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July 4 is celebrated in the United Sates as Independence Day--the day when the Continental Congress is said to have ratified the Declaration of Independence. In past years I have posted U.S. Independence Day reflections to this site (here. here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here) as a way to commemorate the event and celebrate the holiday.
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American liberal democratic Leninism, like the politics of the United States, is, if anything, a study in contrasts. It is more than that. Those contrast converge around the art, psychology and semiotics of "othering"-- people, religion, ethnicity, race, sex, habits, size, diet, car choices. . . . it doesn't really matter, the "othering" is what matters. There is no shame in othering and it has no affinity to political. social, cultural, ethnic, racial, or other categories form and through which "othering" becomes both sport and politics--with social consequences and Leninist aspirations (in the sense of using othering in the service of identifying what passes in the United States for vanguards of social, religious, political, academic or other forces all eager to lead and guide everyone else toward whether ideal has captured their fancy or through which they have come to order the world and insist that everyone else partake in the glory of that vision). the political left or right, whether from the position of social expectations or religious premises, race, or something else. . . it doesn't really matter, the "othering" is what matters. Education may supply the language; it is not a predicate for the convergence of the habits of othering that have become, in a sense, the great identifier of the American spirit in 2026.
That becomes clear when one compares two political figures who might be styled exemplars of the art of othering--not just each other--but as a means of signifying actions, events, and characteristics as the spyholes through which worlds can be constructed, concepts and objects can be signified, and the "other shoe" of othering--its fatal attraction to the Leninist impulse to view humans as clay (and dumb or uneducated, or unenlightened lumps of possibility) that may be molded to suit some vision or other than they assume each embodies. Yet the self-appointed drivers of American values, belief, actions, expectations, different in every generation but always interested in influence--of belief, of the ordering of a rationalization of (political but also social and economic) of reality and thus its forms of approaching challenging and envisioning an ideal (the signification of the otherwise abstracted notions that constitute the normative framework of the Republic).
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From a semiotic perspective the speeches are remarkably similar. Each invokes old political-cultural objects and signifies them in ways that align with underlying foundational presumptions about an idealized version of the United States that then serves as the basis through which one can elaborate those expectations, including expectations of belief, that then serves as a means of othering heretics and identifying apostasy. In this case they seek to other each other and in the process invoke the very sort of Leninist settler colonialist palette that each finds useful when deployed against the other. Settler colonialism, usually deployed as a semiotic fetish in shaping discourse and the significs of power relations among differentiated groups within and among polities (especially among certain political elements of intellectual elites and their claques but by no means limited in its utility to them and their narrow political-social-cultural agendas), might also be thought useful as a way of framing, more generally, the dynamics of settler-indigenous relations not just historically but as a contemporaneous expression of the political-social-cultural consequences of migration as a function of particular ways of approaching the meaning and application of core abstract concepts of a liberal democratic polity as populations are displaced, engorged, and thus transformed. It is migrant-colonialist in the sense of the notion that waves of migrations have an inherent or natural right or expectation of embedding their own signification of politics-economic-religion etc, into the territories which they then occupy or gather in. At its limit it suggests the assimilation of indigenous populations into the lebenswelt of migrants; but it also is embedded in the idea of migrant contributions to (re)shaping their lands of settlement through the contributions of their own cognitive cages into and now as part of the fabric of an expanded indigenous colonial space. It is Leninist in the sense that it also embraces the notion of vanguard leadership the purpose of which is to shape or direct (and accelerate) this process of political reshaping of indigenous socio-culture to suit a re-imagined ideal that is the product of this assimilation.
For the President that colonialist experience became hard wired with the founding of the Republic; for New York's Mayor settler colonialism is an ongoing experience lubricated by and through waves of migration that reshape the Republic more to their liking. Each then defines patriotism with respect to their sense of the temporality of settler colonialist power.
