Tuesday, 8 March 2016

YOU’VE BEEN CONNED – MULTICULTURALISM
Part One – American Cultural Imperialism
They don’t make them like that anymore.
Slim Pickens rides a nuclear bomb in Stanley Kubrick’s satirical film Dr Strangelove.
What Did The Romans Ever Do For Us?
Monty Python1 fans will know that the question prompted many answers.  The Romans spread their culture all over Europe, the Middle-East, and North Africa.  One thousand years later, the British did the same all over the world.  The Romans and the British had lots of things in common.  They believed that might was right.  Their empires ruled by force.  They did not care whom they trampled over.  Foreigners could assimilate or perish.  Resistance was usually wiped out, and lots of people got killed.  Commerce was the driving force.  It provided wealth for Roman and British rulers.  Any benevolence was incidental.  Their installations, which included roads, ports, and forts, were built for their military movements and for their trade.

Shortly after the end of the Second World War, people in Britain and Japan started to hear the phrase American Cultural Imperialism (ACI).  Cultural Imperialism refers to the spread of one culture at the expense of other cultures; it is usually driven by differential economic or political influence.  ACI has been described as the phenomenon of American media, fashion, and food dominating the global markets and shaping the cultures and identities of other nations.

Most ordinary people did not understand it.  As far as they knew, America had no culture and it had no empire.  They did not realise that the USA now owned two empires; they had conquered the Japanese Empire, and they had bought the British Empire.  Those empires contained vast areas of land, but the USA were not interested in capturing territories; they were interested in capturing markets.  Japan and Britain would serve as the vanguard for The New Centurions2.

USA
Marshall McLuhan3, who was a Canadian communications theorist and educator, explained ACI in his book ‘Understanding Media’.  He said: ‘In a culture like ours, long accustomed to splitting and dividing all things as a means of control, it is sometimes a bit of a shock to be reminded that, in operational and practical fact, the medium is the message. This is merely to say that the personal and social consequences of any medium - that is, of any extension of ourselves - result from the new scale that is introduced into our affairs by each extension of ourselves, or by any new technology.’

McLuhan sounded like a conspiracy theorist but his exposé was factual.  He described the usual content of a medium, which could now be an email or text message, as a juicy piece of meat carried by the burglar to distract the watchdog of the mind.  He meant that we usually focus on the obvious, but we miss the structural changes in our affairs that are introduced subtly, or over long periods of time.  In retrospect, we realise that there were some unanticipated consequences or effects of our new ways of doing things. 

When personal computers became a possibility, who could have predicted virtual-reality and ‘gaming’, which now occupy excessive amounts of people’s time?  People have become dependent on new technology.  The majority of people who live in the First World4 say they could not live without their smart-phones.  Consumers remain on permanent standby while they are connected to their electronic-devices; they cannot ignore time-and-date-stamped electronic messages.

Noticing change is the key.  McLuhan always thought of a medium in the sense of a growing medium, like the fertile potting soil into which a seed is planted, or the agar in a Petri5 dish.  In other words, a medium is anything from which a change emerges, and its message is the new emergent culture.

Some sort of change or culture emerges from everything we conceive or create, so all our inventions, innovations, ideas and ideals are media in the McLuhan sense.  Television, computers, and other electronic disseminators of information may be regarded as extensions of us, and they shape styles of thinking and thought in new ways, whether in sociology, art, science, or religion. 

The beginning of ACI can be traced back to 1776 when twelve North American colonies declared independence from Britain.  Their revolution divided the population into three roughly equal groups.  The loyalists wanted to remain under British rule.  The Republicans wanted independence.  The rest did not care because they knew that they would have to pay taxes to somebody; if not King George it would be President George.

The medium was not the parchment on which the declaration was written; it was the Minuteman6 who pledged to take up arms at a minute’s notice.  The message was not the ‘snivelling’ and feigning declaration; it was ‘Manifest Destiny7’, ACI, ‘American Exceptionalism8’, and ‘A New World Order9’.

JAPAN
On April 12th, 1945, Harry S. Truman became president of the USA, which was still at war with Japan.  He inherited three strategic options which might persuade the Japanese government to surrender: invasion, inducement, and nuclear attack.

