Heroism and The Language of Fascism
'Everyone's a hero, everyone's a star," sings Jon Bon Jovi on his 2005 album, "Have a Nice Day." It's an insipid song, but a fitting anthem for what has become a thoroughly insipid age.
Once upon a time, you had to do something truly exceptional to qualify as a full-fledged hero: single-handedly hold off a battalion of enemy soldiers to allow your platoon to escape, or rescue 100 children from a Nazi concentration camp. But today, just showing up at your Army recruiting station makes you an instant hero -- and getting yourself hurt or killed doubles your heroism, even if you were sound asleep when your supply convoy went over an IED.
The empty rhetoric of heroism is everywhere these days. You know what I mean. Pat Tillman -- the former NFL star -- is "an American hero," apparently because he volunteered for duty along with several hundred thousand other people, then had the misfortune to be accidentally shot by his own side. Every wounded service member is a "hero" too: Sen. Hillary Clinton proudly sponsored the "Heroes at Home Act of 2007," intended to improve medical care for wounded military personnel, and the Defense Department recently sponsored the "Hiring Heroes Career Fair" to encourage companies to hire wounded veterans. No soldier left behind!
Bah, humbug.
Before you run me out of town on a rail, let me be clear: I respect the service and sacrifice of the troops. It takes guts to volunteer for the military. Injured service members deserve top-quality care, and the families of those killed deserve our deepest compassion. Soldiers, firefighters, police and many others accept risk and privation to serve the public, and we should be grateful.
But it's a big mistake to mix up the idea of service -- or the idea of sacrifice and suffering -- with the idea of heroism.
As most dictionaries explain, true heroism involves "extraordinary courage, fortitude or greatness of soul." So firefighters who take unusual risks to save others can legitimately be called heroes -- but just showing up for work and turning on a fire hose when required isn't quite enough. Similarly, suffering doesn't magically turn an ordinary person, however beloved, into a hero. Some of the office workers who died on 9/11 were truly heroic, sacrificing their own chance of escape to help others. But many of those who died never even got a chance to be heroic.
Distinguishing heroism from service and suffering is important for two reasons. First, it's always worth fighting the Lake Wobegon effect because, in a world where "all the children are above average," the truly special child gets no recognition, and genuine acts of exceptional courage are trivialized.
Take Jason Dunham, a 22-year-old Marine corporal who, in 2004, threw his helmet and then his body on top of an Iraqi insurgent's grenade, saving the lives of the Marines around him. Dunham died of his wounds and became one of only two soldiers in the Iraq war to be awarded the Medal of Honor, the highest military decoration in the United States. But in a world where every service member is a "hero," how many Americans have heard of Dunham's fatal courage?
There are plenty of other genuine heroes whose names will never be recorded, like the utility workers described by a Cornell University research team: On 9/11, "they went into the flooded Verizon building just north of World Trade Center 6, risking electrocution in chest-deep water and kerosene to shut off the building's massive circuit-breakers by hand." But when each of the thousands of stockbrokers and secretaries in the World Trade Center qualifies for the "everyone's a hero" award, why bother to identify those whose actions were unusually selfless?
But there's a deeper reason to be wary of the "everyone's a hero" rhetoric. Simply put, it fits neatly alongside other terms beloved of the powers that be, such as "warrior" and "the Homeland": It's part of the language of fascism.
For a chilling account of another society in which "the devaluation of the concept of heroism" was "proportional to the frequency of its use and abuse," check out Ilya Zemtsov's "The Encyclopedia of Soviet Life." In 1938, Zemtsov notes, the Soviet Union instituted "the title 'Hero of Socialist Labor'. . . . Thousands of those heroes emerged. . . . The hero was supposed to die in the name of Stalin during wartime [and] give his or her all in labor on communist constructions. . . . [But] a person upon whom the title 'hero' is bestowed has often performed no heroic deed whatsoever, but may receive the title . . . merely in return for displaying loyalty and/or diligence. . . . With time, the awarding of the title came to be used as a token to be disbursed or withheld according to political considerations. . . . "
In other words, comrades, whenever it seems as if they're handing out "hero" medals for free, look out: There's usually a hidden price.
rbrooks@latimescolumnists.com
© 2007 The Los Angeles Times
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29 Comments so far
Show AllMost of these "heros" in the military are suckers. Throwing their life's away thinking they are doing good when they are mearly instruments for the people at the top to get more money or power or both. Tillman was a fool to leave his NFL job to go die in Afganistan. The same applies to the terrorists of 9/11. Being convinced by their leaders that they will be rewarded in the afterlife for killing innocent people. How stupid to believe that crap. If there is an afterlife and a judgement (yeah right)I would have to suspect god would be asking them the same questions about how they be stupid enough to believe that 70 virgins line.
