Daily Kos

The Ubiquity of Moloch

Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 08:39:05 AM PDT

About 10 years ago, I used to work with a woman named Callie, who was from New Zealand. She was about as apolitical as they come - I don’t think she’d ever voted in her life, in either New Zealand or the US.

We were sitting around the office one evening with a couple of beers, shooting the breeze one evening after a long, hectic day taking care of the last of the seasonal inventory, and I asked her, "What was the first thing you noticed about America when you arrived here?"

She sort of paused, as if to judge my possible reactions to what she was about to say, and then said, "Well...everywhere you go here, you’re swimming in propaganda."

I was surprised, and asked her what she meant.

She said, "I always hear people on the news and in the government saying that ‘America is the most powerful nation on earth.’ "

"Well...I guess it’s true, isn’t it?" I asked.

"Sure, of course. But have you ever asked yourself why that is said on a regular basis?"

I guess I looked even more confused, because she said, "Let me ask you to try something for me. The next time you go to the city, just drive around randomly and stop every 5 minutes. Get out of the car, and look around for an American flag. I would bet you good money that there will never be an occasion where an American flag is not visible."

So, the next weekend, my girlfriend and I drove over the Bay Bridge and into San Francisco, and tried this. I drove, she kept time, and every 5 minutes she would say, "Stop!" and I would pull over at the next safe spot.

Callie, my coworker, was right: there was never a place where an American flag was not visible. We made 20 stops, and most of the time we did not even have to get out of the car to find one. This was in late February, not the 4th of July or Memorial Day (and before 9/11/01).

Nationalism saturates American life - it is just the ever-present, ambient sound coming from every form of corporate media, 24/7/365, so ever-present that it has become, in an odd way, invisible. I have come to understand that it is idolatry - that is, quasi-religious self-exaltation - subtler, arguably, than building a golden calf, but no less idolatrous. And it disturbs me a great deal.

We, at every level of our society and in every vocation, me included, have failed to do our jobs of providing a clear voice against this Moloch-like "Machinery of Night," to borrow a phrase from Allen Ginsberg.

Tags: War, Nationalism (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 12 comments

  •  I think people do not see it as idolatry (3+ / 0-)

    because the flag-worship and militaristic "patriotism" has been so completely fused with religion that we can't even separate them out.  You can't see veneration of America as an insidious rival to veneration of God when you can't even keep the two apart.  I agree -- we need to think more clearly about this, and fast.

    Moloch whose love is endless oil and stone!
    Moloch soul is electricity and banks!

  •  Flag worship is idolatry (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    mftalbot

    An ex- buddy would get pissed when I said the flag is just a shiney simplistic distraction . I spent 6 years as an Army grunt while he's is the typical chickenhawk republicon . He hates Democrats because all those N*****rs are Dems . He must think saying the pledge of allegiance ( in grade school )is the same as swearing to uphold the constitution .

    •  No kidding, John... (0+ / 0-)

      I share your irritation at chickenhawk republicons (I think I'll steal that phrase, by the way).

      I did 4 years as a grunt myself, by the way - what unit were you in?

      "The World Is Flat" means, "Expect a pay cut before we fire you." -Me

      by mftalbot on Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 09:13:28 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  If I may. all my european buds visiting comment (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    fatherofdragonwagon

    WE must hang together or we will all hang separately. B.Franklin

    by ruthhmiller on Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 09:06:35 AM PDT

    •  I hit the wrong key. all my suropean buds see a (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      mftalbot, Redfire

      lot more flags here than ever in their countries, even in good old blue New England where I live. I thought about it and I think it's a small way of bringing us all together where, unlike other countries, we do not share an ethnic identity.and sometimes not a history in the country.  So all govt offices fly the flag and lots of private people. I laugh about it.  but I don't necessarily see it as some kind of militaristic thingo.(although sometimes it is) but a way of sort of saying we belong to each other, even if we didn't before we emigrated.

      WE must hang together or we will all hang separately. B.Franklin

      by ruthhmiller on Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 09:13:01 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  More disturbing is . . . (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    mftalbot, JonBarleycorn

    the widespread endorsement of violence as a viable solution to our national and social problems, whether it be endorsed by the federal government taking us to war, or the state and local governments' use of the police to deal with the issue of poverty.  It must beat coming up with creative solutions, but it unfortunately affects all levels of thinking in our country.  Why can't we be proud of our land without the saber-rattling?  

  •  True, says this Brit, but... (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    mftalbot

    Yes, there are flags everywhere. But flags and propaganda are not the same thing. People put up the Stars and Stripes and make it mean many things - supporting the troops is only one possible reason. It could be -

    ...a commitment to federalism
    ...a love for the Constitution and Bill of Rights
    ...a pride in American achievements
    ...a love for American people
    ...a hope that one day America will be a true beacon of freedom...

    I fly a Stars and Stripes on my deck and a Union Jack in the guest bedroom. Both are a part of me now. I love this country, even though its promises have gone unfulfilled for too long, and even though America has not yet come to terms with the idea that the American government has more than once brought havoc and war around the world. I love the chances it has given me to fulfill my own dreams. I love too the trust people place in their neighbors.

    Other countries - especially in Europe - are trying to create secular, multiracial senses of patriotism. The US is in a sense far ahead.

    •  asdf (0+ / 0-)

      ...a commitment to federalism
      ...a love for the Constitution and Bill of Rights
      ...a pride in American achievements
      ...a love for American people
      ...a hope that one day America will be a true beacon of freedom...

      Sure - but it is commonly used as a totem to deflect criticism, and it is this use that disturbs me.

      Militaristic nationalism is ubiquitous in American culture, don't you think?

      "The World Is Flat" means, "Expect a pay cut before we fire you." -Me

      by mftalbot on Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 09:55:18 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

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