Healthy
The 2016 UEFA European Championship: I was struck with the
team from Iceland. This team made it to
the quarterfinals, finally losing to host nation France. Iceland has a population of some 330,000
people. It was reported that up to ten
percent of the island’s population were attending the team’s matches in
France. When the team returned to
Iceland from their eventual defeat to France, they were greeted by what seemed
to be the entire population of the island.
A real feel-good story.
Which caused me to reflect: why feel good about this display of national
pride?
I suspect every person in Iceland has not more than one or
two people in between them and a player on the team. A community, happily cheering for people with
whom there is a personal connection; like cheering for your child, your cousin,
or your friend from gymnasium.
In other words, a nation in the healthiest sense of the
word. Unfortunately, there are not too
many countries that offer such a possibility: decentralization to the point
where nation, country, and state correspond much closer to natural
relationships.
Pathological
Today’s example is to be found in American football: American
football – like most American sports – cannot be separated from the
military. Every game includes some honor
or another to or regarding the military: from a presentation to a “wounded
warrior,” to a flyover, to the home team wearing camouflage-style jerseys. People cheer louder for the military and for flag
worship than they do for a touchdown.
An American football player decides not to stand for the
national anthem. He has apparently done
this before, but it is only now news. The
reaction was (only verbally, so far) violent: how dare he disrespect the
troops! Except he didn’t. His protest was against the treatment of
minorities in America; he could not stand for the anthem or flag of such a
country. But to the masses, “nation” (as
represented by the anthem) equals military and state. This player disrespected the troops, no
matter what he says.
The semi-thoughtful commentators (as opposed to the totally
ignorant) were able to process this distinction: “thank God he didn’t
disrespect the troops.” Translations: it
is OK to protest over an SJW cause, “just
don’t protest about the troops”; “they fight and die for us to have the freedom
to protest.” This passed for
thoughtful commentary.
The even more thoughtful offered: if we cannot remain seated
for the anthem, what does that say about America. Totalitarian governments demand such things, not us!
Let’s see if they say such things when someone refuses to
stand for the troops. Because protesting
regarding the police treatment of dark-skinned people in the US is acceptable;
protesting regarding the US military treatment of dark-skinned people in other
countries…well…we know the answer.
As one talking mouthpiece said: “I don’t know a single
person who doesn’t support the troops.”
To which I say, move to Iraq, Syria, Libya, or Afghanistan. See how you feel about it then.
Or, stop by here,
here, and here once a day: it will be physically much safer,
but intellectually and emotionally crushing.
Conclusion
Iceland. Given the
size and relative cohesiveness of the population, one place where I envision the
possibility of country, nationalism, and state reasonably co-existing: a possibility
for healthy, all-encompassing patriotism.
In a place like the United States? Patriotism equals a sickly
self-identification with international murderers and criminals; it also means crucifixion
for those who don’t go along. Pathological.