On Father's Day, Send Your Cards to Tom Instead of George Our history books tell
us that George Washington was the father of the abomination America has
become. Many around the world, including some Americans, have written off the
possibility that the United States is capable of acting with morality and
sanity. Yet hope remains on the horizon for our country. Harvey
Kaye's Thomas
Paine and the Promise of America rekindled
my fading belief in the United States as a potential home to true freedom
and justice. Thomas Paine's spirit burns as an intense beacon lighting the way
toward his envisioned "asylum for mankind". Paine, in contrast to
Washington, is the intellectual father of an America which does not yet
exist, but is still very possible.
Washington epitomized the aristocracy which has
dominated our nation both socially and politically since its inception. It is
time for the cultural descendents of Thomas Paine--the poor and the working
class---to awaken from our slumber and lay claim to our share of the
wealth and power in the United States. In so doing, we can remake this nation
in the image that Paine envisaged:
When it shall be said in any country in the world, "My poor are happy; neither ignorance nor distress is to be
found among them; my jails are empty of prisoners, my streets of beggars;
the aged are not in want,
the taxes are not oppressive; the rational world is my friend, because I am a friend of happiness": when these things can be said, then may that country boast its constitution and its government." Something is Very Rotten in
Denmark
I have written reams about the social and
political ills of our ailing nation, which have risen to disturbing heights
under the Bush Regime. Given the courageous defiance of tyranny displayed in
the American Revolution and the noble principles embedded in our
Constitution, it is virtually inconceivable that our King George II could
make King George III look like a "Bush-league" tyrant. Yet he has managed
such a feat.
Consider the following:
1. Over 100,000 innocent Iraqi civilians and over
2,000 US military personnel are dead as a result of our illegal,
imperial occupation of Iraq
2. The "Gulag of Our Times", including Guantanamo
Bay, Abu Gharib, "secret" CIA prisons, and the extraordinary
rendition program (before you write the prisoners of the Gulag off
as "terrorists", remember, the crucial issues are due process and
justice....most of those in custody have not even been charged with a crime,
let alone had a trial. You could be next!)
3. The rise of Social Darwinism which has led to
tax cuts for the rich, corporate welfare, and the diversion of our tax dollars
from social programs to benefit humanity to an obscene war machine (which
catalyzed the Diaspora in New
Orleans).
4. The frightening attacks on Habeas Corpus
and Posse Comitatus.
5. Wiretapping and eavesdropping by "Big
Brother"
6. Increasingly unregulated corporations running
roughshod over consumers and the environment (just keep telling yourself that
big corporations have your best interests "at heart" and that Global Warming
is a myth)
7. Continued unflinching support for the state
terrorists in Israel who are committing a form of genocide against the
Palestinians
8. A widening wealth gap, an unconscionable
concentration of wealth in the hands of 1% of the populace, 45 million
Americans without health insurance, one million homeless Americans, and 13% of
Americans living below poverty level
9. Neocolonial policies which perpetuate
corporate America's capacity to exploit the people and resources of other
nations (i.e. Bolivia)
11. Flagrant violations of international
law
12. An Orwellian "Patriot Act" which violates
four of the ten Amendments in the original Bill of Rights
Newsflash: The American Revolution Is
Still Happening
While a fair number of Americans still suffer
from the delusion that we are a benevolent superpower, painful realities
poking us in the eye scream otherwise. Thankfully, Harvey Kaye's book
awoke me to the fact that the dreams and ideals embodied by some of our
Founding Fathers, particularly Thomas Paine, are not dead. The fact that
America has evolved into a nation ruled by corrupt, bloated
plutocrats is not a reason to despair. Our Constitution is more than "just a
goddamned piece of paper". It is the embodiment of true freedom and a
mechanism for the preservation of the rights of all members of society. As
Kaye's tome chronicles the life and times of Thomas Paine, and the impact
of Paine throughout the history of our nation, Kaye reveals some
powerful aspects of America which transcend the sewer in which we are
mired. The America Paine visualized has been a work in progress from the
beginning. Despite the regression we have suffered in recent times, the
"Promise of America" is not dead.
Paine's words remind us that while the
ongoing Revolution is daunting, it is well worth the effort and
risk:
"Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered. Yet we have
this consolation with us: That the harder the conflict, the more glorious the
triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly. 'Tis dearness only
that gives everything its value."
Kaye's book has inspired me as I continue my
writing and activism on behalf of global social justice, economic
justice, human rights, and intellectual freedom. The true value of this book
is that it is that it serves as a reminder that America can still rise to
Paine's aspirations. Throughout our history, champions for the down-trodden
have sacrificed their blood, sweat, tears, and even their lives to progress
toward the goal of conquering the tyranny
of America's plutocracy. The Populists, Progressives, Women's Suffragists,
Abolitionists, Anarchists, Wobblies, Socialists, and members of the civil
rights and anti-war movements were each influenced by Thomas Paine in some
fashion.
Who Was Thomas
Paine?
According to Professor Kaye's depictions, Thomas
Paine, a British immigrant to the American colonies prior to the
Revolutionary War, was the common man incarnate (who happened to have
some uncommon gifts). Born in Thetford, England in 1837 to a Quaker father and
an Anglican mother, Paine grew up in an environment of severe social and
economic inequality. His Quaker father forged young Paine's deep
suspicion of state and religious authority. At thirteen, his parents withdrew
him from school so that he could learn his father's trade of corset or stay
making. The local economy prevented him from making his living in this field,
so in 1756 Paine became a privateer on a mercenary vessel called the King of
Prussia. An avid reader and student, two years later he found himself in
London where he often attended lectures by self taught, working class
dissidents. In London, he learned the philosophy of John Locke and the art of
rhetoric. He opened his own business as a stay maker and was married in 1759.
