I changed channels, ah, Tombstone. Wyatt Earp (Kurt Russell) walked into a near-empty saloon and challenged the toughest, meanest card shark to a fight. Turns out the card shark, fat, sloppy, but nattily dressed, like a king on his throne, controlled the saloon, scaring away all the good, honest gamblers and drunks.
New to
town, along with his family, and famous Earp brothers, Wyatt (Kurt) wanted to
show the tyrant that the town’s people had the right to gamble and drink
wherever they wanted—freedom! Independence! Liberty!
Wyatt, in a
sharp-looking, Macy’s-style, black trench coat, wide-brimmed fedora, and a huge
mustache, more cosmopolitan dandy than dusty, western lawman, stepped up to the
“bad hombre” and glared into his eyes. The gambler stood and met his glare. They
exchanged words. The Royal didn’t back down. Glare, glare, glare. Finally,
Wyatt-Kurt said, “You’re scared. I see it in your eyes,” and slapped the tough across
the face. Shocked, the man’s hardened face melted like hot wax,
and he slithered out the door, abandoning his throne to the outlaw turned lawman-hero,
Wyatt Earp.
His blue eyes blazing, Kurt Russell, in the
true American spirit, had freed the people in the saloon of the dictator—independence
for the citizens of Tombstone to get as soused as they wanted. Hollywood
justice!
Man, I
thought, Kurt Russell is a bad dude. No, wait, that’s not Kurt Russell. That’s
Wyatt Earp—or is it Kurt Russell playing a better Wyatt Earp than the real Earp?
Then, I wondered if the incident with the card shark had ever happened or a
screenwriter invented it, creating the kind of Wyatt Earp American movie-goers
expected.
We know
there was a Wyatt Earp, a real man, but how much of him is true or fiction, a
screenwriter’s imagination or an historian’s facts, but, then, even historians
can be biased? How about Jesse James, Joaquin Murrieta, Ma Barker, Tiburcio
Vasquez, Bonnie and Clyde, the Founding Fathers, Katy Hurtado, Abraham Lincoln,
Betsy Ross, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, or even William Bonny (AKA Billy the
Kid), who most serious “cowboy” scholars claim was a homicidal maniac, not the
romantic kid-gunslinger the dime novels portrayed. Where does the myth end and
reality begin?
Most successful
actors have PR machines who create personas for them, turning 1930s dance hall
girls into Hollywood starlets then princesses, with fairytale lives,
better than Cinderella. Come on! Johnny Depp is from Owensboro, Kentucky, population
160,000. How much can he really have in common with the cool, hipster,
eccentric characters he plays? Though,
to be fair, he did move to Miramar, Florida, when he was eight. Still, the real
and the fiction must get confusing.
Kids of my
generation grew up thinking Davy Crockett, Elfego Baca, Kit Carson, and Jim Bowie
were handsome, well-spoken, good-hearted, outdoorsmen, who opened up the west, American
heroes, at least the way Disney portrayed them on television. I can still see
Fess Parker’s (Davy Crockett) wide smile.
Crockett
and Bowie died at the Alamo, defenders, fighting to the last man, even in the
newest 2004 Disney version with Billy Bob Thornton, dead Mexicans at their feet.
Truth or fiction?
How about the
7th Cavalry, making its heroic last stand at the Little Big Horn, fighting
to the last man, George Armstrong Custer, the courageous general, golden locks
flowing in the breeze, firing his revolver to the end?
Hold on! If
they fought to the last man, that means there were no survivors. Now here is
where a basic course in English Composition enters the picture, under “logic.”
If there were no survivors how do we know what happened?
Well, at
the Alamo, they say, two survived, a man and a woman, one escaped and witnessed
nothing, the second claimed to have been hiding and didn’t see a thing. They
couldn’t confirm a “last stand.” For sure, no one in the 7th Cavalry
survived the Little Big Horn. Though, Captain Reno watched some of the action
from his perch in the mountains.
The only participants
of the battles who lived to talk about them were the opposing armies, ahhggg--the
enemy, Mexicans at the Alamo and a myriad of Indian people at the Little Big
Horn, including Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho, led by some of the most famous American
heroes, Crazy Horse, Little Big Man, and Sitting Bull. But, in the 1800s, who
could trust their account?
Newspaper
reporters out of the East, far from the battles, who wanted to sell as many
papers as possible, after learning about the fighting, simply invented what
happened. In fact, newspaper reporters were notorious for inventing stories,
anyway. On slow news days in New York, they met in local bars, shared stories
with hoodlums and drunks, started making stuff up, then they’d go back to the
office and write it down, barely making the deadline for the next day’s
dailies. A good day was if somebody really got shot.