The US had recently invaded the islands of Iwo Jima and Okinawa; the latter battle was ongoing and it was becoming costly; the US would eventually suffer 80,000 casualties in the two battles.  Invasion of mainland Japan might involve a lengthy, brutal campaign which might cost hundreds of thousands of American lives and millions of Japanese.

On May 8th, just after the war in Europe ended, Truman tried the ‘inducement’ option.  He asked the Japanese government to surrender unconditionally.  He explained that the military leaders would have to go, but the Japanese people would not be punished.  He did not mention the Japanese Emperor, Hirohito.  The American people blamed Hirohito for the war.  They wanted him removed, and possibly tried and hanged.  The Japanese people venerated their emperor, so their government rejected the offer.

In July, Truman, Stalin, and Churchill met at Potsdam in Germany.  They invited Japan to surrender unconditionally or face ‘prompt and utter destruction.’  Japan again rejected their offer, so Truman authorised the use of atomic bombs.

On August 6th, a B-29 ‘Superfortress’ long-range bomber called ‘Enola Gay’ took off from the Marianas Islands.  It was carrying an atomic-bomb nicknamed ‘Little Boy’.  It was bound for Hiroshima, which was a Japanese military port, and a city of 343,000 inhabitants.

The flash of the explosion was seen by a reconnaissance plane 170 miles away. Those in the Enola Gay reported that a black cloud rose over Hiroshima to a height of 40,000 feet.  Aerial photographs showed that the combined heat and blast had pulverized everything in the explosion's immediate vicinity.  The entire centre of the town had disappeared except for the skeletons of three concrete buildings.  Spontaneous fires had completely burned out almost 4.4 square miles, and had killed about 80,000 people, and had injured more than 70,000 others.

A Japanese news agency reported the explosion: ‘Suddenly a glaring light appeared in the sky.  In seconds thousands of people were scorched by a wave of searing heat.  Others lay writhing on the ground screaming in agony.  By evening the fire began to die down.  There was nothing left to burn.  Hiroshima had ceased to exist.’

On August 8th, the U.S.S.R. declared war against Japan and invaded Manchuria.

On August 9th, another B-29 dropped a more sophisticated atomic-bomb on the smaller city of Nagasaki.  It devastated 1.8 square miles and created a considerable crater.  About 40,000 people were killed, and similar numbers were injured.

On August 10th, the Japanese government agreed to the surrender terms of the Potsdam Declaration on the understanding that the emperor would remain as sovereign ruler.  The Allies agreed.  Hirohito was allowed to retain his throne, but he was made subject to the authority of the commander of the Allied occupation armies, General Douglas MacArthur.  Japan would be stripped of its sprawling empire.

BRITAIN
Britain could not afford to pay for US military aid and food supplies during the Second World War, so the US Congress passed the Lend-Lease Act in 1941, which allowed Britain to pay its debts in kind or property.  By the end of the war, Britain was close to bankruptcy.  The Lend-Lease agreement had ended, so the British government decided to beg and borrow a further $3¾ billion from the USA.

Europe lay in ruins and millions of its people were starving.  The USA feared that many European states would turn to Communism, so in 1948 the USA started their European Recovery Program, which became known as the Marshall Plan; they agreed to provide $13 billion worth of aid to European countries.  Britain was the main recipient; it begged a further $3 billion.  Winston Churchill described the plan as: ‘the most unselfish act by any great power in history’, but he was half-American.

Other recipients included Belgium, Denmark, France, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, and Germany.  The Plan persuaded those countries to act collectively rather than independently.  Most of them joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in 1949 and all of them are current members of the European Union.

Clement Atlee’s post-war Labour government knew that strings were attached to all that American money, and they knew that Britain risked becoming a vassal of the USA, so they tried desperately to preserve Britain’s independence.  Their heroic, flag-waving, last stand happened in the summer of 1951 at The Festival of Britain.  The date was the hundredth anniversary of the Great Exhibition which had symbolised Britain’s economic supremacy during the 19th century.  Following the industrial revolution, Britain had been ‘the workshop of the world’.

The Festival was centred on London’s South Bank10.  It intended to celebrate Britain’s history, achievements and culture.  It promoted the best in contemporary British art, design and technology, and it envisioned an optimistic and progressive view of Britain’s future.

