By Lawrence Henry on 9.3.02 @ 12:04AM
Time to take a deep breath and appreciate who we are.
The drama of public life in America falls into a long summer
doze. The machers of the news business and the stock and
bond markets tool off to the Hamptons or Martha's Vineyard, and,
outside the occasional celebrity or society murder, don't do much
of anything. Trees do not fall in the lazy summer forest, or, if
they do, no one hears them; certainly, no one amplifies their
sound. Only the diehards of tennis pay attention to the first week
of the U.S. Open. By the second week, the pace of life quickens and
New York City itself begins to wake to its pulsing autumn. The rest
of America soon catches up. Here we go again.
We will be at war soon, and everyone knows it. Indeed, the
serious know we have been at war since this time last year. (There
are no illusions around Fayetteville, North Carolina, or Ft. Sill,
Oklahoma, or Hampton Roads, Virginia.) More than one commentator
has compared America now to Europe slumbering its way through the
Phony War of 1939-40. Our esteemed editor, bathing in what he calls
"the boiling ocean" off the Carolina coast, wonders if we shouldn't
interrupt our vacations and get back to our desks and fret. Myself,
pacing off my insomnia on the more bracing beaches of Maine, I
think not. It is time instead to take a deep breath and appreciate
who we are.
We are nice people. I can knock on a stranger's mini-van door
and ask in all confidence, "Do you have any wipes?" and be given a
whole package of Wet Ones to clean up my ice cream-besmeared
two-year-old. The tourists in York, Maine, let their children run
free on the beaches after sunset, unsupervised. I spot a paraplegic
hitchhiker one Sunday morning, and later see him in church. I
introduce myself after the service and offer him a ride, which he
declines. He'd rather hitch. A day later, a policeman on a bicycle
stops to ask me if I've seen a hitchhiker on crutches. "Patrick,
you mean?" I ask. "Yeah," says the cop. The York Beach police keep
an eye on the unfortunate and mildly disturbed man, making sure
he's safe.
In a summer resort town where I am a stranger, where I have, for
two weeks, no fixed address (we are between houses, jobs, and
regions), a pharmacist goes out of his way to help me with
life-saving prescription drugs, and to see that they are covered by
my insurance plan. The drugstore where he works carries everything
to sustain life and leisure, including very good-looking Wilson
tennis racquets for a mere thirty dollars.
Why do so many people misunderstand us so? Or why does it seem
that the misunderstanders get so much attention? McDonald's is not
a part of our foreign policy. McDonald's does what McDonald's does.
Britney Spears is not a government initiative. If she takes off her
clothes on television to the outrage of Muslims abroad, this is not
our public business. No law governs her. Indeed, our current
President probably has little idea who Ms. Spears is. Many of our
own citizens, famous ones, draw attention to themselves with public
pronouncements as stupid as any ever uttered by a French
intellectual. These are not policy statements; they say them; they
fall silent; we forget about them again.
Cultural imperialism? What's that? We are nice people in a nice
country, the nicest ever. Our country was founded on what
governments could not do, not on what it could, on rights that
"shall not be infringed," on a Congress that "shall make no law."
Millions of people abroad understand this very well, pack up, and
come here, because they want to live the way we do.
Occasionally, we get aroused. Just before the Gulf War started,
I watched a pro football game, broadcast from Florida. Knowing what
was to come, the crowd stood and sang the national anthem with a
stunning fervor, and followed the last phrase with a full-throated
roar that made the hair stand up on the back of my neck. "Oh, man,"
I thought, "Saddam has no idea what he's getting into."
Yet even in the ferocity of that battle, we acted like nice
people. A Roman emperor would have plowed Baghdad under and sowed
the ground with salt. Do you know what "decimate" means? The Romans
invented that tactic. It means to select at random every tenth
inhabitant of an enemy city for slaughter. We don't do that. We
don't do anything remotely like that.
It's strictly a hunch, but I believe we will attack Iraq long
before most people figure, just the way we attacked Afghanistan's
Taliban by surprise. The summer is over. The movers and shakers of
the financial markets and the media are back at their desks, ready
to trade, ready to cover something real. We are a nice people in a
nice country, and we want to get this over with. We have not cut
short our vacations, but we are back now, and we are ready.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Trade, Television, Business, Law, Iraq, Oil