It Seems to Me Howard Zinn
The Greatest Generation?
They tell me I am a member
of the greatest generation. That's
because I saw combat duty as a bombardier in World War 11, and we (I almost
said "I") won the war against fascism. I am told this by Tom Brokaw, who wrote a book called The Greatest Generation, which is all
about us. He is an anchorman for a big
television network, meaning that he is anchored to orthodoxy, and there is no greater orthodoxy than to ascribe
greatness to valor.
That idea is perpetuated by
an artillery barrage of books and films about World War 11: Pearl Harbor, Saving
Private Ryan, and the HBO multi-episode story of the I 0 1 st Airborne, Band of brothers, based on Stephen
Ambrose's book of the same name. And
Ambrose has just published an exciting history of the valiant "men and
boys" who flew B-24s.
The crews who flew those
planes died in great numbers. We who
flew the more graceful-looking B-17s sardonically called those other planes
Bdash2crash4. I wrote from my air base
in England to my friend Joe Perry, who was flying B-24s out of Italy, kidding
him about his big clunk of a plane, but the humor was extinguished when my last
letter to him came back with the notation "Deceased."
Those who saw combat in
World War 11, whether they lived or died, are celebrated as heroes. But it seems clear that the degree of
heroism attributed to soldiers varies according to the moral reputation of the
war. The fighters of World War 11 share
a special glory because that war has always been considered a "good
war," more easily justified (except by those who refuse to justify any
war) than the wars our nation waged against Vietnam or Korea or Iraq or Panama
or Grenada. And so they are "the
greatest generation."
What makes them so
great? These men-the sal 'lots of Pearl
Harbor, the soldiers of the D-Day invasion, the crews of the bombers and
fighters risked their lives in war, perhaps because they
Believed the war was just,
perhaps because they wanted to save a friend, perhaps because they had some
vague idea they were doing this "for my country." And even if I
believe that there is no such thing as a just war, even if I think that men do
not fight for "our country" but for those who run our country, the
sacrifice of soldiers who believe, even wrongly, that they are fighting for a
good cause is to be acknowledged. But
not admired.
I refuse to celebrate them
as "the greatest generation " because in doing so we are celebrating
courage and sacrifice in the cause of war.
And we are miseducating the young to believe that military heroism is
the noblest form of heroism, when it should be remembered only as the tragic
accompaniment of horrendous policies driven by power and profit. Indeed, the
current infatuation with World War 11 prepares us-innocently on the part of
some, deliberately on the part of others-for more war, more military
adventures, more attempts to emulate the military heroes of the past.
To decide which is "the
greatest generation" involves a double choice. One is the choice of a particular time period. The other is the choice of who will
represent that time period, that generation.
Neither is decided arbitrarily, but rather on the basis of one's
political philosophy. So there is an
ideological purpose in choosing the generation of World War 11, and then in
choosing the warriors of that time to represent "greatness.” would propose
other choices if we are to educate the young people of our time in the values
of peace and justice.
We might take the generation
of the American Revolution, another generation almost universally considered
"great." I would not choose the Founding Fathers to represent
it. Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Hamilton,
Madison have had enough adulation, and their biographies clog the book review
sections of the major media.
The Founding Fathers did
lead the war for independence from Britain. But they did not do it for the equal right of all to life, liberty, and
equality. Their intention was to set up
a new government that would, protect the property of slave owners, land
speculators, merchants, and bondholders.
Independence from England had already been secured in parts of the
country by grassroots rebellion a year before the battles at Lexington and
Concord that initiated hostilities with Britain. (See Ray Raphael's A People@ History of the American
Revolution, New Press, 2001.) It is one of the phenomena of modern times
that revolutions are not favored unless they are led by people who are not
revolutionaries at heart.
I would rather recognize the
greatness of all those who fought to make sure that the Founding Fathers would
not betray the principles of the Declaration of Independence, to make sure that
the dead and maimed of the Revolutionary War did not make their sacrifices in
vain. And so I would honor the soldiers
of the Pennsylvania and New Jersey lines, who mutinied against George
Washington and Mad Anthony Wayne. They
were rebelling against the luxurious treatment of their gentry officers, and
their own mistreatment: 500 lashes for misconduct, Washington decreed, and
execute a few mutinous leaders to set an example.
Add to the honors list in
that great generation the farmers of western Massachusetts who resisted the
taking of their homes and land for nonpayment of exorbitant taxes. This was the Shays Rebellion, which put a
fright into the Founding Fathers, especially as it led to uprisings in
Maryland, South Carolina, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. That rebellion persuaded the Founding
Fathers that a strong central government was needed to maintain law and order
against unruly dissidents, slave rebels, and Indians. These were the true revolutionaries of the Revolutionary
generation.
I submit as additional
candidates for "the greatest generation those Americans who, in the
decades before the Civil War, struggled against the takeover of Indian and
Mexican lands. These were the Indians
of the Five Civilized Tribes, and especially the Seminoles, who resisted their
removal from Florida in eight years of guerrilla warfare, succumbing finally to
a combination of deception and superior force.
And the dissidents of the Mexican War: Seven
regiments deserted on the way to Mex-
ico City. And the Massachusetts volunteers-that half
of them who survived-who booed their commanding officer at a reception after
the war ended.
And what of the abolitionist
generation-the leaders of slave revolts, the conductors of the underground
railroad, the speakers and writers, the likes of David Walker and Harriet
Tubman and Frederick Douglass? It was
they who gave honor to the decades leading up to the Civil War, they who
pressured Lincoln and the Congress into ending slavery.
Why do we use the term
"greatest generation" for participants in war? Why not for those who have opposed war, who
have tried to make us understand that war has never solved fundamental
problems? Should we not honor, instead
of parachutists and bomber pilots, those conscientious objectors -, who refused
to fight or the radicals and pacifists who opposed the idea that young people
of one nation should HI young people of another nation to serve the purposes of
politicians and financiers?
The generation of the First
World War was not made honorable by Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, by
General Pershing and Admiral Dewey.
What nobility it had came from the courage of Eugene Debs, Emma Goldman,
Alexander Berkman, Kate Richard O'Hare, and the leaders of the Industrial
Workers of the World, all of whom were imprisoned for opposing the entrance of
the United States into the slaughterhouse of Europe.
If there is to be a label
"the greatest generation," let us consider attaching it also to the
men and women of the sixties: the black people who changed the South and
educated the nation, the civilians and soldiers who opposed the war in Vietnam,
the women who put sexual equality on the national agenda, the homosexuals who
declared their humanity in defiance of deep prejudices, the disabled people who
insisted that the government recognize the discrimination against them.
And I suggest that some
future writer-not an anchorman, but someone unmoored from traditional ways of
thinking-may, if the rebels of Seattle and Genoa persist and grow, recognize
the greatness of this generation, the first of the new century, for launching a
world movement against corporate domination, for asserting human rights against
guns and greed.
reprinted from the October 2001 issue of
The Progressive