America's national pastime is not really baseball but
football. Unlike baseball, which is equally popular in Japan, Taiwan and many
Latin American countries, no one else shares America's pigskin passion, a sport
in which collective rage is ritualized and celebrated, a colorful spectacle of
cool violence, an American specialty.
There are 246 foreign born players in Major Leagues
Baseball, compared to only a handful in the NFL. This is only appropriate in a
country that invented the assembly line. Streamlining the production of
objects, it also systematized and homogenized the behaviors of men, turned them
into seething robots. Manning an assembly line at Boeing, Perdue Farms or McDonald's,
a person becomes just as uniform as the jet engines, drum sticks or freedom
fries he's cranking out. If stockholders had their wishes, he could be switched
off at the end of his shift, given a cursory wipe and a pat on the head, then
flipped back on the next morning, the costs of his daily upkeep automatically
deducted from his debit card. Screw healthcare.
With his helmeted head, invisible face and angular, padded
shoulders, a football player resembles nothing so much as a robot, a hulking
humanoid, impervious to pain yet eager to dispense it. Knights in armor also
appeared robot-like, but that was only cosplay for the elites. Only the Ringo
Starrs and Elton Johns of their days were allowed to dress up like
proto-robots. Not so, football players. Even the lowest American could aspire
to become a tackling, blocking robot, provided he's not a wussified,
pencil-necked, tanka-composing creep, with barely enough facial hair to not
shave.
Like cars, robots are super cool. Tom Brady and LaDainian
Tomlinson are also cool. Cool is where it's at. Americans who lose their cool
must do it online, in the dark or out of sight, preferably in another country,
while on vacation or in uniform. Criminals or trash, they're only shown on TV
to be ridiculed. Real Americans keep their cool. Stay cool, keep cool, be cool,
act cool, even as one is suffering or inflicting pain. It's only shock and awe,
y'all. All football players are cool.
I'd be very surprised to learn of another language that uses
cool as a blanket substitute for all positive qualities. Hot also appears
frequently in American English, but not nearly as often as cool. Hot's not
really American. Yankees are cool, Latinos hot. If you're an American man,
don't even think of blurting in public that LaDainian Tomlinson is hot, for
example. Humans are supposed to be warm, machines cool. Americans are
definitely cool.
Cyborgs, androids, gynoids, American fictional robots
include the Six Million Dollar Man, The Bionic Woman, Star Trek's Data and
many, many more. The ultimate American robot is The Terminator, an
indestructible killing machine that stops at nothing. Outside of his role,
Arnold Schwarzenegger also projects a machine-like hardness and coolness. No
reflections, no irony, no moods. No method actor, Schwarzenegger.
The ultimate self-made immigrant, Arnold Schwarzenegger
governs the most mythologized state of the union, brightly lit, plastic, hardly
real, a self-parody, with San Francisco a foggy aberration. Don't ever confuse
him with that other beef jerky, Sylvester Stallone. Arnold would never consent
to mouth such a lame ass question like, "Do we get to win this time?"
Sylvester sounded like a hurt little boy asking his mom if he could go outside
and play. That's not American, dipshit. What's next, approval from Congress?
Just kick ass, like Schwarzenegger. Instead of asking stupid questions, The
Terminator just threatened, promised, "I'll be back," like General
MacArthur, the last American with truly depleted uranium gonads.
If only America had a mile-long assembly line to crank out
millions of Schwarzeneggers, its army wouldn't be short of robotic soldiers.
Desperate, it's accepting foreigners, middle-aged fatsos, drug addicts, Aryan
Nation, Blood, Crisp, Latin Kings and Tiny Rascals members, not to mention
borderline retards. One overzealous recruiter even crossed into Mexico to track
down two potential suckers in a Tijuana high school. A female soldier has to be
28 weeks pregnant before they send her home. On May 23, 2003, a 33 year-old
Marine even gave birth to a baby boy on the USS Boxer, deployed near Kuwait.
The Pentagon thought it had landed a poster robot in Pat
Tillman, a square-jawed football player who turned down three million bucks to
go zap terrorists, payback time, except that Tillman actually had a brain and a
heart. Sent to Iraq, then Afghanistan, he said to a fellow soldier as they
witnessed the bombing of a town, "You know, this war is so fuckin'
illegal." He urged other soldiers to vote against Bush, and even asked his
mother to arrange a meeting with Noam Chomsky, of all people. No robot, Tillman
was morphing into a fire-breathing dissident in front of his handlers' eyes, so
they had three
shots blasted into his forehead from ten yards away, then declared
him a hero. Case closed. Even after the criminal details had leaked out, the
corporate media gave this sensational story only a cursory glance, leaving his
family and the alternative press to pick through the sordid facts. In the
absurd funhouse that's contemporary America, Ellen DeGeneres' dog is more
newsworthy.
Robotic soldiers are only a stopgap measure until real
robots can be perfected. Although they may not be as well-spoken as Arnold
Schwarzenegger, they won't feel pain, hunger and fatigue. Israel already
employs bulldozer robots and, on the border with Gaza, a series of wall-mounted
machine guns remote-controlled by
female soldiers. South Korea uses SGR-A1
robots along its border with North Korea. According to Samsung, the robots' manufacturer, "the system is
designed to replace human-oriented guards, overcoming their limitation of
discontinuous guarding mission due to its severe weather condition or fatigue,
so that the perfect guarding operation is guaranteed." Leading the field
is the USA, of course, with 5,000 robots deployed in Iraq alone, everything from a
nine-pound Dragon
Runner, a "throwbot"
that can be tossed over a wall, out a three-story window or up a flight of
stairs, to the Special Weapons Observation Remote Reconnaissance Direct Action
System (SWORDS), armed with an M249 rifle. All these systems are
still controlled by a human, but that will soon change. Noel Sharkey wrote recently in the Guardian:
[ . . . ] fully autonomous robots that
make their own decisions about lethality are high on the US military agenda.
The US National Research Council advises "aggressively exploiting the
considerable warfighting benefits offered by autonomous vehicles." They
are cheap to manufacture, require less personnel and, according to the navy,
perform better in complex missions. One battlefield soldier could start a large-scale
robot attack in the air and on the ground.
This is dangerous new territory for warfare, yet there are no new ethical codes
or guidelines in place. I have worked in artificial intelligence for decades,
and the idea of a robot making decisions about human termination is terrifying.
The Pentagon is taking its cue from a 1995 dystopian movie, Screamers, which features a fighting robot called
Autonomous Mobile Sword. A self-replicating crawling machine, it tracks a
living pulse, then leaps to dismember its target. A small problem: it cannot
distinguish between friends or foes, civilians or soldiers, men, women or
children, primary or collateral damage. It sounds like we're already there.
Cool!
Linh Dinh is the author of four books of poems
and two collections of stories, including Blood and Soap,
which was one of The Village Voice�s Best Books of 2004. A novel, Love Like
Hate, will be released in the Spring of 2008. He maintains a regularly updated
blog, Detainees.