An award sort of loses its value if it is given out for just about anything and everything. It is by contrast and rarity that we know this is a special award reserved for people that have done truly special things to help others. Most people would just be satisfied with "a job well done" pat on the back from their friends and family. Neil Armstrong, the fist man to land on the moon did not want accolades. He just felt that he was doing his job and was fortunate enough to be the first.
PEACEMAN: First of all, I salute you as a soul brother. I feel a strong spiritual affinity with your point of view. As for HERO awards, you know, there's a reason why the Ancients depicted theater with twin masks: one for tragedy and the other for comedy. In these near-tragic times (tragic indeed for many), comedy is often more useful as medicine than just about anything else. With that being said, I'd like to see Jon Stewart or someone of his ilk do an A--HOLE award on T.V. It would be designed as a gold plated TUSH and certainly several should be made for the biggest industrial polluters who more than anyone else, are full of IT. LIARS of course would qualify for awards, as would those who benefitted from no-bid contracts, especially when it came to losing money to the tune of billions of dollars and/or designing structures where the TOILETS leak from upstairs to downstairs office rooms. I mean the possibilities dazzle the imagination. There are so many! And who would sponsor such an event? Maybe George Soros as it fits the idea of an OPEN society to show who the greatest offenders are. The nuclear industry passing itself off as GREEN gets my vote; as does the garbage "industry" in seeking to co-opt the term "organic" to suit its tidy recyclable toxic substances. Alas... all in the name of profit. What do you think? I would donate money to such a televised event... it might wake people up about products and companies they trust...
Siouxrose: Thanks. I certainly agree with what you just said. Last fall, I met Lt. Watada's father and stepmother at a fundraiser. The parents spoke passionately about Ehren and his refusing to go to Iraq. His father is a professor in Hawaii, and was a conscientious objector during our invasion of another innocent country, South Vietnam. I thanked them kindly for an outstanding job in raising a young man with real courage and integrity, and not succumbing to the false propaganda of the war-mongering profiteers in D.C.
I told them, and I really mean it, that in my not so humble opinion, their son was the "Audie Murphy" of the officer corp in the 21st century. WITHOUT firing a shot! You should have seen the smiles.
Also, Siouxrose, we may be arming unstable countries to the teeth, but the MOST unstable country armed to the teeth is our own Uncle Sam!
How about HERO awards for the best organically grown produce? HERO awards for the newest, safest, biodegradable products from sustainable natural resources for our "creature comforts", and things like that. A HERO award for persons using public transportation, bicycling, and walking, instead of driving two blocks away in a motor vehicle to go to the store,etc. I like your concept. Keep on writing, sister. You are an inspiration!
JEEZ! One last thing. A HERO award for reading the CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES and THE BILL OF RIGHTS, and understanding what they are BEFORE being given the HERO award and understand what the term "CHECKS AND BALANCES" means.
PEACEMAN: Goodo posting. I, for one, would find it refreshing to see the very construct of the word and concept of HERO configured with actions that support the greater good and better conditions for mankind! (Rather than this who's the big dog pro violence model that is tearing Eden asunder, and arming the most unstable countries to the teeth!)
Throughout history, there have been men and women who displayed extraordinary courage against overwhelming odds by doing the right thing, instead of conforming to the status quo. It takes a hero to buck a corrupt system, knowing full well the possible consequences of taking direct action, and being labeled as some sort of outlaw, by the real perpetrators of crime or injustice.
Lt. Ehren Watada, the first, (and maybe only) commissioned officer in our military, refused to take part in crimes against humanity in Iraq. Mr. Watada is a true hero of the highest caliber, and took a couragous stand by opposing the false and dangerous jingoistic propaganda still permeating much of American society.
Many enlisted men and women in our armed forces have refused to participate in the unlawful and immoral carnage we have inflicted on the people in Iraq, by refusing to go back for another "tour" or refusing to go in the first place. Under Geneva Convention Laws and the Nuremberg Tribunals, they should not follow those orders.
I'll go back in time. Another hero is Daniel Ellsberg, who released the Pentagon Papers, putting himself in jeopardy and not knowing what action would be taken against him by the tyrants in power. At that time in history, Mr. Ellsberg displayed extraordinary courage. Footnote...Senator Mike Gravel of Alaska helped Dan publish the "Papers", as the Senator was against the Vietnam War.
