Sunday, July 3, 2016

240 YEARS INTO THE GREAT AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

American Tune
Lyrics by Paul Simon
Music by JS Bach

Many's the time I've been mistaken, and many times confused
And I've often felt forsaken, and certainly misused.
But it's all right, it's all right, I'm just weary to my bones
Still, you don't expect to be bright and Bon Vivant
So far away from home, so far away from home.

By Juan Montoya
The American Republic and its inhabitants have seen turmoil from its very inception. When the Pilgrim colonists landed on Plymouth Rock and left the Mayflower, they were a sect of religious believers that were not content (and not very well liked) in their native England.
Dissatisfied with their situation, they sailed off to the new English colony that would eventually become the United States. Interestingly, the sect also had its disillusioned members who splintered off and formed new states away from the core colony because they complained of...religious intolerance.
The lot of the Native American under these new settlers was not a good one. The natives were not immune to the Old World diseases, and those who didn't succumb to the pestilences of small pox and other contagious illnesses were driven from their lands or simply slaughtered to drive them away from the Christian settlements. A sort of low-level intensity war raged for years.
The goodwill extended the new comers by the naive natives at the first Thanksgiving that helped them survive in the Brave New world was badly repaid with a strange sort of return.
It would result, eventually, in the natives being decimated, dispossessed of their ancestral homelands and relegated to a system of dependence on their conquerors. What if the natives had had an immigration service to filter out the newcomers?

I don't know a soul who's not been battered
Don't have a friend who feels at ease
Don't know a dream that's not been shattered
Or driven to it's knees. 
But it's all right, all right, We've lived so well so long
Still, when I think of the road we're traveling on,
I wonder what went wrong, I can't help it
I wonder what went wrong.

By 1776, the 13 colonies had acquired their independence from Mother England and set about to establish a country rooted in the ideals embodied in the U.S. Constitution that still hold the nation together. It was the promise of freedom and equal justice for all.
The United States spread west and incorporated into it the masses of Europe, the tired, the hungry, the poor, the huddled masses yearning to breathe free. The young country soon contracted the dreaded European disease known as imperialism and spread its wings – as newspaper editor John O'Sullivan , the sloganeer, phrased it – to accomplish its "manifest destiny."
By 1848, having invaded and defeated the newly-independent and division-torn Mexican state and acquired more than half of its territory, it set about to settle and grab the great stretches of land west of the Mississippi and beyond the Continental Divide. Hungry European and Irish refugees looked across the ocean to a new beginning, for them, the American Dream.
They came by the millions, often to face a backlash by those who were already here. Even the Irish often found that in the lowest jobs, the statement "Irish Need Not Apply" was posted below the advertisement for workers.
And still, the nagging and lingering "peculiar institution" that relegated the black slave and his descendants to a life of servitude and second-class citizenship (remember the three-fifths Compromise?) continued to hang around the nation's conscience like an albatross. It would only be a matter of time before the festering sore would explode "like a raisin in the sun" and the matter was brought to the fore and faced squarely in a bloody Civil War between brothers.
It had to reconcile its comportment with its stated ideals, or, as one of the descendants of slaves, Barbara Jordan, so simply and eloquently stated: "What the people want is very simple – they want an America as good as its promise."

And I dreamed I was flying. I dreamed my soul rose
unexpectedly, and looking back down on me, smiled
reassuringly, and I dreamed I was dying.
And far above, my eyes could clearly see
The Statue of Liberty, drifting away to sea
And I dreamed I was flying.

Lately, it seems the Good Ship America doesn't want some of us anymore. In contrast to the laws of the past that actually sought out agreements with nations like China, Mexico and others to fill jobs no one – not even the descendants of the Irish – would take, it now seeks out those who appear different and targets them for banishment from the realm. During wars and times when labor was needed, the trains and transports would stream to the border to load up with laborers only too glad to find any kind of work to feed their families back in their homelands. Chinese workers built – and died building – the railroads in the West. The Germans made the Plains fertile. The Irish provided the raw muscle for huge public projects in the East.
People like Albert Einstein, a Jewish scientist refugee fleeing the Nazi nightmare, helped us win the war. Countless other human beings cast out by want or the authoritarian regimes of their homelands migrated here and contributed their grain of sand.
Mexicans bent their backs to make the deserts green and gathered the minerals from the depths of dank, dark mines.  
An now, the 911 tragedy combined with the world economic downturn has antagonized us against each other.
Walls have been built and more are contemplated..
Deportations have started again.
The Constitution was not a perfect instrument. We have had to amend it 27 times. We have found out separate is not equal, that a person cannot be counted at three-fifths for purposes of political representation, that 18-year-olds – if they can die in our wars – should also be allowed to vote. That women – the other half of the sky – should be allowed their voice in our national affairs through suffrage. But it didn't happen without a good dose of kicking and screaming from those traditionally accustomed to holding the power.
(We would do well to note that even now the entrenched dominant male mentality still haunts us as is witnessed by the white male-Texas Legislature passing laws that seek to impose their medieval morality on women's reproductive rights. The recent decision by the U.S. Supreme Court striking down Texas laws limiting access to abortion clinics speaks to that issue.)  
And so we find ourselves like that first load of Pilgrims who unloaded their meager belongings at Plymouth agonizing over what kind of nation we want to be, what kind of people we want to become, what kind of future we want for our children. Will we forget the promise that was made back when?
Or can we soar higher?


We come on a ship we call the Mayflower,
We come on a ship that sailed the moon 
We come at the age's most uncertain hour
And sing the American tune
But it's all right, it's all right
You can't be forever blessed
Still, tomorrow's gonna be another working day
And I'm trying to get some rest,
That's all, I'm trying to get some rest

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

More left wing liberal bull shit.

Anonymous said...

Sentimentality is your weakness, Montoya. The country is at war, against all that is foreign and, more and more, all that is domestic. Write that story.

Anonymous said...

Well, in fairness, the American people are more likely these days to mock openly the level of hypocrisy and self-delusion that existed when a slave owning bastage like Thomas Jefferson writes a love letter to "liberty." We are more likely to laugh at such a fool than swoon.

Stop spreading the myth, Montoya, for you well-know those that landed on Plymouth would not have allowed your kind to board the ship.

Anonymous said...

The document they wrote allowed for the injustices of the day to later be corrected. 21st century values are different from that of their time, and they wrote a document that allowed for the people of the day to expand those included and protected by it. So lynch the forefathers all you want in writing- they made sure your right to do that is protected as well.

Anonymous said...

All history is gossip.

Anonymous said...

Air Force Veteran to Montoya: on paper you are an American; your ideology is that of a Mexican, a stinking Mexican. Remember this Montoya the Mexican, I served this great nation for the Americans that live here, and not any stinking illegal which is predominately made of stinking Mexicans. There is something called the rule of law, and it pertains also to all the stinking Mexicans that you hold dear to your heart...Montoya the Mexican.

Anonymous said...

The musing of an aging failed Marxist.

Anonymous said...

No mention of the 65,621 immigrant visas that were granted to Mexicans, most of any country. We legally admit more than half a million immigrants each year. But there are those in their infinite knowledge that say we should just open the door and let anybody and everyone come in. Are they really that ignorant??? *sigh*

rita