America is Exceptional, But... ( | Volume: 1, Issue: 1)

America is Exceptional, But...

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Authors: Paul Ortiz

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| Volume 1, Issue 1

I believe that the greatness of the United States is not rooted in the country’s original governing institutions. Nor is the nation’s genius located in its Founding Fathers whose destructive errors of judgement set the nation on a chaotic road to Disunion. 

The wisdom of America is properly rooted in its laboring classes and the remarkable array of social movements and traditions of resistance to tyranny and corruption that they established—and continue to establish in our own time.  

Foremost among these were insurgencies created by ordinary people who understood that their struggles were intimately tied to people’s movements against despotism throughout the world. In An African American and Latinx History of the United States, I call this phenomenon emancipatory internationalism. It was a worldview born from the experience of seeing slavery, “Indian Wars,” and militarism extinguishing liberty across the North American continent in the tumultuous decades after the American Revolution. The power of emancipatory internationalism would break the boundaries of the nation state repeatedly in the form of slave revolts, strikes, the creation of anti-colonial newspapers and other anti-authoritarian tactics. 

Dissenters passed on these traditions of resistance to future generations by establishing anti-slavery societies, mutual aid organizations, labor parties, trade unions and other free associations. African American leaders brought emancipatory internationalism to the forefront during Reconstruction when they organized a national movement to assist the Cuban War of Independence (1868-1878) arguing that their newly won freedoms were imperiled as long as slavery existed anywhere in the world. 

In the 1920s, the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) organized membership chapters in the United States, Cuba, Chile, France, South Africa and elsewhere with one, overarching goal: the self-emancipation of oppressed people everywhere. Critics of injustice in the United States joined together across a broad ideological spectrum—as well as across lines of race and ethnicity—to denounce exploitation of workers in other parts of the world. In the early 20th century, Pittsburgh Courier editor George Schuyler, Socialist Party leader Asa Philip Randolph, UNIA’s Amy Jacques Garvey (among many others) frequently juxtaposed the evils of white supremacist violence “at home” with US military occupation and corporate exploitation in the Caribbean, Central America, and Africa. 

Howard University President Mordecai Johnson used his Washington, DC-based radio program to connect white business supremacy in the United States with his government’s support for repressive “Banana Republics” in Latin America. The Afro-American summarized Johnson’s Sunday broadcast in the final week of November, 1929 noting that, “To the [Herbert] Hoover administration he [Johnson] suggested that there is no need to talk of peace as long as its policy is exploitation and greed in Haiti, Nicaragua and other small countries of the Caribbean….And he reminded heads of big business that as super-corporations they did things to workers and to competitors that they would be ashamed to do in the presence of their own families.”

More recently, millions of participants in El Gran Paro Estadounidense (also known as the Great American General Strike of 2006) connected immigrants’ rights struggles for justice in the United States with the