WHEN WE FIGHT . . . WHO WINS? (Hint: it’s neither of us)

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I think Howard Zinn inspired the question (more about that below).  It’s a question I ask in part to inspire your asking it too.  When I am part of an ideological collision, when someone else and I have been cast as opponents, when I am expending significant time and energy challenging their point of view, when the chasm between us ever widens . . . who really wins?  (If it’s not either of us?!)  To whose advantage is our polarization?  Who benefits from the distraction?

If I were asked to name the five books that have most influenced me across the past quarter century, one title would come immediately to mind, Howard Zinn’s People’s History of the United States, written, unlike classroom textbooks, from the perspective of the politically and economically disadvantaged, or more accurately exploited.

Zinn offers historical analysis that ponders the question how a minority wealthy elite, from generation to generation, maintained positions of privilege and power.  A central thesis: a primary strategy of the powerful elite, the de facto oligarchy, was to astutely and effectively keep populations of clearly shared self-interest – logical partners of common reality, common cause and a potential common adversary – surely separate and better yet themselves adversaries.  Some examples include:

  • Bacon’s Rebellion in 1676, fully one hundred years before independence, threatened to galvanize a rebellion of white frontiersmen, slaves and the white servant class, a formidable coalition ready to parlay growing resentment of the wealthy elite and openly challenge them.  Fierce military reprisals, aided by the arrival of British soldiers, and brutal punitive tactics and Bacon’s untimely death crushed the rebellion – adding an unanticipated but timely benefit to the landed rich, the discouragement of tribal leaders to unite previously divided Indian tribes in the northeast.
  • Zinn offers what seems a heretical argument that the American Revolution, the act of creating a nation, institutionalized mechanizations of control by the wealthy few over a now expanding populism potentially linking slaves, Indians and poor white servant class in common cause.
  • Westward expansion demanded “removal” of dozens of Indian tribes from their land to pave the way for the entrepreneurs of industrialization and commerce.   Knowing a single onslaught would only stiffen Indian resistance and strengthen Indian alliances, with the collusion of Christian missionary zeal, the government took them on one-by-one, a divide-and-conquer strategy succeeding.  In time to avert a budding coalition of Indians, freed slaves, and poor frontiersmen that was gaining unsettling momentum.
  • When divide and conquer fails, Zinn argues, declaring war is a tactic of last resort.   Writers no less familiar than Mark Twain, Upton Sinclair and Helen Keller chronicled growing labor unrest, newly robust Negro organizing, the mainstreaming of Socialism and early voices of feminism in the early 1900’s.  Was potential revolution-from-within mounting, the oligarchy its common enemy?  The U.S. entered one of history’s arguably most senseless wars, Zinn suggests, only because social chaos could not be quelled by previously successful means.

I offer this small collection of historical narratives to wonder out loud: Does a powerful elite, a clear statistical minority, a de facto oligarchy, continue to succeed in keeping logically aligned populations divided and at odds?  When I yield to oppositionalism, engage in divisive dialogue, “name an ideological enemy and take them on” do I collude with the centuries old stratagem of the oligarchy?

Who gains from legislative gridlock, be it on a state or national level?  Who benefits from the collisions of Left and Right?  Who wins as rhetoric gets nastier and more polarizing?  To whose advantage is all that which obscures potential common cause beneath apparent divisions?  The Health Insurance giants and Big Pharma?  Big Banks and the Financial Colossus?  The lobbying industry (whose legions on the banking reform front outnumber legislators 5-1)?  The ever smaller number of us who hold an ever increasing percentage of the wealth?  Am I inadvertently, while intending otherwise, naively but inexcusably, more part of the problem than the solution?

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2 Responses

  1. C. Observer says:

    Asked to name five books that were the seminal five books that have influenced me, I couldn’t do it. There are five books that I might recommend reading, but they might have little to do with any given topic at hand.

    JD Salinger’s “Catcher In The Rye” would surely be one.

