Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Proud to be an American*

When Michelle Obama said it during the campaign, it was considered a gaffe and people seized upon it. I, however, say it with conviction:

Today, for the first time in my life, I'm proud to be an American.

That I didn't previously care shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone. While at one point I was an idealist and wanted a life in the whirlwind of politics in Washington D.C. (that dream died after my first trip there and seeing how things really worked), I've never hidden the fact that I really only cared about getting US citizenship so I could have a passport unencumbered by visa requirements in most countries. Sure, the right to vote is pretty cool, but look what that got us in the past...

If anything, I'm the anti-patriot. I love the US Constitution, but I find that most people who wave a flag or sing the hymns are the first to want to trample upon the document. And that was before these last 7 years of post-9/11 jingoism, so you can imagine how I've felt more recently! ...If not, it goes something like this: Fuck your ugly, asymmetric flag, and learn to pronounce "nuclear" while you're at it! California should secede, and maybe bring some of the cool coastal cities with it, just to keep my tax dollars from supporting dumb fucks like you. Hell, I'm moving to France where they have a whole Socialist party and even some Communists just to spite you.

But I digress. Today isn't about vitriolic ranting. It's about celebrating.

And I'm celebrating the rebirth of the optimism that disappeared along with my youth. The optimism that sometimes the system - while definitely very flawed - can work. Optimism that the American people can take a bold step toward something new. Optimism that, one day, America can be the exemplary beacon of liberty and opportunity that it truly has not been since WWII.

Of course, it's easy to be optimistic about something when it's already happened. In just one November day, America proved to the world that the system worked, that it wasn't afraid to take a huge leap, and that it is still an inspiration for the rest of the world. Without a single life lost, battle fought, or vote allegedly stolen, America inspired people all over the world to repeat Barack Obama's mantra, "Yes we can."

Overnight, the world has once again bought into the American dream - the real one and not the fallacy that Reaganites and Neocons have pervertedly peddled, or more often than not, forced down the world's collective throat. People from Africa to Europe to southeast Asia believe the American dream that anyone who studies hard enough, works hard enough, and tries hard enough may well achieve what they set out to do.

Granted, I'm not an Obamaniac - or whatever you want to call his rabid supporters. I haven't drank the proverbial Kool-Aid. When I cast my vote for him, it was as much against the continuation of Reaganomics and the Bush Doctrine. It was against flag-waving and valuing ignorance over intellect. Against the Dubya-fication of politics. Against the beatification of egomaniacs who got shot down and captured in a losing war.

I find Obama to be flawed, and disagreed with many of his stances from the very outset, and found even more to dislike throughout the campaign.

But it's undeniable that he is charismatic. A natural leader. What many have now in a clichéed manner called a "transformational figure." Someone who brings out - as seen all around the world, and right here in my very mirror - the best in people. (Palin rally-goers notwithstanding.) With his eloquence, even-keeled manner, and ability to engage without antagonizing, he has brought back a term that hardly applies to any politician anymore: Statesman.

The fact that he's the son of an immigrant father, from a broken home, who's moved around from Kansas to Indonesia to Hawaii, who passed up the big bucks of law practice after putting himself through Harvard – even if he didn't make it to the presidency – show that he embodies the American dream. And in one election, he fully realized and went above and beyond that dream. For himself, and for African-Americans, immigrants, kids of divorcees, and just about everyone in the world who's been displaced over no choice of their own or told they don't have a chance.

The news has shown kids rejoicing, saying that when they grow up, they want to become leaders. Here in my new adopted home of France, black politicians are inspired. Africans and Afro-Caribbeans make up 10% of the population but have only one minister in the government; now they can hold President Nicolas Sarkozy accountable to his campaign promises of a more inclusive government. In my native country of Iran, a normally cynical youth population is (cautiously) optimistic about their own upcoming election, encouraged not only by the impeachment of the current nutbag president's close ally, but also by the possibility of a new dialogue with Americans.