Another hero of the same period was Mario Savio, the student at U.C. Berkely who led the" Free Speech" Movement, daring to question our involvement in Southeast Asia.
More unnamed heros were the black civil rights protestors in the south during the turbulent 60's and also the white people who volunteered and went down to Dixie in support. Standing up to the KKK and the"high sheriff" in those days took an extraordinary amount of courage, but they prevailed and justice and equality became the law.
Trade-unionists beaten by police goons in the struggle for decent wages and benefits and working conditions were heros who displayed extraordinary courage in fighting for things we take for granted today.
I could continually go back in time and illustrate different heros with different objectives in trying to make this a better world, but I hope I made my point.
When Dennis Kucinich says he wants to create a Department of Peace, he is my hero.
How quickly we forgot the utility and construction workers on 9/11 who ALSO ran towards the buildings instead of away.
What America could really use is a civilian peaceful equivalent of the military, something like the old Peace Corps. Leave the soldiers for what they were intended for, which was defending the country. But between the "double Gitmo bomb bomb Iran" Repugs and the "Don't tell the Pakis we won't nuke 'em" Dems, I don't forsee either happening anytime soon.
Thanks for the etymological references, definitions of fascism, and the parallels in contemporary America. See also
"The Rise of Fascism in America" by Gary Alan Scott (published on this site on April 12, 2006.)
I wont say the H-word, and what really gets me going are the stickers: "The power of pride."
What the fuck is that?
"Support"? What is this? A Jock Strap? I "Support" NO ONE who kills in the name of this war. The people who are there made a choice.
That includes the contract killers of Blackwater, Halibuton, KBR, and the CIA. Just becouse you wear a uniform all of the sudden you area hero?
I work at a Grocery store, I wear a uinform. Am I a hero?
Where are the Peace Heroes? The Government and Big Business propaganda mills would have us believe that only by burning babies on command can we express our love for country. America hates the guts of anyone who won't take part in its evil. Killing and butchering don't keep this country free: that's got to be the biggest lie perpetrated upon a supposedly educated society. Let America salute its dead war "heroes". I'm looking high and low for a nation of live peace heroes.
I have heroically read this story and the heroic comments made about it by our own commondreams heroes.
ROUNDABOUT: Thank you for posting the background of words used commonly in our language.
Worse, in Loonitary Decider land people who exhibit real heroics, from John Kerry to Colleen Rawley to Max Cleland to Joe Wilson are pilloried and mocked, while total failures (whose incompetence killed tens of thousands and destroyed two nations,) like Tenet and Bremer and Powell are rewarded with medals and millions.
God blesses this, does he?
http://www.oldamericancentury.org/14pts.htm
The reason the USA needs political and religious cleansing for the sake of ALL Americans, including the culprits responsible.
"extraordinary courage, fortitude or greatness of soul."
Lets see now, Tillman walks away from his multi million dollar a year contract in the prime of his football career to join the army because his country has been attacked.
On active service he is killed, apparently by friendly fire.
Just the first thing he did qualifed him as a hero as far as I am concerned.
As for you Ms. Brooks, you aren't qualified to use his name in your cheap, shallow, political rhetoric.
good comments above. it is unfortunate that our definitions of heroism partake of some kind of militarized "courage" (engaging in state sanctioned violence or defending others from violence).
that said, how many times in the mainstream press do you read even the slightest critique or comment on the fascistic turn our public language has taken in the US?
and if i hear Homeland (das Heimland to the nazis) one more time, i'll VOMIT.
I don't believe in "heroes," or the system of offering praise to people in the military for performing their duties of obedience in death squads. The invasion is illegal, so why give out medals?
It is difficult to understand how this Blogger can see through all the "Homeland," "hero" and "warrior" cant and still be able to write, "I respect the service and sacrific of the troops." This sentiment is precisely what keeps an army in the field.
Main Entry: fas·cism
Pronunciation: 'fa-"shi-z&m also 'fa-"si-
Function: noun
Etymology: Italian fascismo, from fascio bundle, fasces, group, from Latin fascis bundle & fasces fasces
1 often capitalized : a political philosophy, movement, or regime (as that of the Fascisti) that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition
2 : a tendency toward or actual exercise of strong autocratic or dictatorial control
patriotism
"You'll never have a quiet world till you knock patriotism out of the
human race." George Bernard Shaw, O'Flaherty
"Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel." Samuel Johnson,
Boswell's Life
"Patriotism -- it fulfills our worst wishes. In the person of our
nation we are able vicariously, to bully and cheat, and what's more,
bully and cheat with a feeling that we are profoundly virtuous."