New York
writer Jimmy Breslin maintains that writers, like Damon Runyon, were the real genius
behind iconic times, places, and people, like the Roaring Twenties, Broadway,
the Babe, the Copacabana, and professional athletics, which were more crooked
than “a dog peeing in the snow,” as one Irish friend told me. Reporters made
the sports appear legitimate to get “losers and suckers” to put their
hard-earned money down on the table, so some swindler could wipe them clean.
The Roaring Twenties didn’t “roar” any more than any other time in history, but
Hollywood made sure movie-goes heard them roar.
Runyon and
his ilk turned lazy, inarticulate, uneducated, bloodthirsty thieves into, what
they titled for their readers, “Gangsters” and “Mobsters”. Violence, criminals and
crime sold papers. Most reporters writing for big city newspapers agreed that even more corrupt than the mobsters were politicians, bankers, real estate
speculators, and lawyers, who got the thugs to do their dirty work, while keeping
their hands “clean” for the unsuspecting public.
Hollywood
took it from there, glamorizing gangsters through Bogart, Cagney, Brando, and Pacino, with Jean Harlow, Barbara Stanwick, Lorraine Bracco, and Michelle Pfeiffer
at their sides, much more beautiful than the real thing.
I once
asked my father (born 1924) how working-class Mexican kids became pachucos and
cholos. He answered, no hesitation, “Hollywood. In the 1930s, we all went to the
movies every Saturday afternoon, mostly gangster movies. Everybody wanted to be
like them.” I asked about racism, the WWII zoot suit riots, and police abuse.
“Nah,” he said. “Before any of that, the kids were already wearing second-hand
suits, greasing back their hair, and talking tough, just like the gangsters in
the movies.”
Without the
magic of reporters’ pens, none of those everyday-Joes, places, and events would
have come down to us as they have—American myth.
The truth
about the Alamo? According to scholar Phillip Tucker, the Alamo in most
Americans psyches came packaged in an 1836 book by Richard Penn Smith, “Colonel
Crockett’s Exploits and Adventures in Texas,” what Tucker calls, “a bogus
account,” “complete fiction,” even the quotes, portraying Mexicans in the most
heinous way. Americans still hold on to this account.
As for
Custer, we now know, once the coverup of a "last stand" was debunked,” scholars
agree Custer was a megalomaniac and a narcissist who led his men into the
valley of death, ignoring all warnings. No last stand, like in the movie. Custer's men scattered under the intense barrage. They didn't form a circle like in the movies. Archeologists found skeletal remains far from the site of the actual attack, soldiers fleeing. Had he lived, he would have been court
marshalled. Truth be told, it was all hubris, like
George W’s “Mission Accomplished,” the Iraq war now going into its seventeenth year.”
More myth.
Polk, Sam
Houston, Custer, and probably Johnson, Nixon, Clinton, Bush, Cheney, and
Rumsfeld too, believed in Manifest Destiny, the belief that the “Almighty”
willed America’s right to take as much land as it wanted, regardless of
ownership. This belief had at its root: no Indian, Mexican, or person with dark
skin could defeat a white man in battle. So, the Alamo and Little Big Horn had
to be portrayed for readers as how an “immoral, unscrupulous enemy had to have tricked
courageous Americans into unfair battles.” (My quotation marks.)
Every good movie needs a scapegoat. The level-headed Captain Reno, who refused to
send his men into the valley to die, and still had to fight overwhelming forces
to save his men, was Custer's scapegoat. I remember reading a few years back, Captain Reno’s descendants
forced the Army to absolve him of his crime and admit they’d lied—or, at the
least—erred in unjustly court-marshaling Reno.
Inside the
Alamo, the mostly green, volunteer-militia was caught sleeping or in sick-bay,
ill from lack of food and water. They couldn’t fight. Their gun powder was old,
wet, and, much of it useless. Recently, archeological evidence showed the majority
of the Alamo’s defenders died fleeing the old mission’s walls, many skeletal remains
found up to 500 yards away. Bowie was sick in bed when he was killed, probably
sleeping. Crockett? Too many decayed bodies to ever 100% identify his remains.
Cowards? No
way! The Alamo was a death trap. The men retreated in the hopes of fighting
another day, except, well, they ran straight into Mexican lancers, who were,
historians agree, superbly trained in that antiquated style of combat.
