Why Are Americans So
Passive?
Get Pissed Off and Break Things
By Ted Rall
June 22, 2013 "Information Clearing House - There's a reason "Keep Calm and Carry On" is everywhere. When people lose everything — their economic aspirations, their their freedom, their privacy — when there's nothing they can do to restore what they've lost — all they have left is dignity.
Get Pissed Off and Break Things
By Ted Rall
June 22, 2013 "Information Clearing House - There's a reason "Keep Calm and Carry On" is everywhere. When people lose everything — their economic aspirations, their their freedom, their privacy — when there's nothing they can do to restore what they've lost — all they have left is dignity.
Remember Saddam? Seconds
before he was hanged, disheveled and disrespected, the deposed dictator held his
head high, his eyes blazing with contempt as he spat sarcastic insults at his
executioners. He "faced death like a lion," said his supposed body double, Latif Yahia, and no one could
argue. He left this life with the one thing he could control intact.
Dignity. That's what "Keep
Calm and Carry On" is all about. That's what we think of when we think of the
Battle of Britain. As German bombs rained down, the English went about their
business. Like the iconic photo of the milkman tiptoeing over rubble. Like the
bomb-damaged stores whose shopkeepers posted signs that read "We are still open — more open than
usual."
Man, that is so not
us.
You've seen the T-shirts, with
their clean Gill Sans-esque lettering and iconic crown. There are mugs,
postcards and posters. Of course. It's a reproduction of a propaganda poster
from World War II, an (unsuccessful, because it wasn't distributed) attempt by
the British government to steel jittery citizens during the Blitz.
"Keep Calm and Carry On" merch
dates to 2000 but really took off after 9/11; the popularity of the image, the
stoicism of its call to stiffen upper lips everywhere, and numerous parodies
("Stay Alive and Kill Zombies") has generated millions of dollars of profits,
inevitably sparking lawsuits and inspiring a song by John Nolan.
Why is a meme originally
prepared for a possible German invasion of the UK (which is why it wasn't
released) popular now? Zizi Papacharissi, communications professor at the
University of Illinois at Chicago, points to the crappy economy. "We are undergoing a profound
and fairly global economic crisis, so it is natural to revisit the saying: Keep
calm and carry on. It reminds us of courage shown back then, and how courage
shown helped people pluck through a crisis."
It's also a reaction to
terrorism — or more accurately a reaction to the initial reaction to the 9/11 terrorist
attacks: hysteria, jingoism, multiple wars of choice, all doomed. More than any
other factor, Obama owed his 2008 victory to his (Maureen Dowd called him)
Vulcan personality: cool, implacable, possibly non-sentient, the
anti-Dubya.
What wouldn't we give for a
2001 do-over? No invasions, no Patriot Act, no Gitmo, no "extraordinary
renditions," no New York Times op-ed pieces arguing in favor of
"enhanced interrogation techniques." Treat 9/11 like a crime, let the FBI go
after the perps. Reach out to Muslims, reconsider our carte blanche to Israel,
and most of all: go slow. Don't freak out.
Perspective: 3,000 deaths is
awful. 9/11 was shocking. We killed 2 million Vietnamese people, yet they're
going strong. With a minimum of whining.
And yet…
Sometimes you need some
perspective to your perspective.
There are times when it's
appropriate to freak out. When, in fact, it's downright weird and unhealthy and
wrong not to flip your lid. For example, when you get diagnosed with a
terrible disease. When someone you love dies.
There are also times when
big-picture, impersonal stuff, including politics and the economy, ought to make
you crazy with rage or grief or…something. Not nothing. Not just keeping calm
and carrying on.
Keeping calm and carrying on
was an appropriate response to the Blitz. Short of moving away from the
targeted area, there's nothing you can do about bombs. Living or dying is a
matter of happenstance. Keeping calm might help you make smart decisions. Panic
is usually more dangerous than self-control.
The same is true of terrorism.
Terrorists will kill you, or not — probably not. You can't fix your
fate.
But it is decidedly not true
about the economy. Not when what is wrong with the economy is not something no
one can control — a giant meteor, bad weather, panic in the markets — but
something that most assuredly can and indeed should be, like the systemic
transfer of wealth from the poor and middle-class to the rich that has
characterized the class divide in Western nations since the 1970s. The
appropriate, intelligent and self-preserving response to mass theft is rage,
demands for action, and decisive punishment of political and economic leaders
who refuse to change things.
As one revelation about the
National Security Agency's spying follows another, the "Keep Calm and Carry On"
meme seems less like an appeal to dignity and calm reserve than the much older,
classic response of the power elite to their oppressed subjects: Shut the Fuck
Up.
Ted Rall’s website is tedrall.com. His book “After We Kill
You, We Will Welcome You Back As Honored Guests: Unembedded in Afghanistan” will
be released in March 2014 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux
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