As a frequent visitor
to the USA I think I should offer my thoughts.
I visit the US pretty
frequently. Once a year usually. Sometimes more. Garden lectures,
work trips, leading garden tours etc.
I've read a lot about
American history and keep up with the politics.
So, I think I'm in a
good position to make some comments, particularly aimed at fellow
Europeans who are aghast at the election of the man one US journalist
dubbed “Donald Trumplethinskin”. In fact I think I have something
of a duty to help explain, and suggest some reading matter. So here
goes:
Firstly, the gardening
crowd I meet are overwhelmingly well-travelled, open-minded, liberal.
I have only once had socialise with someone who asked me things like - “is
it true that Muslim fundamentalists are taking over Switzerland?”
Yes, really. That was in North Carolina (since you ask). He listened
to Fox News, which clearly has a lot to answer for, and gives you a good idea of the kind of misinformation which makes up many people's supply of news.
Oddly though, the
garden groups that make invitations are overwhelmingly in the
North-East (New England, New York, Pennsylvania) or the West Coast,
and perhaps Chicago. I have only twice, in the course of a twenty
year history of lecturing in the US, had invitations from The South
(capital T, capital S). There is a deep garden culture here though.
But it is not necessarily what we might expect After all, they have a
magazine, called 'Garden and Gun'. Yes, really, I am not making this
up. You can look at their website.
The 'gun' refers to the
love of hunting (a form of nature appreciation though many might not
see it like this), and linking the two together does help hint at
part of the explanation of real difference we Europeans feel about
the US. Its the whole thing of being a pioneer: grow your own veg,
shoot your own supper, look after your own needs, don't need no
government to tell me what to do. These attitudes are particularly
strong in the South and parts of the west but can be found anywhere.
A good guide to understanding them is the book: American Beliefs
Growing your own supper
and shooting your own veg is one thing but in the crowded, interdependent modern world, the
extreme individualism of the pioneer mentality militates against
community and social responsibility. This atavistic pioneer mindset
is what has driven The Tea Party and the hostility to national health
care, which we Europeans see as one of the benchmarks of a civilised
society.
The question of The
South gets to a crucial point in how we outsiders understand the US,
and the seeming insanity of their recent presidential election –
the United States of America is anything but united, and never really
has been. The post-war period did show an exceptional unity, and we
can be forgiven for thinking, as we peer across the pond, that 'they'
really are one people. Not any more, as the bitter divisions over
Trumpthinskin are showing. These divisions reflect some very
different political cultures, essentially geographically defined and
dating back a long time. One of the most useful books to help you
understand this is American Nations.
Which sets out to
establish that there are eleven very distinct cultures across North
America, whose origins, often during the first few decades of
European settlement, have somehow fixed a particular mentality and
culture. The author argues that this has stayed remarkably stable
over time. Reading this book explains so much, and in particular
should warn us away from lazy stereotyping: e.g. gun-toting maniacs?
no, most of the guns are owned by people in very distinct
geographical areas; a country of immigration? not really, most
immigrants go to a few cities or regions. It does a lot to
explain the major differences in political behaviour and almost
visceral loathing between different political tendencies which we now
see developing.
We all know about the
Civil War of 1861 to 1865 – a bloodbath if ever there was one. That
was the civil war that really took off. The War of Independence
(1775–1783) was effectively a bloodbath of a civil war too (wars of
independence usually are: ask an Algerian or Zimbabwean). The latter
was followed by a series of armed conflicts which almost flared into
civil wars. A recent and very well-reviewed book covers this period
well and debunks many a myth of national unity: American Revolutions
Looking back over the
course of US political history, the election of a failed businessman
and game show host does not look so extraordinary. Politics has often
been violent and corrupt, especially in the big cities; to take one
example Chicago's Richard Daley (Mayor from 1955 to 1976) is infamous
for the expression "Vote early - and often". To get an idea
of the long history behind Trump look here.
BTW, Daley's son was Mayor too, but made of better stuff - it was he who got the Lurie Garden and many good green things happening in the city.To return to The South. Of course there are plenty of good people here, but there is undeniably a large sector of the white population who have never confronted the evil of slavery and the following century of lynching, segregation and denial of the vote as a moral outrage, and who saw the election of a black man to the White House, as something deeply and totally unacceptable. I want to say that I think it is difficult for Europeans to understand how deeply racist the white South is, but then I remember the Holocaust. But then western Europe at least has confronted its horrors, and moved forward in a way the white South has really failed do so.
One way of looking at
the last few decades of US politics is to see the poisonous politics
of the white South seeping beyond its old boundaries – the spread
of Southern-style Christian Conservatism (80% voted for Trump the
sexual predator), the continued killings of young black men by the
police, the refusal to accept Obama as a legitimate (i.e.
American-born) president. For the next few years it is the race
factor that really worries me – things could get very nasty indeed.
Black Americans' lives have not gotten one iota better under Obama.
Remember the Black Panthers? The KKK? With Trump in control, they
could both enjoy a revival.
I have mentioned the
deepening of already deep divisions. This is one thing which is very
frightening about the US right now, two nations who listen to
different news outlets, live in different neighbourhoods, keep
different friends, and I am not just talking about Black and White,
but about Democrat and Republican voting blocks. No-one seems to
listen to each other any more. There is a silo-thinking of which
liberals are also guilty of; express an opinion which is divergent to
the liberal canon and you can get some odd looks – I shall never
forget stating how I thought GM crops were a good thing and hearing a
dinner table fall silent. At its worst we see this in the
universities and the stifling intolerance of political correctness
which is increasingly making a mockery of freedom of speech. There
are a lot of liberals who need to get out more and listen more.
Finally, don't give up
on our friends and colleagues over the pond. There is always a latent
anti-americanism in Europe just below the surface, which
Trumplethinskin's antics will do much to increase. Visit, keep in
touch and show solidarity!