March 31, 2003
Margaret Atwood: Letter To America

[from The Globe and Mail:]

Dear America: This is a difficult letter to write, because I'm no longer sure who you are.

Some of you may be having the same trouble. I thought I knew you: We'd become well acquainted over the past 55 years. You were the Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck comic books I read in the late 1940s. You were the radio shows -- Jack Benny, Our Miss Brooks. You were the music I sang and danced to: the Andrews Sisters, Ella Fitzgerald, the Platters, Elvis. You were a ton of fun.

You wrote some of my favourite books. You created Huckleberry Finn, and Hawkeye, and Beth and Jo in Little Women, courageous in their different ways. Later, you were my beloved Thoreau, father of environmentalism, witness to individual conscience; and Walt Whitman, singer of the great Republic; and Emily Dickinson, keeper of the private soul. You were Hammett and Chandler, heroic walkers of mean streets; even later, you were the amazing trio, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner, who traced the dark labyrinths of your hidden heart. You were Sinclair Lewis and Arthur Miller, who, with their own American idealism, went after the sham in you, because they thought you could do better.

You were Marlon Brando in On The Waterfront, you were Humphrey Bogart in Key Largo, you were Lillian Gish in Night of the Hunter. You stood up for freedom, honesty and justice; you protected the innocent. I believed most of that. I think you did, too. It seemed true at the time.

You put God on the money, though, even then. You had a way of thinking that the things of Caesar were the same as the things of God: that gave you self-confidence. You have always wanted to be a city upon a hill, a light to all nations, and for a while you were. Give me your tired, your poor, you sang, and for a while you meant it.

We've always been close, you and us. History, that old entangler, has twisted us together since the early 17th century. Some of us used to be you; some of us want to be you; some of you used to be us. You are not only our neighbours: In many cases -- mine, for instance -- you are also our blood relations, our colleagues, and our personal friends. But although we've had a ringside seat, we've never understood you completely, up here north of the 49th parallel.

We're like Romanized Gauls -- look like Romans, dress like Romans, but aren't Romans -- peering over the wall at the real Romans. What are they doing? Why? What are they doing now? Why is the haruspex eyeballing the sheep's liver? Why is the soothsayer wholesaling the Bewares?

Perhaps that's been my difficulty in writing you this letter: I'm not sure I know what's really going on. Anyway, you have a huge posse of experienced entrail-sifters who do nothing but analyze your every vein and lobe. What can I tell you about yourself that you don't already know?

This might be the reason for my hesitation: embarrassment, brought on by a becoming modesty. But it is more likely to be embarrassment of another sort. When my grandmother -- from a New England background -- was confronted with an unsavoury topic, she would change the subject and gaze out the window. And that is my own inclination: Mind your own business.

But I'll take the plunge, because your business is no longer merely your business. To paraphrase Marley's Ghost, who figured it out too late, mankind is your business. And vice versa: When the Jolly Green Giant goes on the rampage, many lesser plants and animals get trampled underfoot. As for us, you're our biggest trading partner: We know perfectly well that if you go down the plug-hole, we're going with you. We have every reason to wish you well.

I won't go into the reasons why I think your recent Iraqi adventures have been -- taking the long view -- an ill-advised tactical error. By the time you read this, Baghdad may or may not look like the craters of the Moon, and many more sheep entrails will have been examined. Let's talk, then, not about what you're doing to other people, but about what you're doing to yourselves.

You're gutting the Constitution. Already your home can be entered without your knowledge or permission, you can be snatched away and incarcerated without cause, your mail can be spied on, your private records searched. Why isn't this a recipe for widespread business theft, political intimidation, and fraud? I know you've been told all this is for your own safety and protection, but think about it for a minute. Anyway, when did you get so scared? You didn't used to be easily frightened.

You're running up a record level of debt. Keep spending at this rate and pretty soon you won't be able to afford any big military adventures. Either that or you'll go the way of the USSR: lots of tanks, but no air conditioning. That will make folks very cross. They'll be even crosser when they can't take a shower because your short-sighted bulldozing of environmental protections has dirtied most of the water and dried up the rest. Then things will get hot and dirty indeed.

You're torching the American economy. How soon before the answer to that will be, not to produce anything yourselves, but to grab stuff other people produce, at gunboat-diplomacy prices? Is the world going to consist of a few megarich King Midases, with the rest being serfs, both inside and outside your country? Will the biggest business sector in the United States be the prison system? Let's hope not.

If you proceed much further down the slippery slope, people around the world will stop admiring the good things about you. They'll decide that your city upon the hill is a slum and your democracy is a sham, and therefore you have no business trying to impose your sullied vision on them. They'll think you've abandoned the rule of law. They'll think you've fouled your own nest.

The British used to have a myth about King Arthur. He wasn't dead, but sleeping in a cave, it was said; in the country's hour of greatest peril, he would return. You, too, have great spirits of the past you may call upon: men and women of courage, of conscience, of prescience. Summon them now, to stand with you, to inspire you, to defend the best in you. You need them.

Margaret Atwood studied American literature -- among other things -- at Radcliffe and Harvard in the 1960s. She is the author of 10 novels. Her 11th, Oryx and Crake, will be published in May. This essay also appears in The Nation.

Posted by Darren Wershler-Henry at March 31, 2003 06:39 PM
Comments

Wish all our friends were this honest with us!!!
Many other friends have been trying to tell us the same thing, but we seem to have become deaf.

Posted by: Ana on April 1, 2003 05:41 PM

Ok, like state the obvious... so what should we DO about it. Everybody just wants to talk talk talk, but what do WE do about the problems in the Middle East, when they start to affect us? It was all so simple when they just kept to (and killed) themselves, wasn't it? Ah, too be old and reminiscent... Well baby, times have changed. Remember a couple of buildings fell over... and 'that part of the world' has major problems with us, obviously. So what is your solution, other than go up into the attic and sort through your dusty memories?

Posted by: Dave on April 8, 2003 01:26 PM

A couple buildings have fallen? So you will give up on everything that you hold dear because....a couple of buildings have fallen? Are you a coward? You do know that the rights enshrined in the constitution are worth more than a few natural disasters, terrorist attacks, and war. It protects YOU and YOUR RIGHT to live FREE! If you want to live in a totalitarian state like the former Soviet Union then, by all means, support George W. Bush on his crusade to rip our rights to shreds! I have never seen a more ridiculous response to terrorism than I've witnessed in the U.S.
Many nations around the world have dealt with terrorism on a regular basis and you don't see them starting wars in the middle east. Attacking a country that has no links to 911, flimsy evidence of danger to the U.S. or its allies by so-called WMD (by the way, WHERE THE HELL ARE THOSE WMD HUH???!!!), and the U.S. being derided and hated by every single country on earth. Why is that? Why do countries (even our allies) hate our guts now? Why, because President Bush informed the whole world that he had the absolute right to attack another country "pre-emptively" without any international law. The U.S. can make war on any country on earth, all there has to be is the suspicion that a country will sometime in the future, somehow, maybe, be a 'possible' threat to the U.S. Now how does one determine that?! Psychic ability? Needless to say, people around the world fear for their country's soverignty...and Americans have all the popularity evquivalent to that of being a leper.

Posted by: Tanya on April 20, 2003 11:47 AM

HaHa

Posted by: Kitt on April 20, 2003 11:51 AM

OK, more blah, but here's what Americans DO to stop the problems. First, everybody stop driving or get a SMALL clean modern diesel car, just like the Europeans. Then develop oil-producing algae farms in the deserts of Arizona to supply veggie-diesel to run the country (this is all possible). It's carbon-neutral, Kyoto-friendly, and would create jobs In the US (not China).
Become dependant on yourselves, instead of raping the world for resources. Then who cares if the middle east self destructs as long as it's not nuclear. If their philosophy and life is SO wrong, they will eventually just cease to exist. Then, when nobody is left, try colonial imperialism and claim the empty land for yourselves - before China gets it!

Sure this method may take longer, but patience is a virtue... Oh, and I'm not American, so of course I'm a coward, but only of GWB and his WMD. WTF, are you Americans hooked on initialisms, or what?

Cheers!

Posted by: Dave on May 2, 2003 01:27 PM
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