Bashing the U.S. makes us feel good all over (Canada)


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Brian Maffei
September 24, 2003, 02:47 PM
Robert Fulford
National Post (Canada)

Saturday, September 20, 2003

Paul Johnson, the British journalist and historian, recently delivered some harsh words on anti-Americanism as embodied in the culture of Europe. He called it crude, childish, self-defeating and nonsensical. "It is based," he said, "on the powerful but irrational impulse of envy -- an envy of American wealth, power, success and determination."

Most Americans would probably consider his opinion exaggerated. Surely it can't be that bad? But a Canadian, living in a country where anti-Americanism is the air we breathe, may decide that Johnson has it about right.

For Canadians, cultural anti-Americanism provides, among other things, a way to avoid reality. It helps us escape responsibility for mass culture. If the cultural preferences of our fellow citizens dismay us (or our own appetites make us feel guilty) we blame the Americans. Because most of the mass culture we receive originates in the United States, we place the burden of our cultural sins on American shoulders. In these matters, we have lost the power of self-reflection.

For instance, a recent Globe and Mail piece by John Doyle, the TV critic, carried the headline: "The empty inanity of American celebrity," one of several thousand similar headlines that appear every year in Canadian papers. No doubt the editor who wrote it knows perfectly well that Canadians are as celebrity-crazed as anyone. But at the same time we want to feel superior to Americans. So the Globe flatters its readers into believing, wrongly, that they are in a position to look down on American inanity.

In this way, hypocrisy becomes an essential element in the Canadian style. In another piece, Doyle described watching TV on "a dull day of mind-numbing American piffle-culture." (As opposed, presumably, to Canadian high-culture.) For Doyle and many others, the United States offers a safe punching bag. What Canadian reader will ever object to a journalist pouring contempt on Americans?

Theorists have been arguing for years that American culture debases the whole planet, to the point where humanity now has no choice but to live in McWorld, a place as predictable as Disneyland. American, European, and Canadian writers love this idea, but one American has set about the task of challenging it -- Tyler Cowen, an economist at George Mason University in Virginia, the author of Creative Destruction: How Globalization Is Changing the World's Cultures.

Where others see tedious uniformity around the world, Cowen sees attractive diversity. Where others imagine American culture imposing a single global style, Cowen sees international exchange producing innovation. In culture, he argues, globalization expands choice. Being an economist, he's supposed to know little and care less about culture. But it's Cowen, not one of the army of cultural theorists, who has pointed us toward a startling truth: The rise of the great media companies has been accompanied by diversity and heightened freedom.

His secret method is personal research. He looks and listens rather than reading essays by other economists. He loves discovering forms of creativity that arise from globalization, such as reggae. It began under the influence of American R&B, borrowed from the 1960s British bands, drew on sea chanteys, and took inspiration from Rastafarianism, a religion linked to Ethiopia. Jamaica considers reggae intensely Jamaican and the world loves it. (It happens that I realized how much I liked it in 1979, while listening to it in Israel.) Its influence long ago went back to the United States as inspiration for Paul Simon, rap, and many other forms. Whatever you may say about Jamaican popular music of the last 30 years, it has not been, to quote the standard cliché, "trampled by conglomerate multinationals."

In France, cultural anti-Americanism has been endemic for generations. One philosopher, Jean François Revel, recently claimed (in his book, L'obsession anti-americaine) that it emerges from French political and moral failures; it's the result of inadequacy.

In Europe generally it deeply influences and distorts political thought. The Americans, with their 18th-century constitution, have maintained civil peace, democracy, and high levels of economic activity across a vast sea-to-sea territory for more than a century. In the same period, Continental Europe has suffered for long periods from monstrous burdens that its leaders have placed on the people -- fascism, communism and two catastrophic wars. Twice, Americans have had to cross the Atlantic to pacify Europe.

All that is tragedy, but it has a comic side. While these facts would fascinate an impartial observer, not one in 100 European political writers ever notices them. And of those who notice, only a few imagine that Europe might learn something, maybe just a little, from this unprecedented American experience. Europeans, looking at America, like to notice lynching in one era, McCarthyism in another, race riots in another -- as if these were comparable to the catastrophes of Europe.

It's culture, grounded in mythology, that keeps Europe from seeing this remarkable history with any clarity. European culture teaches its elites that America is run by ignorant gun-toting cowboys. How could Europe possibly learn from people like that? In France, and in countries like Canada as well, anti-Americanism resembles a unique French beverage, absinthe. It's exciting, it's satisfying, and it's built into cultural history. But it does tend to leave you blind.