It also intended to endorse and re-construct Britain’s national identity through the exploration and re-affirmation of ‘Britishness’.  The ‘Lion and the Unicorn’ pavilion contained exhibits which were supposed to symbolize the main qualities of the British national character: realism, strength, independence, and imagination.

The Festival ran for five months; it was extremely popular, and it made a profit, but the new Conservative government, which was still led by Winston Churchill, considered the Festival to be a piece of socialist propaganda.  The Conservatives levelled the Festival site and they removed nearly all trace of it.

The British electorate had inadvertently voted for the erasure of British culture and British customs and British traditions.

How I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb
The Second World War had created a cultural vacuum and the US believed only they had the moral standing and the means to fill it.  The Japanese knew that they had lost the war, but the British believed that they had won the war.  The Japanese were ready to try something new.  The British remained steadfast.  The sun had set on both their empires.

From the beginning, many people thought that the atomic bombs had changed the world in a profound way, one that left them with a feeling of foreboding.  They knew that mutually assured destruction was a real possibility, and they were not reassured by talk of ‘nuclear umbrellas’, or electricity which was too cheap to meter.

Stanley Kubrick’s film ‘Dr. Strangelove’ (1964), ridiculed the ineffective safeguards which were supposed to prevent nuclear war.  Many people believed that the film was accurate enough to take seriously.  Its doomsday scenario was played out by remote, disturbed and frustrated warmongers whose fingers were poised menacingly over the missile buttons.

Yet Japanese and British consumers were getting used to American mixed messages.  Contradictory values and ideologies meant variety and freedom of thought.  American culture was available ‘off the shelf’ and people could pick-and-choose or take-it-or-leave-it.  Consumers were getting used to the caveat: ‘let the buyer beware’, and voters were getting used to politics which forced them to take ‘the good with the bad’.  The implication was always the same: ‘You bought it’, or ‘You voted for it’, so ‘You are to blame for it’. 

McLuhan proposed that the ‘content of any medium’ is always another medium.  People noticed changes in their society and culture, which were the effects of a new medium and which indicated the presence of a new message.  The medium was ‘American Cultural Imperialism’ and the message was ‘The American Dream’; it was descending all over Japan and Britain like radioactive fallout, and it would contaminate their cultures for decades.

NOTES
1)  Monty Python’s Flying Circus was a surrealistic, comedy-sketch show, which ran on BBC TV between 1969 and 1974.
2)  ‘The New Centurions’ is a modern American classic novel written by Joseph Wambaugh.
3)  Marshall McLuhan published his book ‘Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man’ in 1964.  It introduced his paradoxical aphorism ‘The medium is the message.
4)  First World - 'western' capitalist economies.  Second World - 'eastern' communist economies.  Third World - 'southern' poor economies.
5)  Petri Dish - a small shallow dish of thin glass or plastic with a loose cover used especially for cultures in bacteriology.
6)  Minuteman - a member of the republican revolutionary militia; US intercontinental ballistic missile which carried thermonuclear warheads during the 1960s and 1970s.
7)  Manifest Destiny was a 19th century doctrine in which the US believed it had the ‘God given right’ to expand into the whole North American continent and beyond.
8)  American Exceptionalism is another conjecture in the compilation of American Folklore and Mythology which was started by Thomas Jefferson and other Founding Fathers and Freemasons.  It claims that the US is inherently different from other nations because it has a unique mission to transform the world; that mission makes it superior over other nations.  It also claims that the US is a uniquely free nation which is based on democratic ideals and personal liberty.
9)  A New World Order was the astonishing response of US ‘war hawks’ to the end of the cold war. 
10)  South Bank – This arts complex was built next to the river Thames in Lambeth.

Green Swipe thanks the following sources:
1)  Mark Federman, Chief Strategist, McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology
http://individual.utoronto.ca/markfederman/article mediumisthemessage.htm
2)  20th Century London
3)  Ecyclopaedia Britannica

WINDUP
Join Green Swipe's opposition to the Green Party’s pro-EU policy blunder.  Green Swipe supports the ‘OUT’ campaign.  Britain must leave the EU.  It is just a front for big business and people trafficking.  Help rescue British people from second–class citizenship, drudgery, and poverty.  Vote ‘OUT!’

Don’t miss our next post – ‘You’ve Been Conned’ – Multiculturalism Part Two – The American Dream
peace manÿ[

You may send your comments to greenswipe@gmail.com


No comments: