bridges in opposition
to police brutality, as the new rallying cry is “Black Lives
Matter!” The increasingly active new generation of low-paid
workers with student debt is much more favorable to once
forbidden political ideologies like socialism. ) Libertarianism,
anarchism and communism all have a slew of new adherents as well.
READ MORE: Unemployment rate falls in June as nearly 40% of Americans opt out of workforce
In the background, starting just a little more than a week after the July 4 holiday, the US military will begin a series of military exercises in the southwestern states codenamed “Operation Jade Helm,” which has been explained to the public as rehearsal for “unconventional warfare” on US soil. “Unconventional warfare” is military-speak for armed insurrections among the population. The US Army Green Berets, US Marines Special Operation Command, US Navy Seals, and US Air Force Special Operations Command will be in nine different states practicing “counterinsurgency” tactics.
“The Battle Cry of Freedom”
As much as all of the above sounds shocking, I’m not deeply
perturbed. History is the most flunked and disliked subject
among students in the United States. The
reason students in the US don’t like to learn history is because
they are taught a very dull and patriotic version of events.
If we actually knew the history of the North American continent,
we would all see that the political drama and rising unrest of
the last decade fits into a historical pattern of repression,
struggle and resistance.
Take the latest controversy: the Confederate flag. This is not
the symbol of southerners who think New Englanders look down on
their accents. That was the flag chosen to represent a group of
states who attempted to withdraw from the country in response to
the election of a third-party candidate.
The Republican Party was a stronghold of radicals and
rabble-rousers back in the 1860s. It took its name from the
radical “Republican” movements of Europe. Its supporters unfurled
bright red flags. The Republican Party newspaper of New York
City, the New York Tribune, hired Karl Marx as its London
correspondent. Radical Christian abolitionists such as John Brown
launched armed attacks on the US government. Among the slaves
themselves, there were constant uprisings and rebellions.
READ MORE: Brawl breaks out between Confederate flag supporters, opponents
In 1852, Frederick Douglass, who later became a prominent leader
of the Republican Party, shamed a crowd of people for inviting him to
a Fourth of July celebration. He thundered, “What, to the
American slave, is your 4th of July? I answer: a day that reveals
to him, more than all other days in the year, the gross injustice
and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your
celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license;
your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of
rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciations of tyrants,
brass fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality,
hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and
thanksgivings, with all your religious parade, and solemnity,
are, to him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and
hypocrisy — a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a
nation of savages. There is not a nation on the earth guilty of
practices, more shocking and bloody, than are the people of these
United States, at this very hour.”
Abraham Lincoln took office on a platform of refusing to allow
slavery to expand into the Western territories. In response, the
wealthy slave plantation owners decided to secede from the
country. They had the support of Wall Street, which was making
lots of money insuring and loaning money to the slave owners and
otherwise making profits from human bondage. The Confederates
also had the support of the richest people within the British
Empire, who saw slave plantations as a source of cheap cotton for
the emerging textile industry.
READ MORE: Occupy Wall Street volunteers defend Ferguson protesters in court
The Confederate flag was unfurled to defend the practice of
owning human beings as property. The secession of the slave
owners provoked a mass mobilization of the people. Labor unions
mobilized their members to join the fight. Harriet Tubman
led a battalion of former slaves and union
soldiers through South Carolina, raiding and liberating the
plantations along the Combahee River. Also leading the battle
against the slave owners was German immigrant August Willich, who commanded the famous Ohio 9th
Infantry Regiment. Willich was openly and proudly a Communist who
corresponded with Karl Marx throughout the war. The Ohio 9th
unfurled the Red Flag as its officials colors, and sang the “La
Marseilles” anthem of the French Revolution as they marched into
battle.
What we have all been told was a “war between the
states” in history classes and dull Ken Burns’ documentaries
on PBS was in reality a massive people’s revolution. Wall Street,
the British Empire, and the rich slave plantation owners were
defeated by a broad coalition of everyday Americans who were sick
and tired of them. The coalition that defeated the slavocracy
included slave rebels, labor activists, radical Christians and
even some communists. The song that rallied this broad coalition
of anti-slavery revolutionaries was called “The Battle Cry of
Freedom.”
READ MORE: Fire at predominantly black church in N.C. ruled arson, possible hate crime
Revolutions and mass rebellions are not foreign to the United
States. The country began with an uprising against the British
Empire. The heralded Boston Tea Party was a mass act of property
damage and vandalism. The Bill of Rights only ended up in the US
Constitution after popular outcry demanded it.