If you're an American and didn't vote for Obama - whether you're afraid of paying taxes, don't want to pull out the troops from Iraq before the century's over, or are afraid of secret Muslims - know that even before he's taken the oath of office, you've benefited from his election. In one day, America's standing in the world is back on the upswing. For one day, no one's burning the stars and stripes. And for one day - and I hope for much longer - I'm proud of America.*



*On the other hand, for the first time ever, I'm ashamed to be a Californian. Fuck the 52% of you who voted for Proposition 8. Fuck Utah and the Church of Latter Day Saints. And mother fuck Howard Ahmanson and his daddy issues.

3 comments:

  1. as an expat of sorts myself, this election only reaffirms and in fact deepens my feelings that I do not hold with American ideals at all. I don't fit there. I don't believe in the right to bear arms or the general libertarian way of life in the US. The fundamentals there are still the same even with Obama as President; the US will just be a bit less harsh a "leader" (and I don't agree with that characterization personally) of the free world.

    I'm glad it's Obama and not McCain, but, I don't get why people think everything has magically changed all of a sudden.

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  2. Like I said, there's a lot I don't like about Obama's policies - but I wanted to keep things positive ;)

    Trust me, my personal motto is "Bloody Revolution" - which is probably why I like living in France: The place has a history of the government having to be afraid of its people, and not vice versa, all without the populace having to be armed to the teeth.

    I disagree completely with the paradigm of US hegemony, American exceptionalism, or as you brought up, the thought of the president as "leader of the free world." (Americans are hardly as free as they think they are...)

    Despite my continuing qualms with Obama and American politics in general, his historic election has helped much of the world breathe a sigh of relief. I highly doubt many people believe he's some sort of messianic figure who'll set things right again, but I do believe he's restored some dignity to the American brand.

    It's going to take more than one presidential term or one particular party (I dislike the Democrats almost as much as the Republicans) to undo the domestic and international damage done by everyone from Reagan to Bush I to Clinton to Bush II. Hell, even Carter - punching bag of the right wing - had some horrifically oppressive foreign policy that to this day should shame so-called progressives everywhere.

    But for one day, I've been proud that my blue passport doesn't make me a laughing stock or lightning rod for criticism. Not that I can't take it, but for now, I can actual feel some pride that for the first time in years, America did something right.

    That's rare praise from me :)

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  3. I didn't mean that *you* think things have magically changed all of a sudden, sorry I wasn't very clear there--you've lived there most of your life and you know what the US is and isn't.

    I mean all of the articles and interviews I'm reading and seeing from non-Americans around the world since he won. It's insane the level of...denial people seem to be in about what this means for the future imo.

    "I disagree completely with the paradigm of US hegemony, American exceptionalism, or as you brought up, the thought of the president as "leader of the free world." (Americans are hardly as free as they think they are...)"

    Same here, but even in his own speech last night he remarked twice that "the world is ready for America to lead again" "A new dawn of American leadership in the world is at hand" and things like that (I'm paraphrasing-can't find the article right now). The Canadian reaction to his win is getting a bit nauseating; people who refuse to even vote in their own election at home saying they wish they were American because of Obama. WTF. They don't even know what that statement *means*.

    "Despite my continuing qualms with Obama and American politics in general, his historic election has helped much of the world breathe a sigh of relief. I highly doubt many people believe he's some sort of messianic figure who'll set things right again, but I do believe he's restored some dignity to the American brand."

    I guess what his win has put into sharp focus for me (cause I've been trying to put my finger on what has been bugging me for months now..) is that maybe most people around the world right now (and for a long time to come it seems) are quite fine with the US being that "leader" of the free world as long as they aren't torturing people or employing the Bush Doctrine. As long as it's generally business as usual rolled back to the Clinton administration everything is dandy again, and I'm pretty annoyed by that. I hope that's clear--my irritation is more from without than within the US right now.

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