Mythology, for most Americans, evokes images of Jupiter,
Hercules, and Thor; it's something the primitive ancients engaged in before
modernity reared its enlightened head. But the US is a nation built upon a
foundation of myth and many forms of mythology have taken hold: free markets,
Western supremacy, the cult of science and technology, and fundamentalist
demagoguery to name a few. Such deeply held tenets could only become acceptable
in a society consciously and purposefully conditioned to worship wealth,
consumerism, and the unquestioned preservation of power at any cost.
That same society might be quite receptive to the alluring
appeal of the "good old days" (GOD). You're familiar with this
concept, I'm sure. The days when you could leave your doors open, sex was for
the bedroom, men wore ties and hats, and women knew their place. "Girls
were girls and men were men," as the "All in the Family" theme
song goes. Here's how conservative columnist, Linda Bowles, describes the GOD
concept: "There was a time, let's call them the good old days, when
parents could send their little children off to school with full confidence
they would be in good hands."
And some good old days, it seems, were better than others.
Tom Brokaw, in his best selling book, "The Greatest Generation,"
informs those who came of age during the era of Reagan and Rambo that those who
came of age during the Depression and WWII were "the greatest generation
any society has ever produced." This was a generation that would take its
rightful place alongside those "who had converted the North American
wilderness into the United States," Brokaw declares without even a hint of
irony.
The danger inherent in the GOD myth is twofold. Like all
myths, its mere existence makes other illusions easier to swallow. If the GOD
invention is accurate, the wars fought, the businesses started and subsidized,
the legislation passed, the culture created, and the leaders elected in the GOD
get a free ride on its coattails. We become a nation of people gazing backward
for innocence lost rather than looking ahead for lessons learned. This is the
second danger of the GOD fiction: disempowerment.
By accepting that "the greatest generation any society
has ever produced" roamed the earth some 50 to 70 years ago, we surrender
new ideas and embrace whitewashed nostalgia. The answers, we acknowledge, are
found in the past; all we have to do is slam on the brakes and throw our SUVs
in reverse.
A valuable step in fostering a more forward-thinking
approach would be to expose the GOD for what they were: a mixed bag of good and
not so good, like all such "days." If we don't buy into the
mythology, it's harder to convince us that most or all the solutions lie in the
past.
"The simple truth is that the 'good old days' were
never that good for the vast majority of the people who lived them," says
author Dennis N. Randall. "We cannot expect to return to a past that never
really existed. History is written by the victors. It is usually written for,
by, and about the wealthy and influential people of the times."
Historian Howard Zinn reminds us "history involves the
selection and arrangement of facts." Challenging that "selection and
arrangement" is but one way to ensure that the best days are yet to come.
Mickey
Z. is the author of several books, most recently "50 American Revolutions
You're Not Supposed to Know" (Disinformation Books). He can be found
on the Web at mickeyz.net.