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agricola
September 24, 2003, 03:04 PM
its remarkable that an article accusing people of blind anti-american sentiment can go and make statements like:

Twice, Americans have had to cross the Atlantic to pacify Europe.

and

European culture teaches its elites that America is run by ignorant gun-toting cowboys. How could Europe possibly learn from people like that?

and as for reggae, you could make a stronger argument for it being a product of imperialism rather than globalization.

most people over here dont blindly dislike "American culture" - personally, there are aspects I like (Frasier / the Simpsons / Duckman / Family Guy/ Jessica Alba / hockey) and aspects I dont (baseball / basketball / McDonalds / bland sitcoms / Hollywoods attitude to filmmaking), which is pretty much the same for any culture.

jsalcedo
September 24, 2003, 03:17 PM
there are aspects I like (Frasier / the Simpsons / Duckman / Family Guy/

You picked the exact things I like about American culture.

The ability disparage and laugh at ourselves.

I also like our pervasive gun culture :D

Leatherneck
September 24, 2003, 03:22 PM
er...Ag, surely you don't subscribe to thisto the point where humanity now has no choice but to live in McWorld, a place as predictable as Disneyland do you?

The last time I checked, such activities as viewing and eating out were entirely voluntary.

I find articles about anti-Americanism both tedious and, to some degree, wrong.

TC
TFL Survivor

MuzzleBlast
September 25, 2003, 10:02 AM
Yeah, well, reading articles bashing America-bashing makes us feel good all over.

SDC
September 25, 2003, 10:10 AM
Fulford pretty accurately describes the majority of the "news" media in Canada :mad:

SGT109FA
September 25, 2003, 11:00 AM
Well anybody including the canooks that want to bash America can kiss our red, white and blue aryes! ...:neener:

Mark Tyson
September 25, 2003, 11:16 AM
Feeling indignant feels good. Being able to blame troubles on others also feels good. It's a lot easier than finding solutions to problems. Nobody's immune from this bad habit, of course. In the US and elsewhere you have white supremacists who lose jobs to minorities and then go out and blame ZOG and the NWO for everything that's wrong in their life.

Criticism of US foriegn policy and culture is fine, but hating America seems to be the default position of every loser in the world. It's a popular position, too. Sure beats reasoned argument.

As for culture, Europeans have their own celebrity worship complexes. Look at all the attention paid to the royal family in the UK for example.

Mike Irwin
September 25, 2003, 11:59 AM
You know, it's pretty funny, actually...

That for all of the elitist screeching over the horrors of American culture invading and debasing their nations, their own people are not only receptive to it, they're clamoring for it.

I wonder if that is what really fuels a lot of this anti-American sentiment...

That the people of so many nations have looked at their own cultural moors and found them so wanting that they need to adopt those of a nation thousands of miles away.

Wild Bill
September 25, 2003, 12:18 PM
Mark, Mike …

I don’t think you’ll find too many people in Canada that actually hate America or it’s people. But you will find a certain resentment of the big southern neighbour is indeed a part of that loosely defined Canadian identity. Arguably some measure of this is healthy.

No justification here, just a backgrounder …

Canada was fundamentally founded by the French and English. All of these folks were basically merchants exploring the new country more to exploit it’s wealth than for colonization. Both were wary of the newly forming, seemingly belligerent Republic to the south because of concerns over possible annexation and competition for the resources of the vast north. Many of the English were former loyalists to the British Empire that were forced north once the Revolution turned against them. So we have two dominant groups, both of whom have legitimate competitive reasons for being wary of the USA – one of which has an already deep-seated resentment towards the southern neighbour.

Take into account that the population of Canada is both much smaller and primarily spread in a narrow corridor just north of the border and a pattern begins to emerge. By their nature Canadians are less bold, more cautious, less forceful, and far more willing to put the collective good before the individual’s. The military might of the country is lacking at best. The economy is essentially dependent on the strength of resource extraction/refinement, and is highly sensitive to swings in that powerhouse economic engine to the south.

Assuming these traits it’s easy to see how close, indefensible proximity to such an economically and militarily superior power would taint the viewpoint of the smaller. Add in the pervasive nature of the American culture to spread and dominate, particularly in North America, and the reason for a level of anti-American sentiment is clear. Call it an act of reasonable wariness or perhaps defiance attempting to protect a relatively fragile culture from an overwhelmingly stronger neighbour.

That being said everyone remember they are tried and true allies tested in every major conflict (excepting the present – officially). Canada founded peacekeeping, gave y’all basketball and a host of other “Americanisms”. I think a little historically ingrained identity blustering is allowed.

Cheers

Futo Inu
September 25, 2003, 12:26 PM
"high levels of economic activity across a vast sea-to-sea territory for more than a century."

Say what? Does he think we were immune to the Great Depression?

We do have elements of culture that are on a intellectual par with paramecium, like Jerry Springer show, but we also run the gamut to much high culture.

Globalization (and its rapid acceleration of pace due to the internet) is in general, IMO, a good thing for world peace and prosperity in the long run, particularly peace. In the short and intermediate runs, it's gonna cause some cultural friction/resentment.

In any event, good topic, but IMO not gun-related (unfortunately).

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