    Ah, see, as soon as I name one, I think, “That’s not right. I can easily think of five that should take its place.” Perhaps one of the Superman comics should be included–they did much to raise my enthusiasm for reading.

    Both JD Salinger and Howard Zinn died on the same day this year.

    Zinn wrote in his autobiography, You Can’t Be Neutral on a Moving Train (1994), “From the start, my teaching was infused with my own history. I would try to be fair to other points of view, but I wanted more than ‘objectivity’; I wanted students to leave my classes not just better informed, but more prepared to relinquish the safety of silence, more prepared to speak up, to act against injustice wherever they saw it. This, of course, was a recipe for trouble.”

    I wonder what books influenced Zinn? One way or the other… …Durant’s The Story of Philosophy? …H.G. Wells’ The Outline of History? …Ernest Dimnet’s The Art of Thinking? …Charles and Mary Beard’s The Rise of American Civilization? …Pearl Buck’s The Good Earth? …Pearson’s and Allen’s Washington Merry-go-round? …Adams’ The Epic of America? or his March of Democracy I and II? …Clarance Darrow’s The Story of My Life? …Roosevelt’s Looking Forward? …Edna Ferber’s Come and Get it? …Woolcott’s While Rome Burns? …Zinsser’s Rats, Lice, and History? …Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind? …Edmonds’ Drums along the Mohawk? …Sinclair Lewis’ It Can’t Happen Here? …Negley Farson’s The Way of a Transgressor? …Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men? or his Grapes of Wrath? …Rawlings’ The Yearling? …Hitler’s Mein Kampf? …Vincent Sheen’s Not Peace but a Sword? …LLewellyn’s How Green Was My Valley? …Sholem Asch’s The Nazarene? …Alsop’s and Kintnor’s American White Paper? …Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls? …Churchill’s Blood, Sweat, and Tears? …or his The Gathering Storm …Miller’s You Can’t Do Business With Hitler? …Kiplinger’s Washington Is Like That? Wenle Willkie’s One World? …Walter Lippmann’s US Foreign Policy? …Lillian Smith’s Strange Fruit? …Wakeman’s The Hucksters? …Emery Reves’ The Anatomy of Peace? …Arnold Toynebee’s A Study of History? …Lecomte du Nouy’s Human Destiny? …Butterfield’s The American Past?

    What would you need to know of Zinn’s influences and his opinions of them? Perhaps nothing. Perhaps his words alone should be judged without knowing who and what might have influenced him.

    Salinger said two things that come to mind, “I’m quite illiterate, but I read a lot” and “How do you know you’re going to do something, untill you do it?”

    Go to Afghanistan or Pakistan and visit any town or village. Walk to the town limit and then backtrack to the 6th residence you come to. Enter the house and ask the family there what they are worried about. I guarantee you that oppression by the US or by Russia or by China or by India or even by their own national government will not be on the top ten items. They will not identify freedom, liberty, or justice as a top priority. The list will go something like this: food, shelter, clothing, children, job, health, education, weather, taxes, and personal financial security in old age.

    …and what are the worries of Big Pharma, Oil Companies, and very large finanacial institutions? I guarantee you the list doesn’t contain any of the items (including taxes) that are on the list of the 6th house from the town limit.

  2. Howard says:

    Dear C. Observer,

    I know two now young adults, each involved in activist work, who took classes with Howard Zinn at Boston University. If you ask either one what influences or persons most shaped and inspired them, Zinn is the immediate and animated first answer. And, appropro your comments, it was not the books he recommended, but the way he himself had internalized the perspectives and values of which he spoke, the authenticating nature of his very being. Though, attending one of his classes not being an option, it was his writing — and “something about” his writing — that had profoundly shaped and inspired me. Occasionally I re-read a book I had not picked up for twenty years, usually amply underlined, and realize how, unawares, that author and those ideas had penetated my core being. Finally, since my own activism is largely oriented to the work we do with and among the peasant population of Cuernavaca, Mexico, I am constantly re-focused by the “concerns of those in the sixth house.” Thank you for your continuing reflections. Wish I knew more about you. Howard

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