During his European debut, a reporter in
Strasbourg, France asked President Obama
if he subscribes to the school of
“American Exceptionalism” as did his
predecessors. Being the first Black
president and known as a uniter, the
question weighs heavy in irony since
America’s self-grandiosity is tied to
military aggression and presidential
legacies that are littered with
unapologetic ethnic and cultural
indifference. Although not a common
term, African Americans should form long
lines like voting to get information
whenever the subject of “Exceptionalism”
is mentioned.
Frenchman Alexis de Tocqueville coined
“Exceptionalism” in his 1835 book
Democracy in America to describe the
notion that America considers itself a
superior and trustworthy nation that’s
favored by God to play a special
political, economic, religious, and
military role in the world . . .
Therefore, U.S. values and policies are
presupposed by Americans as right and
best for all nations to follow. Nothing
is inherently wrong or unjust with any
country espousing “Exceptionalism.” The
problem and danger is when such views
are pursued or imposed at the human or
sovereign expense of others.
America’s
brand of “Exceptionalism” took
Machiavellian detours along the way for
the worst. Yes, it verbally professes
“Equality and Justice for All,” but at
its core remains a prevailing Manifest
Destiny for wealth, resources, and power
that’s paved in blood and knows no
bounds. Because of this duplicity,
“American Exceptionalism” can only stand
limited-level scrutiny before depths of
contradictions and sensitivities are
reached that this establishment prefers
not to redress.
But all this is belied by “religious
fluff” that cloaks what otherwise is
inexcusable historical conduct engaged
by both parties. Based on the
puritanical overtones associated with
its founding history and founding
fathers, you would think America is
spiritually incapable of human and civil
rights violations that legalized
enslavement and segregation to
contrarily coexist with “democracy” for
centuries, with impunity.
Today, the same arrogant nature of
“Exceptionalism” allows America to
“forgive itself” for the past and become
an Evangelical arbiter that places
labels of “evil” on nations with
comparatively far less guilt. The U.S.
government is also quick to holler “war
crimes” against other nations, yet
conversely doesn’t want U.S. soldiers,
officials or mercenaries like Blackwater,
subjected to possible prosecution for
war crimes at the International Criminal
Court – Even though Obama says “America
does not torture.”
Politicians popularly say, “God bless
America.” But it’s politically
unthinkable to ever associate God with
“punishment,” as did Mayor Ray Nagin of
New Orleans who then had to apologize
after Hurricane Katrina for saying, “God
is mad at America . . . and doesn’t
approve of Iraq.” “Exceptionalism” was
also behind the denunciation of Rev.
Jeremiah Wright and Black Liberation
Theology. (Note how the media
bleeps-out the word “damn” where he says
“God damn America” in his infamous
sermon . . . as though it’s too
unbearable to broadcast on airwaves that
are already filthied with commercialized
vulgarities, violence, and sexual
content).
Protestant theologies stem from
yearnings within groups to relate and
appeal to God to address their specific
hardships. The only difference between
Black Liberation Theology and any other
“Protestant” theology, like Lutheranism
or Methodism, is that the “Protest” is
directed against flagrances of America
as opposed to the Catholic Church or
British Crown. So of course, according
to “Exceptionalism,” Rev. Wright and
Black Liberation Theology must be
discredited in the mainstream. This
establishment will not sit silent and
watch a Black president relate or appeal
to God in ways that deem them
transgressors. They’ve studied
Aristotle well-enough at think tanks and
Ivy institutions to know that a
government must always give appearances
of “uncommon devotion to religion” so
that “subjects do less easily move
against” it.
All in all, “Exceptionalism” has thrived
ever since their formative years when
Euro-Americans were considered roving
bands of “Rebellious Brits” who defied
King George III. Although the
Declaration of Independence and
Constitution clearly weren’t intended to
apply to Black people, the same
political elements of “Exceptionalism”
that assured our past exclusion are now
actively revising history right before
our very eyes, by propagating Obama’s
presidency as the long-awaited ethnic
fulfillment of the founder’s “real”
intents of democracy and equality.
Being a great idealist and well-schooled
articulator of universal aspirations,
Obama admitted America was “imperfect,”
but he smoothed-over the question as
though “Exceptionalism” only applies to
America’s greatness, and as though his
predecessors were all as race-neutral as
he. Like his predecessors however his
job is to defend America; deviances
against us included. Even a Black
president doesn’t alter the reality that
we as Africans have integrated into an
already-sovereign European society . . .
And because of the hypnotic sways of
this thing call “American Exceptionalism”
we find ourselves paying tribute to
heroes, holidays, and history that
otherwise would make no political or
logical sense.
This article was culled in part from
Ezrah Aharone’s 2009 book, Sovereign
Evolution (Chapter 4: “The Cloak of
Exceptionalism”). He is also the author
of Pawned Sovereignty and a founding
member of the Center for Sovereignty
Advancement. He can be reached at Ezrah@theCSA.org.