The Mayor's settler colonialism is worth a little more examination if only because it raises some interesting issues the resolution of which may not be possible (or may expose the subtextual premises or objectives that drive analysis). It is possible to read in the Mayor's text the suggestion that colonialism is shaped differently in every generation and in context, but that that migration represents a form of settling colonialism that is very much in the spirit of the founding ideology of the Republic--which itself is, for him perhaps, grounded in the notion of constant revolution driven by waves of migrants who reshape the Republic in a sort of dialectic with the indigenous population into which they are embedded or will displace (the latter for example in the subtext of the discursive oddity of identifying and counting discrete groups as objects signifying power to project and impose cultural-social-economic-and political norms against shifting collective ideals). What makes the Mayor's settler colonialism good is the conceit that the waves of migrants were forced to the Americas against their will in one way or another. Notice the passive voice: "For generation after generation, we have been told that when the world has sent its people to our shores, it has not sent its best." Any yet that appears to be, one might suggest, the traditional patterns of migration of peoples all over the world. It is a thin reed indeed to distinguish similar consequences from migration--indeed it is not intent but perhaps effect that might be a useful additional consideration. In any case, the New York Mayor consciously represents the ruling forces of such displacement as an elite (and therefore leading element) of the the newer waves of colonialist migration (as he mentions) in which role one can view that collective as a vanguard element of the rationalizing reshaping of the Republic more in the image of that current wave of colonialist migration. He represents good settler colonialism among as opposed to others against some of which he has campaigned.
The truth, my friends, is that America is exceptional because here, nothing is fixed into place. The frontier may be closed, we may have walked on the moon, but the work of fulfilling the values first enshrined in the Declaration of Independence — that work endures and it belongs to us all. It belongs too to our newest Americans, those standing here with me today, all of whom were recently naturalized. Nearly a decade ago, I too felt what you feel, the joy of no longer being just a New Yorker, but an American too. You each hold a special power, the power to determine what America means. (Mamdani Remarks)
The President references a colonialist experience locked in time:
You do not have to be born here, but you do have to love what we have built. You must love our country. There has never been anything like us anywhere on Earth, and we are not going to let anyone take that away. . . . Yet, as we approach this magnificent anniversary, we see our American identity under a renewed attack. A generation after we fought and won the Cold War against the menace of communism, there is now a resurgence of the communist menace in our land, including from newcomers to our country who embrace ideas totally opposed to our way of life and our great success. . . As for those who peddle Marxist lies about our heritage, tell our children that we live on stolen land or that our heroes were oppressors, they’re doing something much worse than slandering our past. They are slandering and attacking our future. Not going to let that happen. They’re trying to tear down the great American character to destroy the people who declared independence, who crossed the Delaware, who settled the West and conquered the skies. You know who those people are. But we will never let that happen. (Trump Remarks)
These then shape their sense (the semiotics) of patriotism, and in the process provide a window onto its political expression within the MAGA and Democratic Socialist (both so-called) camps. For the New York Mayor it follows that the Republic, as a function of migration as a constant, is a social-ethnic state of settler colonialist revolution/transformation, in the style of Trotsky:
There are some who respond to those who ask for more from America with a simple refrain. “Love it or leave it,” they say. But patriotism has never been about pretending our nation is without flaws. Patriotism is every act of righteous dissent. It is every march led under the heavy sun. It is every protest held a decade before its time. It is precisely because we love this nation that we will not leave it. After all, who loves America more than those who have sacrificed so much to make it free?(Mamdani Remarks)
For the President, this state of transformation and dialectic, and certainly one grounded in the inherent transformative nature of migration, is the essence of subversion:
For generations, it was understood that the core patriotic duty of every American was to pass this culture on to our children and to preserve the nation for centuries and centuries to come. But in recent years, there’s been an undeniable attempt to change this exceptional character, to beat the American spirit out of us, alienate us from our history, and to make it impossible to even answer the question, what does it mean to be an American? (Trump Remarks)
And both embrace quite distinct significations of the fundamental principles that each extracts from the founding documents. That is the most fascinating part of the comparison--the evocation of common text into which are infused substantially distinct significs made possible because the grounding cognitive starting points of each is to some extent largely incompatible--and deliberately so.
Taken together one begins to see the shape of the Republic that may be emerging. It is one in which old text objects have been revivified as the representation of contemporary desire; in which the impulse of settler colonialism remains strong--especially in newer waves of migration, and in which the impulse to identify and vest authority in vanguards of leading social forces that are dedicated to reshaping the cognitive cages in which the Republic knows itself, and against which contemporary deviance is monitored, assessed, and corrected, appears as string now as when these notions first came into modern style play after the violence of 1861-65. The United States will no doubt emerge the stronger for it; yet semiotically it will also emerge as something that, true to itself, will redefine its present by recasting its past toward a reimagined future solidarity with which will distinguish future patriots from counterrevolutionary or subversive forces that recertification of whom will engage our new leading forces.
