Aldous Huxley, Eyeless in Gaza
'The men who are eminent as patriots in the Republic seem to be as
devoid of altruism as so many cockroaches." H. L. Mencken, The
Analogous World
"Patriotism is religion: it is the egg from which wars are hatched."
Guy de Maupassant, Sosthenes
"Patriotism is the religion of hell." James Branch Cabell, Jurgen
Forget heroism, I wish more folks would look up what fascism means, and maybe have a care as to whether or not we're living it. Just asking the question, just a little thought on the matter, it would go a long way.
Thank you for so eloquently laying out the argument. I first understood the difference during the "Iran hostage" situation; I thought it rather odd to refer to the hostages as heroes instead of what they truly were: victims.
Since then, starting with the morning-in-America-Regan, the word "hero" has gradually been fixed into the hyperbole propaganda lexicon thereby debasing the definition. Lowering the bar on everything has followed, culminating in $400-million-a-year-with red-ink-balance-sheet-CEO's, "heckuva job" sycophant cronies, and loyal-yes-men-AG's-deemed-patriotic. Of course, lowering the bar on "character" was inevitable. All this happened while we were distracting and shopping ourselves to death. Some of those zombies now hail Paris Hilton as a hero, I suppose.
I suggest to you that misuse of the term "hero" goes hand-in-hand with the cultural ideology of "winning at all costs"---after all, our chickehawk, draft-dodging, warmongering pre-adolescent president could not possibly make references to the "victims" his fingerprints are on.
This article and the comments of JConrad above express something I've felt since 9/11 but have had a hard time articulating.Calling all service members heroes not only degrades the meaning of the word but serves to effectively stop debate about the mission these soldiers were sent to carry out.
It truly is a facistic use of language by an administration which seems to have a unique talent for obfuscation
Robber barons call themselves "Heroes" and "Angels" too. The words have lost their meaning.
The concept of "heroism" as related to our invasion of Iraq is just one aspect of a collective war pathology in our nation of denial. By even using the word "hero" it is suggested there is a just cause underlying American aggression. This type of truth twisting serves to justify imperial war crimes and massages our delusional national identity while luring naïve young recruits into a cruel bloodbath. There is nothing heroic about killing people in a ravaged developing nation and stealing their resources. Ironically, the Iraqi resistance fighters opposing the most technologically advanced military on earth are called "terrorists". It was a sad day when our chicken hawk boy emperor landed on an aircraft carrier posing as a hero and declared "mission accomplished". The old cliché that "patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel" still rings true.
"I respect the service and sacrifice of the troops. It takes guts to volunteer for the military."
So, Ms. Rosa Brooks is trapped in hero worshiping too deep even to notice that she uses the same "language of fascism", which she complains about.
Her example is also telling. American puppet government and its supporting intelligentsia are in the same revisionist mode as American government and its supporting intelligentsia; they all re-writing history to serve their own interest and justify The Loot, which affected both countries.
Year 1938, when Hero of Soviet Union was first introduced, is also telling. At that time Mr. Prescott Bush, president's grandpa, in cahoots with brothers Dulles and other American fascists (FDR's term, not mine) were busy re-arming Hitler and channeling him toward East. As direct result of such efforts, 12,000 future Heroes of Soviet Union were given chance to fight in defense of their country against, yes, occupying fascist horde, not to occupy foreign land. Alas, their heroism was in vain. Dizziness of success had finally ruined Soviet Union and gave USAns a unique chance to build new Empire on the rabble of Nazis futile efforts to rule the world. Now the same dizziness of success is destroying the next suitor for world domination to the benefit of all planetarians and USAns in the first place.
With such clarity of understanding of what is what as displayed by Ms. Brooks, Bush and his clique may never be overmisunderestimated.
I agree completely. This goes along with giving trophies to all the kids on the kindergarten soccer team so that no one feels left out - even though they don't even really know how to play a game. People come to expect recognition for doing the regular, everyday things. They expect rewards for doing what is expected. Bad for our society, bad for our kids.
SIOUXROSE: The feeling is mutual. I admire the way you address these issues that seem to pop up by the hour, since Bush took office. I forgot about the twin masks, and thanks for bringing it up.
Jon Stewart would be great for hosting the awards. Bill Maher, Lewis Black or George Carlin can have specials on HBO, doing it big time. I like your suggestions and the possibilities do dazzle the imagination. People would watch and learn, then ACT!