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An Expat Named Superman

Taki's Magazine 

There were two huge stories last week in American mythmaking: The United States has slain Public Enemy Number One, and Superman is renouncing his American citizenship. Barack Obama may exult in the first, but he should beware the second. The Man of Steel's renunciation of his adopted homeland may represent more in American mythology than the extrajudicial execution of a terrorist in Pakistan. Osama bin Laden, for all his pretensions, was a mere mortal. Superman is the stuff of dreams - primarily the American dream. The dream was a vision of the immigrant making good and embracing the country more meaningfully than those born there and taking it for granted. Now he is turning away. It is as if our first immigrants, the Pilgrims, were boarding the Mayflower to sail back to England.

For those who have been busy following White House pronouncements and news from Pakistan, here is what happened in the latest issue of Action Comics: Superman returns from observing popular demonstrations in Iran, and the National Security Advisor upbraids him for giving the appearance of representing the president. Superman answers,

I realize that, and you're right, of course. Which is why I intend to speak before the United Nations tomorrow and inform them that I am renouncing my US citizenship. I'm tired of having my actions construed as instruments of US policy.

The advisor asks, "What?"

'Truth, justice and the American way' - it's not enough anymore.

When Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel created Superman in 1932, the caped hero fought for "truth and justice." This was later changed to "truth, tolerance, and justice." (Anyone remember "tolerance"?) The "American way" part replaced "tolerance" during the McCarthy years, around when the phrase "under God" was added to the Pledge of Allegiance. Loyalty and oaths were the order of the day, and Superman adapted. Most of us did if we wanted to keep our jobs.

Read the rest at Taki's Magazine.


© Charles Glass 2011





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