American Eagle By Bruce Walker

Twenty years ago the light of liberty flickered briefly in
China.  In May 1989, Chinese students built a “Goddess of Liberty,”
alternatively called a “Goddess of Democracy,” in Tiananmen Square. 
Throughout much of China, the subjects of the nation, on the fortieth
anniversary of the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War, expressed their
support for liberty as well.  The whole world watched.  Then, on May
30, 1989, twenty years ago, the tanks of the People’s Liberation Army (the
ultimate oxymoron) violently crushed the mass gathering and crushed all public
dissent.  All this happened while the whole world watched.  There
could be no pretense any longer that this was the People’s Republic.  It
was, instead, the Oligarchs’ Republic.

The vast evils of Mao, perhaps the greatest mass murderer in
human history and certainly a monster as awful as Stalin or Hitler, had been
stilled before 1989.  During the thirteen years between the death of Mao
and Tiananmen Square, China had been entering a phase not unlike
de-Stalinization in Russia during the 1950s.  The Great Helmsman (Mao) was
never repudiated, but his policies which were essentially to sate every vile
impulse he could imagine, were tamed.

How far would this end of totalitarianism go?  The world
was wondering this twenty years ago, and the Chinese people were wondering it
too.  Did they own China, or were they simply increasingly well paid
employees of the  mandarins and warlords?  A free China – a truly
free China – promised wonderful things for mankind.  A democratic China –
a truly democratic China – promise real hope for the world.

When students twenty years ago constructed the “Goddess of
Liberty,” anyone who looked at that structure knew exactly what it was: 
the Statute of Liberty which sits astride the entrance to New York and which
has come to represent all that is America.  The students in China knew
exactly what they wanted, and what they wanted was a true People’s Republic, a
nation of the people, by the people, and for the people, as Lincoln so
beautifully described America in the Gettysburg Address.

Twenty years ago, that dream died.  What do we have
today?  We have a nation which is described by Freedom House in its three
tiered categories of “free,” “partly free,” and “not free,” as “not
free.”  http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=363&year=2008.
  Is this because the Chinese people cannot govern themselves? 
The Republic of China (Taiwan) is a free democracy.  The two other great
powers of Asia, Japan and India, are also free democracies.  Freedom and
democracy, the history of the last sixty years has shown, are not inventions
unique to European based cultures and civilizations.

America has become the homeland of many Vietnamese, Koreans,
Chinese and other East Asians who have left homes that were not free or
democratic to enjoy these blessings in a foreign land.  The Goddess in
Tiananmen Square, like the Statute of Liberty which it so strongly resembled,
reflects a universal human yearning. 

What is China, if it is not “free” or even “partly
free”?  Certainly the Chinese people have a higher standard of living than
twenty years ago.  Businessmen in China are getting rich.  The
Chinese people are not starving like under Mao.  Genocide continues (ho,
hum) in Tibet, as it has over the last sixty years.  But the very
modernity of China today, the very affluence which is obviously spreading
slowly across this vast land, belies our conventional notions of enslavement.

This is a ghastly and dangerous way of looking at
nations.  Nazi Germany was relatively prosperous, at least during the
peacetime years and the early days of the Second World War.  Nations and
peoples can have much material wealth and still be slaves.  Countries can
be glittering and yet bad.  Governments can grant subjects limited
privileges and still keep them subjects and not citizens.  Wealth,
technology, national pride – all the things we see swelling up in China now –
are the very same sorts of things that the world watched growing in Germany
under Hitler.

Freedom often produces affluence – that is one of its
pleasant byproducts – but we fool ourselves badly if we begin to imagine that
rich slaves are not slaves.  The cluster of political virtues we call
“human rights” transcends material goodies.  That is why our Founding Fathers
sacrificed wealth for freedom.  That is why our soldiers, whose heroism we
honored a few days ago, bled for our liberty.  That is why the brave
students in Beijing, many of who still linger in awful prisons in China, stood
up to tanks for the chance to breath free air.

When we drop into the memory hole the matchless courage of
Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto sixty-five years ago, when we forget the Hungarians
armed only with Molotov Cocktails in the streets of Budapest fifty-three years
ago, and when we let the memories of Chinese student facing their own nation’s
tanks wilt and die, then we more than our sense of the power of freedom: 
we lose our souls.  Twenty years ago, the human spirit soared in China,
and then, as so often has happened in human history, it was crushed under the
jackboot.  Twenty years ago, the Goddess of Liberty wept.

Bruce Walker is the author of two
books:  Sinisterism: Secular Religion of the Lie, and his recently
published book, The Swastika against the Cross: The Nazi War on Christianity.

http://outskirtspress.com/swastika_against_the_cross 

http://outskirtspress.com/Sinisterism

                      © 2009 Bruce Walker — All Rights Reserved

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3 responses to “The Tears of the Goddess of Liberty”

  1. Philip France Avatar
    Philip France

    In an unspeakable breach of our own nation’s accomplishments and despite the blood of our fathers and our brothers in the defense thereof, we are casting away our precious liberty and our nation is smiling, even applauding our demise into Maoist-style Marxism.
    Our press applauds our pseudo-President while nearly every decision that Comrade Obama has made is leading us to the misery that the Chinese have suffered under over the last 70 years. Our Speaker of the House of our Representatives has taken refuge in China in a facile effort to divert attention from the controversy she has wrought through the exposure of her sheer lunacy. How ironic is that?

    Like

  2. manoman Avatar
  3. Philip France Avatar
    Philip France

    Dear manoman,
    Great site! Thanks for the tip. I have saved the URL to my “Favorites”.

    Like

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