| We can do better than this. |
After the other two panelists respond with slogans—“diversity
and opportunity” and “freedom and freedom, so let’s keep it that way”—McEvoy
responds, “The New York Jets.” Even a
Jets fan like Curmie laughed at the absurdity of that one. (At least back when that show was filmed, the
Jets didn’t completely suck, which they have for most of Curmie’s adult life.)
After another evasion, the camera cuts to a woman near the back of the
auditorium. We don’t know who she is
yet, but it’s MacKenzie McHale, McEvoy’s ex-girlfriend and soon to be his new
executive producer. She holds up a sign
that says, “It’s not.” She then flips
the sign over and writes something else: “But it can be.”
There are 11 seconds of silence, at least in terms of
diegetic sound. There’s another
roundabout response, and the moderator demands “a human moment.” The camera cuts back to McHale, holding the
“It’s not” sign. A moment later, McEvoy
blurts out, “It’s not the greatest country in the world, professor. That’s my answer.” The follow-up goes on for three minutes. You can check out the link above or read the
transcript,
but there are two things Curmie wants to highlight. There’s the litany of rankings, addressed to
“sorority girl”:
... there is absolutely no evidence to support the statement that we’re the greatest country in the world. We’re seventh in literacy, twenty-seventh in math, twenty-second in science, forty-ninth in life expectancy, 178th in infant mortality, third in median household income, number four in labor force, and number four in exports. We lead the world in only three categories: number of incarcerated citizens per capita, number of adults who believe angels are real, and defense spending, where we spend more than the next twenty-six countries combined, twenty-five of whom are allies.
There are a couple of exaggerations in there, but no more than in the average political speech. More importantly, this isn’t an indictment of America, simply a warning about allowing patriotism to morph into jingoism and what might now be called hallucinatory rhetoric.
The other thing to point out
is that the sign is both an insistence on truth and a symbol of hope. “But it can be” is a rallying cry, a call to
arms (in the metaphorical sense, at least).
At the risk of sounding like a Monty Python routine, Curmie
adds a third point: in the opening moments of a left-leaning series that aired
during the Obama administration, the central character yearns for the days when
“We sure used to be” the greatest country in the world. True, the litany of attributes—“We waged wars
on poverty, not poor people,” for example—bespeaks a liberal mindset. But the desire to return to the glories of
the past sure sounds a lot like a desire to “Make America Great Again.”
How sadly ironic, then, that the slogan is most associated
with an octogenarian toddler with no impulse control, a pathological inability to
accept responsibility for his own actions, and a track record that includes stealing
from a charity, sexual assault, and wholesale financial shenanigans ranging
from garden variety grift to de facto selling pardons to people who
really are “the worst of the worst.” All
the things that any normal President from either party would have orchestrated
for the country’s 250th anniversary celebration are gone, replaced by
ultra-partisan posturing and a level of ego-centrism that would make Narcissus
himself blush.
Plus, of course, there’s the destruction of the East Wing of
the White House, the paving over of the Rose Garden, the vulgar and frankly
embarrassing UFC extravaganza that destroyed even more of the White House lawn,
the totally botched reflecting pool project, that ridiculous “state fair” farce…
Curmie would go on, but he’s trying to keep this essay shorter than the Mahābhārata.
None of what Curmie is discussing here comes under the
heading of actual policy decisions. Curmie
has disagreed with virtually everything this POTUS has done, but he had plenty
of reservations about the policies of a lot of 47’s predecessors, too. Curmie grants, however, that all of those
guys were at least trying to do the best thing for the country, however much he
would have preferred a different approach.
Not so, Dear Leader. He has never
cared about anyone or anything but himself and perhaps a small circle of
sycophantic admirers or fellow billionaire hucksters. If saying any of this makes Curmie
“deranged,” then so fucking be it.
Curmie is angry that a celebration he’d been looking forward
to—let’s face it, I’m not going to be around for #300—has been derailed by the hubristic
and incompetent machinations of the worst President in the history of the country. Yes, angry.