In modern times, the reason we have Social Security, unemployment
insurance and paved roads in the suburbs is because of mass
rebellions and the unemployed during the 1930s. The Unemployment
Councils fought the police to prevent evictions during the Great
Depression. Their slogan was: “Don’t Starve, Fight!” The
government responded to the wave of street battles by hiring the
unemployed into the Works Progress Administration.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who aligned with this mass
movement of low-income people, described what they were rebelling against. He said:
“We had to struggle with the old enemies of peace - business
and financial monopoly, speculation, reckless banking, class
antagonism, sectionalism, war profiteering. They had begun to
consider the government of the United States as a mere appendage
to their own affairs. We know now that government by organized
money is just as dangerous as government by organized mob.”
The United States currently has an African American president
because of generations of struggle against racism. Martin Luther
King, Jr. now has a national holiday in his honor, but once US
television declared him to be Soviet agent and a traitor because
he actively fought for civil rights and racial equality. This
man, now loved and commemorated throughout US society, spent many
days sitting inside the country’s jails. The FBI tracked him
everywhere he went, and urged him to commit suicide with threatening letters.
In the last years of his life, King himself even declared:
“There must be better distribution of wealth and maybe
America must move toward a democratic socialism. Call it what you
may, call it democracy, or call it democratic socialism, but
there must be a better distribution of wealth within this country
for all of God's children.”
Mass protests and rebellions against the tyranny of big bankers
and government acting as their hired stooges are nothing new. The
blood of radicals and revolutionaries who fought against
injustice, often using the latest Second Amendment technology,
flows through the veins of all who reside on US soil.
READ MORE: ‘Black lives matter’: 70,000 march across ‘Bloody Sunday’ bridge in Selma (PHOTOS, VIDEO)
Even slave-owning Thomas Jefferson, who has been eulogized as an
iconic “founding father,” was enthusiastic about the
perpetuation of massive uprisings in the country he helped
establish. He stated bluntly: “What country can preserve its
liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that
their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take
arms… The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time
with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural
manure.”
Compared to Thomas Jefferson, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther
King, Jr., and Franklin Roosevelt, many of the newly politicized
youth of today seem somewhat conservative. In general, all they
have asked for with their wave of peaceful protests and
occupations is some accountability from police officers,
government officials, and the people who run the economy. In
terms of US history, they have shown a great amount of restraint.
What's Next?
The wages and standard of living in the United States is going
down. The police are escalating their brutality against African
Americans and getting away with it. Our much cherished civil
liberties are being stripped away. Cops and prisons are
everywhere, but good-paying jobs are vanishing. So, what happens
next?
The people of the United States, especially the next generation
so decried as “lazy,” is resuming the forgotten traditions of
struggle against the rich and powerful. They are filling the
streets. They are remembering who “The American People”
really are and what they are capable of.
Many have decided to put down their Playstations and take up
“The Battle Cry of Freedom.” Wall Street’s blueprint for
a low-wage prison is being repudiated, not only with tweets and
Facebook “likes,” but with concrete action.
The forces responsible for the currently disastrous state of
affairs are not in Caracas, Pyongyang, Moscow, Damascus or
Tehran. The tyrants on this Independence Day are much closer to
home - on Wall Street and in Washington, DC.
READ MORE: ‘Cold War mentality’: Beijing slams new US military strategy over South China Sea
If the schemes of this ruling elite push the country into some
foreign war, this could be their fatal error. Less than 50 years
ago during the Vietnam War, soldiers were fragging their officers
and refusing to fight. Students were taking over buildings and
burning their draft cards. The recent escalation of US military
presence in the Pacific, and the campaign of demonization being
waged against Russia and China, could backfire on the
billionaires and warmongers. If things get out of hand
internationally, they are more likely to see great upheaval from
the “lazy millennials” than any enthusiasm or
willingness to go fight for Wall Street against a major world
power.
Call me a conspiracy theorist, but I don’t think the military
drills dubbed “Operation Jade Helm” are about rehearsing
for battle against ISIS or Al-Qaeda. I think the boys in
Washington and their bosses on Wall Street know US history pretty
well.
They know that “We, the People” won’t let them get away
with this stuff for very much longer. The United States isn’t
frozen in time. The actions of tyrants often have unpredictable
consequences. History will keep marching forward, whether or not
they choose to get onboard.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.