Rusty Bertrand on Nostr: “What passes for identity in America is a series of myths about one’s heroic ...
“What passes for identity in America is a series of myths about one’s heroic ancestors. It’s astounding to me, for example, that so many people really appear to believe that the country was founded by a band of heroes who wanted to be free. That happens not to be true.
What happened was that some people left Europe because they couldn’t stay there any longer and had to go someplace else to make it.
That’s all. They were hungry, they were poor, they were convicts. Those who were making it in England, for example, did not get on the Mayflower. That’s how the country was settled. Not by Gary Cooper.
Yet we have a whole race of people, a whole republic, who believe the myths to the point where even today they select political representatives, as far as I can tell, by how closely they resemble Gary Cooper. Now this is dangerously infantile, and it shows in every level of national life.”
- James Baldwin in a Talk to Teachers working in the New York Public School System on October 16, 1963 discussing the American Identity
What happened was that some people left Europe because they couldn’t stay there any longer and had to go someplace else to make it.
That’s all. They were hungry, they were poor, they were convicts. Those who were making it in England, for example, did not get on the Mayflower. That’s how the country was settled. Not by Gary Cooper.
Yet we have a whole race of people, a whole republic, who believe the myths to the point where even today they select political representatives, as far as I can tell, by how closely they resemble Gary Cooper. Now this is dangerously infantile, and it shows in every level of national life.”
- James Baldwin in a Talk to Teachers working in the New York Public School System on October 16, 1963 discussing the American Identity