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    Exceptionalism and Benefaction: 
  Two 
	Mythical Notions Drowning America into Premature Oblivion 
  By 
	Ben Tanosborn 
       
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 16, 2014
  It was over four decades ago 
	that I first heard the expression “premature oblivion.” It came from a 
	fellow graduate student at UCLA, Stefan, a magisterial peer to many of us, 
	not so much because of his then-soon-to-be ABD status, but rather his Zorba 
	the Greek likeability in his contrarian demeanor.  Beyond obstinacy 
	perhaps, most of us close to him would agree, but with an undeniable air of 
	prophetic clairvoyance.  And if we took his assertions as Stefan-lite 
	dictums; as the years have gone by, some of us started to realize our 
	misdiagnosed pig-headedness in him was no more than unbending firmness 
	resulting from clear vision, historical knowledge and logical perspective. 
	  Stefan’s then-reference of premature oblivion was not in the form of 
	critiquing a literary play, but an early vision of an eventual US decline as 
	the economic-political epicenter of the world.  And he was delivering 
	his sermons to us during America’s extended apogee period of 
	cultural-economic influence – discounting as an anomaly the Vietnam war – as 
	the US commanded a good chunk of the world’s GDP, before OPEC became a major 
	player (1973-4 oil crisis) in retaliation for America’s aid to Israel in the 
	Yom Kippur War;   or the formalization period in US-China 
	relations (1971-8) after Richard Nixon sent then National Security Advisor 
	Henry Kissinger on a courtship mission to Beijing (1971).   Two 
	beliefs, both of them myths, will play key roles in bringing America from 
	its unique apex status to an average or even mediocre position among the 
	nations of the world, according to Stefan’s gospel: exceptionalism and 
	benefaction. He didn’t see communism as the possible dethroner of Imperial 
	America, but rather the self-triggered implosion of American economic 
	dominance by misinterpreting, and not paying attention, to the reason for 
	such dominance. Instead of paying homage to the American popular cult of the 
	two egocentric virtuosities of how “special” and how “good” Americans are, 
	they should be examining the historical reasons which gave America 
	predominance, at least in regards to the relatively high standard of living 
	for a large middle class.    My introduction to Democracy in America 
	by Alexis de Tocqueville came as a result of my constant encounters with 
	Stefan on both economic and political issues, and how clear it had become 
	for a French historian traveling through America in the mid-1800s to 
	determine what made Young America click: the theory behind America’s 
	economic and political success.  A not so farfetched theory, 
	particularly when set side by side with the faith-based, mythical doctrine 
	of American Exceptionalism. Causal variables in why the US became the envied 
	economic giant are clearly evidenced coming together during this nation’s 
	short history.  Namely, (1) the founding and development of a nation 
	with few if any trade/commercial restrictions on a vast, expanding 
	territory, an ever-increasing large immigrant population, and a seemingly 
	inexhaustible source  of natural and human (slaves) resources; (2) that 
	happening while benefits in the transformation of natural resources, via the 
	technical exploits of the industrial revolution, were taking place; (3) and 
	an unstoppable territorial expansion, from the Atlantic to the Pacific 
	oceans, which would make the US the largest, self-contained, economic 
	marketplace.  This braided trio of variables was instrumental in 
	creating this economic miracle, the so-called fulfillment of the “American 
	dream” for a large number of people; and not some hocus pocus, mythical 
	exceptionalism miraculously manifested to European immigrants, mostly from 
	the lower socioeconomic tiers in their own lands, through the magic of 
	debarkation or birth in the United States.   If anything, there is 
	ample, and creditable, statistical evidence gathered during the last two 
	decades showing how America fares in relation to other economically advanced 
	nations in education, health care, social progress, the environment, and the 
	overall wellbeing of the citizenry, best expressed by how many children are 
	raised in poverty.  US standing in just about any of these categories 
	range from poor to dismal, giving us a cynical approach as to the irony of 
	possibly renaming “American Exceptionalism,” in light of today’s reality: 
	“American Deceptionalism.”  [A current article in Huffington Post, 
	10-13-14, The United States Is Number 1 – But in What? penned by Lawrence S. 
	Wittner, Professor of History emeritus at SUNY/Albany offers a quick summary 
	of stats.]   And just as this exceptionalism idea is proved to be 
	nothing but jingo-crock, so is the other myth that bestows on America the 
	crown of benevolence and supreme savior of the world.  The 
	misconceptions Americans have about themselves as rescuers and great 
	protectors of everything and everyone in the world falls in the same 
	mythical category as that of exceptionalism.  Yet, most Americans are 
	till under the impression that it is through their sacrifice and beneficence 
	(aid) that much of the world stays alive.  An idea with roots dating 
	back to the post-WWII Marshall Plan [Most Americans unaware that the Plan 
	had as great or greater favorable impact for the US economy as it did to the 
	reconstruction of shattered Europe.]   Why Americans cling to these 
	two mythical notions of exceptionalism and benefaction in today’s reality is 
	beyond comprehension, other than political-America preferring to have the 
	population captive in ignorance for their own intents and purposes.  And it 
	is the weight of these two millstones that is drowning America into 
	premature oblivion.   Americans have been blessed in the past by 
	living in a unique marketplace that provided a good life for a large middle 
	class; now that globalization has changed Americans’ privileged position, 
	what Americans don’t need is clinging to the pagan rituals of exceptionalism 
	and benefaction that will keep them from the crude new realities of 
	international economic competition. 
	 *** 
	
		 
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