My Fellow Americans: We Are Fools


There is something I am going to try and explain here after watching the Democratic National Convention this evening that will invite the scorn of many of my friends. But the words are gagging my throat and my stomach is twisted and sick and I have to vomit this out. The anti-americanism in me is about to explode and land god knows where as my rage is well beyond reason. And I, by heritage, half American in a way that makes me “more” American than almost anyone else in this country except for the true Americans, the American Indians, am in utter denial tonight that I am, as you are, American as well.

I am half Canadian, I was brought up there, with very different values than you Americans hold, and tonight — after the endless spit ups and boasts and rants about the greatness of American militarism, and praise for American military strength, and boasts about wiping out ISIS, and America being the strongest country on earth, and an utterly inane story from a woman whose son died in Obama’s war, about how she got to cry in gratitude on Obama’s shoulder — tonight I feel deeply Canadian. Every subtle lesson I was ever subliminally given about the bullies across the border and their rudeness and their lack of education and their self-given right to bomb whoever they wanted in the world for no reason other than that they wanted something the people in the other country had, and their greed, came oozing to the surface of my psyche.

I just got back from a rather fierce walk beside the Yellowstone River here in Montana, trying to let the mountains in the distance reconnect me to some place of goodness in my soul, but I couldn’t find it. The scenery was as exquisite as ever, but it just couldn’t touch the rage in my heart. The visions of all the dead children in Syria that Hillary Clinton helped to kill; the children bombed to bits in Afghanistan and Pakistan from Obama’s drones, the grisly chaos of of Libya, the utter wasteland of Iraq, the death and destruction everywhere caused by American military intervention. The Ukraine, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Chile, you name it — your country has bombed it or destroyed its civilian life in some basic way.

When I heard all the Americans cheering for the military and the pronouncements of might coming from the speakers in the Wells Fargo Centre, I loathed you. I loathed every single one of you. I knew in my gut that what I was taught as a child was true, which is that YOU are the enemy. YOU are the country to be feared. YOU are the country to be disgusted by. YOU are ignorant. And your greed and self-satisfaction and unearned pride knows no bounds.

I am not an American tonight. I reject my Puritan ancestors who landed in this country in 1648. I reject the words I voiced at my citizenship ceremony. I reject every moment of thrilling discovery I ever had in this country.

You people have no idea what it is like for people from other countries to hear you boast and cheer for your guns and your bombs and your soldiers and your murderous military leaders and your war criminals and your murdering and conscienceless Commander in Chief. All those soaring words are received by the rest of us, by us non-Americans, by all the cells in our body, as absolutely repugnant and obscene.

And there you all are tonight, glued to your TVs and your computers, your hearts swelled with pride because you belong to the strongest country on Earth, cheering on your Murderer President. Ignorant of the entire world’s repulsion. You kill and you kill and you kill, and still you remain proud.

We are fools.

Margot Kidder is an actress and activist in Montana.

2 Comments

  1. Richard Bluhm July 31, 2016 1:36 pm 

    “which is that YOU are the enemy.”

    More than likely, WE are the enemy. Barbara Tuchman, author and historian, wrote “The March of Folly” in 1984. In it she presents the story of the Trojan Horse as the story of humankind. We can never resist a Trojan Horse. It is wrapped up today in privilege and jobs and tribalism and ego and denial and myth and propaganda and distraction like humankind has never before experienced. We just can’t seem to help ourselves as with deaf ears we ignore those who would warn against bringing that wooden horse into the city. That was Laocoon in Virgil’s “Aeneid.”

    I believe that Tuchman was onto something. Not only can we ignore the barbarity of our militarism, but we can ignore global warming that threatens our existence.

    As the Four Horsemen break from a gallop into a dead on run, we break down the walls of Troy to let the gift horse in.

  2. avatar
    Colin Stuart July 30, 2016 2:03 pm 

    Right on Margot. I feel much the same.! But the corollary is to ask what we as Canadians do to support Americans also deeply repelled by this HIllaryDonald jingoism, exceptionalism, militarism – whatever you want to call it. Canadian are all too complacent, often complicit by their silence, in this madness.

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