Sadly, his wife and baby died in child-birth shortly thereafter.
Over time, Paine developed a reputation as a
formidable debater and "wordsmith". Thomas Clio
Rickman, Paine's long-time friend, said of Paine:
He was tenacious of his opinions, which were bold, acute, and
independent, and which he maintained with ardour, elegance, and
argument.
After a second marriage, which did not last, and
a stint as an excise officer, Paine utilized his friendship with Benjamin
Franklin to emigrate to the American colonies in 1774. Fortunately for the
colonists, according to Kaye, "he had acquired skills and knowledge, tested his courage
and intellect, made friends and contacts, and developed an intolerance of
hypocrisy, injustice, and inequality along with a budding sense of working
people's political potential."
January 10, 1776 marks an
intellectual watershed for the American Revolution. It was on that day
that Paine's unsigned pamphlet called Common Sense began
circulating the streets of Philadelphia. His scathing critique of Great
Britain's government and compelling
argument for the colonies to break ties with their imperial master ignited a
revolutionary flame throughout the fledgling nation.
By December 4, 1776, the colonies had
declared their independence and the American army was dogged by defeat
and hopelessness. Thomas Paine responded with another powerful dose of
writing. The American
Crisis buoyed sagging spirits and reinvigorated the colonists as
they fought to forge a sovereign nation. Paine spurred on his fellow
revolutionaries with this opening line:
THESE are the times that try men's souls: The summer soldier
and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his
country but he that stands it NOW, deserves the love and thanks of man and
woman.
Having done his part to spark and perpetuate the
American Revolution, remaining true to the way he defined himself ("my country is the world, and my
religion is to do good..."), Paine left America in 1782
to return to England. There he continued to wage the battle for the common man
by publishing The
Rights of Man, which supported the French Revolution and decried
monarchy. Charged by the British government with seditious libel, Paine fled
to Paris. He became a French citizen and became involved in politics. When he
opposed the execution of Louis XVI, he was imprisoned and sentenced to
death. It was from his cell that he penned The
Age of Reason, which incurred the wrath of many Christians
because of its exposure of the contradictions, untruths, and immoralities
contained in the Bible. Despite his professed Deism, Paine's memory is dogged
to this day with charges of atheism.
James Monroe managed to secure a stay of
execution and freedom for Paine. In 1802 he returned to America to
discover that The Age of Reason had ruined his reputation
with many Americans. Paine's stubborn commitment to the working class, human
rights, spiritual freedom, and reason had cost him dearly. He died in New
York in 1809, poverty-stricken and a pariah.
Which Father Knew
Best? The Answer Depends on Your "Pedigree"
Thomas Paine and the Promise of
America by Harvey Kaye (a professor of history at the University of
Wisconsin at Green Bay), serves as a powerful reminder that the American
Revolution may not have started without Common Sense or may
have failed without The American Crisis. It also
reminds us that the ongoing American social and political revolution (which
has advanced the rights of women, minorities, workers, the poor, farmers, and
consumers) embodies the spirit of Thomas Paine rather than that of those
Founding Fathers who were wealthy aristocrats, owned slaves,
opposed the Bill of Rights, and limited the inclusion of the "common
people" in the nation's power structure.
With the advent of the Bush Regimes (both I and
II), an amoral plutocracy (or Miscreant
Dynasty) has seized virtually absolute power in our nation. While
most of our presidents have represented America's aristocracy first and
foremost, virtually all of them advanced the cause of the poor and working
class to some degree. Bush I and II and their myriad criminal accomplices,
including Rove, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Rice and a host of plutocrats
quietly working behind the scenes, have hijacked the America that Thomas Paine
had foreseen. Meanwhile, a majority of Americans (largely pacified
by consumerism, popular culture, and propaganda) have stood idly by as
unwitting victims and accomplices.
A nation is an abstraction, a complex and
intricate set of dynamics involving many people and processes. It is in a
constant state of flux and is not easily definable. However, in recent
history, generally speaking, the United States has morphed into a social and
political cesspool viewed contemptuously by most of the world. We have strayed
woefully far from the "Promise of America", but as Kaye's powerful analysis of
Thomas Paine and his impact on the evolution of our nation reveals, it is not
too late to fulfill that promise. George Washington is the father of a country
ruled by the wealthy elite. The spirit of Thomas Paine is poised to become the
father of a nation ruled by all Americans. It is time that "We the People"
adopt a new father and wrest the power away from a group of narcissistic,
avaricious malefactors who are the enemies of humanity.
As Sinclair Lewis warned in It
Can't Happen Here, tyranny can arise in highly unexpected
places. And it has. If enough of us join together, exhibit fortitude
and patience, and take action, we can
put an end to this nightmare. For a motivational jump-start and an awakening
to what America was meant to be (and still can be), I highly recommend
Thomas Paine and the Promise of America by Harvey
Kaye.
________________________________________ Jason Miller is a 39 year old activist writer with a degree in liberal arts. When he is not spending time with his wife and three sons, researching, or writing, he is working as a loan counselor. He is a member of Amnesty International and an avid supporter of Oxfam International. He welcomes responses at willpowerful@hotmail.com or comments on his blog, Thomas Paine's Corner, at http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/.
More articles by Jason Miller here >>
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