Curmie is not a nationalist, but he does think he qualifies as a
patriot. Having spent at least three
months in each of three other countries, he’s still going to consider himself
lucky to be from the US. That would be,
of course the real US, the one that countless World Cup fans have encountered
to their amazement: the place where foreigners are welcomed by the overwhelming
majority of the locals; where neighbors help each other out; where the question
isn’t whether to give to charities, but to which ones.
This is not the America inhabited by Donald Trump or Stephen
Miller or Mike Johnson. But it’s where
most of us live, irrespective of where (or if) we worship, who our favorite
basketball team is, or even who we voted for last time out. There are those who want to take that America
away from us, and they think they have defeated us, or soon will. Curmie responds (with a tip of the hat to Johnny
Carson): Not so fast, Semiquincentennial-Breath. We are not our government. The real America is out there, embodied in
people like Major Jason Watson,
like Leen Hijaz,
like the citizens of Curmie’s much-beloved former hometown of Lawrence, Kansas,
whose embrace of the Algerian World Cup team using their city as a home base
made international headlines.
But that takes us to another point. Curmie is proud of Lawrence, not because of
the notoriety, but because they, my former neighbors, did something right. Curmie was legitimately sad that Algerian
team lost their elimination round game on the west coast Thursday night. He may not be in Lawrence anymore, but Les
Fennecs were his team, too (after the US).
That notion of pride is intriguing, however. Another video clip came across Curmie’s path
this week. It was of the late, great,
George Carlin talking about, among other things, his problem with the slogan “proud to be an
American.” He suggests that “pride
should be reserved for something you achieve or attain on your own, not
something that happens by accident of birth…. You wouldn’t say I’m proud to be
5’11”. I’m proud to have a
predisposition for colon cancer…. If you’re happy with it, that’s fine:
put that on your car.”
Speaking of pride: the first Pride events happened in the
early 1970s, but Curmie wasn’t aware of them, or especially of their
designation as “Pride” until later: after, in fact, the release of the Tom
Robinson Band’s “Power in the Darkness” LP, which featured a song called “Sing If You’re Glad to Be Gay.” Chances are, you’ve never heard it,
Gentle Reader, because the TRB never had much influence west of the Atlantic;
Curmie was working on his Master’s in England when the song came out in 1978. Whether the TRB consciously rejected the
notion of “pride,” or whether they’d never heard it (as Curmie hadn’t at the
time), the result was to center on being “glad” or “happy” rather than “proud” of
one’s sexual orientation, which of course is another of those accidents of
birth that Carlin was talking about.
Pride in one’s own accomplishments is perfectly reasonable,
of course, at least in moderation. That
extends, in Curmie’s world, to pride in the achievements of his former
students, because in some small way he helped prepare them for that
success. And there is the crux. George Carlin notwithstanding, pride in the
good things that one’s nation has done makes some sense. (So too, of course, is embarrassment at its
transgressions.) Indeed, taking pride in
literally anyone’s honest attainments makes some sense; we’re all fellow
travelers here, after all. But that
emotion is usually only a variation on happiness. Curmie is happy the Knicks won the NBA title
this year, but he’s not proud of them except to the extent that they manifested
admirable qualities along the way: teamwork, refusal to give up, etc. A player who simply has a good jump shot: cause
for celebration, but not for pride.
For pride to truly manifest, however, there needs to be a
personal connection. Curmie is proud of
the two former students who are off to grad school in the fall, but their perhaps
equally qualified friends who never took my classes, not so much. It would be nice to actually be proud to
be an American. The solution is obvious,
and it isn’t capitulation. We, all of
us, need to become personally invested in creating a nation worthy of our
pride. That will take resolve, work,
perhaps even sacrifice. But we must, we
can, we will, do this. Roll up your
sleeves, Gentle Reader. We’ve got work
to do.


