On Patriotism
by
Fred Reed
Recently
by Fred Reed: How
We Were
Patriotism
is everywhere thought to be a virtue rather than a mental disorder.
I dont get it.
If I told the
Rotarians or an American Legion hall that John is a patriot,
all would approve greatly of John. If I told them that patriotism
was nothing more than the loyalty to each other of dogs in a pack,
they would lynch me. Patriotism, they believe, is a Good Thing.
Of course the
Japanese pilots who attacked Pearl Harbor were patriots, as were
the German soldiers who murdered millions in the Second World War.
The men who brought down the towers in New York were patriots, though
of a religious sort. Do we admire their patriotism?
Of course not.
When we say John is a patriot, we mean John is
a reliable member of our dog pack, nothing more. The pack
instinct seems more ancient, and certainly stronger, than morality
or any form of human decency. Thus, once the pack citizenry,
I meant to say have been properly roused to a pitch of patriotism,
they will, under cover of the most diaphanous pretexts, rape Nanking,
bomb Hiroshima, kill the Jews or, if they are Jews, Palestinians.
We are animals of the pack. We dont admire patriotism. We
admire loyalty to ourselves.
The pack dominates
humanity. Observe that the behavior of urban gangs the Vice
Lords, Mara Salvatrucha, Los Locos Intocables, Crips, Bloods
precisely mirrors that of more formally recognized gangs, which
are called countries. Gangs, like countries, are intensely
territorial with recognized borders fiercely defended. The soldiers
of gangs, like those of countries, have uniforms, usually clothing
of particular colors, and they throw signs make
the patterns of fingers indicating their gang and wear their
hats sideways in different directions to indicate to whom their
patriotism is plighted. They have generals, councils of war, and
ranks paralleling the colonels and majors of national packs. They
fight each other endlessly, as do countries, for territory, for
control of markets, or because someone insulted someone. It makes
no sense it would be more reasonable for example to divide
the market for drugs instead of killing each other but they
do it because of the pack instinct.
Packery dominates
society. Across the country high schools form basketball packs and
do battle on the court, while cheerleaders jump and twirl, preferably
in short skirts (here we have the other major instinct) to maintain
patriotic fervor in the onlookers. Cities with NFL franchises hire
bulky felons from around the country to bump forcefully into the
parallel felons of other cities, arousing warlike sentiments among
their respective fellow dogs.
Fans. Fans.
Such is their
footballian enthusiasm that they will sometimes burn their own cities
in delight at victory or disturbance at loss. Without the pack instinct,
football would hardly matter to them at all.
Its everywhere.
The Olympics, the World Cup, racial groups, political parties Crips
and Bloods, all.
Part of patriotism
is nationalism, the political expression of having given up to the
pack all independence of thought.
Patriotism
is of course incompatible with morality. This is more explicit in
the soldier, a patriot who agrees to kill anyone he is told to kill
by the various alpha-dogs President, Fuehrer, emperor, Duce,
generals.
Is this not
literally true? An adolescent enlists, never having heard of Ruritania,
which is perhaps on the other side of the earth. A year later, having
learned to manage the Gatlings on a helicopter gunship, he is told
that Ruritania is A Grave Threat. Never having seen a Ruritanian,
being unable to spell the place, not knowing where it is (you would
be amazed how many veterans of Viet Nam do not know where it is)
he is soon killing Ruritanians. He will shortly hate them intensely
as vermin, scuttling cockroaches, rice-propelled paddy maggots,
gooks, or sand niggers.
The military
calls the pack instinct unit cohesion, and fosters it
to the point that soldiers often have more loyalty to the military
than to the national pack. Thus it is easy to get them to fire on
their own citizens. It has not happened in the United States since
perhaps Kent State, but in the past the soldiery were often used
to kill striking workers. All you have to do is to get the troops
to think of the murderees as another group.
If you talk
to patriots, particularly to the military variety, they will usually
be outraged at having their morality questioned. Here we encounter
moral compartmentation, very much a characteristic of the pack.
If you have several dogs, as we do, you will note that they are
friendly and affectionate with the family and tussle playfully among
themselves but bark furiously at strangers and, unless they
are very domesticated, will attack unknown dogs cooperatively and
kill them.
Similarly the
colonel next door will be honest, wont kick your cat or steal
your silverware. Should some natural disaster occur, work strenuously
to save lives, at the risk of his own if need be. Yet he will consciencelessly
cluster-bomb downtown Baghdad, and pride himself on having done
so. A different pack, you see. It is all right to attack strange
dogs.
The pack instinct,
age old, limbic, atavistic, gonadal, precludes any sympathy for
the suffereings of outsiders. If Dog pack A attacks intruding dog
pack B to defend its territory, its members cant afford to
think, Gosh, Im really hurting this guy. Maybe I should
stop. You dont defend territory by sharing it. Thus
if you tell a patriot that his bombs are burning alive thousands
of children, or that the embargo on Iraq killed half a million kids
by dysentery because they couldnt get chlorine to sterilize
water, he wont care. He cant.
The same instinct
governs thought about atrocities committed in wartime. In every
war, every army (correctly) accuses the other side of committing
atrocities. Atrocities are what armies do. Such is the elevating
power of morality that soldiers feel constrained to lie about them.
But patriots just dont care. Psychologists speak of demonization
and affecting numbing and such, but its really just that the
tortured, raped, butchered and burned are members of the other pack.
I need a drink.
May
25, 2011
Fred Reed
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be. His latest
book is Curmudgeing
Through Paradise: Reports from a Fractal Dung Beetle. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2011 Fred Reed
The
Best of Fred Reed
|