In fact, Mexicans had been living on the range and herding cattle when the Yankees were still growing cotton and tobacco east of the Mississippi. American cowboy lore is more Mexican than New England, thanks to the Spanish conquistadores. That’s why so many Spanish words have seeped into the American cowboy lingo, hombre, vaquero, bronco, coyote, chaparral, barranca, canyon, reata, etc.
The men
inside the Alamo were pawns, a motley sort, many shouldering their personal
hunting weapons. These men were used by politicians and pro-slavery plantation
owners who promised reinforcements that never arrived, as well as "land" if they lived. There was no central
command or organized force. Some defenders didn’t’ even trust each other, pro-slavery
on one side and anti-slavery on the other. Why didn’t the Disney movies mention
slavery?
The battle took
place in the blinding dark, and thick smoke clogged the air. The majority of
Mexican casualties, much lower than reported by the New York reporters,
occurred from fratricide, get it? Friendly fire. They shot each other in the
dark.
The battle lasted
all of 30-to-45 minutes, not much of a defense, and the Mexicans attacked only after
Santa Ana had sent the Alamo’s leader numerous warnings. That’s when the hubris
set in--Manifest Destiny, “No greaser could defeat a white man in battle.” They died believing that.
Mexico,
like its patria, Spain, celebrates everything--big, with monuments, songs, and
parties, holidays, life, death, baptisms, confirmations, every saint’s day, war
heroes, quincineras, and war. South of the border, nobody celebrates the Alamo.
To Mexicans, it was a minor skirmish. The old abandoned mission was a lonely
outpost in San Antonio, a wilderness, and its defenders a rag tag group of slave-traders,
encroaching on Mexican territory. The battle barely made it into the Mexican
history books.
If
important historical events are fictionalized, what are we to believe? When I
see people claiming: “USA! USA! Freedom! Independence! The Constitution!” I
wonder where that came from. Even the early settlers in the colonies, though
seeking freedom to practice religion, still saw themselves as subjects to the
king of England, including the so-called Founding Fathers. Few considered
themselves “free” of laws, whether of God or of man.
Now, why would
people flee a monarchy only to continue supporting it? Turns out the
alternative was to live under the rules of the new, rich plantation owners, who
cared little for the small farmers, artisans, and tradesmen, and preferred slave
and indentured labor to paid workers. As low as some companies pay today not much has changed there either.
By 1780s, even
after George Washington and his rebels sent the red-coats packing, the rich
plantation owners ruled the roost, so to speak. They didn’t want anybody messing
with their profits, least of all, a bunch of poor lazy farmers and tradesmen
who charged too much money for their goods and labor.
Historian
Harlow Unger, in his book, the Last Founding Father: James Monroe,
describes a German visitor’s account upon witnessing a congressional meeting in
progress. “In the anteroom, they amuse themselves zealously with talk of
horse-races, run-away negroes, yesterday’s play…according to each man’s
caprice.”
When
Founding Father James Monroe began attending congress meetings, “…he adapted
quickly to ‘club rules,’ joining other council members—especially his good
friend John Marshall—in card games, dice, and billiards, and at horse races and
cockfights. Monroe was an avid player of whist, poker, chess, checkers, and dominoes.
Although he did not document his gambling, he proved a consistent winner and
Marshall’s account books show at least one loss of 19 pounds (about $1,200
today) to Monroe at whist.”
Only the rich land owners could serve in
Congress. They represented the thirteen colonies, north and south. They didn’t
want any laws passed that might limit their rights to make money. So, it was in
their best interests to play games rather than pass laws. (I am paraphrasing
Unger)
Maybe the
reason Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Hamilton” is such a smash hit is that it may be
one of the few “popular” portrayals of the Founding Fathers showing them
meeting at bars and bordellos, and the use of rap, hip-hop, music and dance,
captures a more realistic side than any other portrayal. These early landlords
were--well, the first “hipsters,” partying while everybody else worked.
Unger’s
book shows when politicians, including some Founding Fathers, took time away
from their play-time in congress, the laws they passed benefitted them, their
business interests, not the “people”, as Hollywood and our education system would
like us to believe. Think how much Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Universal
must donate to politicians’ coffers, today. How much has really changed?
Our country is a republic, modeled
on the principles of Greece and Rome. In some Southwestern states, certain
water laws (more rules), were not founded in New England, but go back to Spanish rule. In
other states, the citizens are proud of their indigenous roots and practices
and have incorporated some into their own local government. Talk
about true “Independence.” Rules and laws everywhere you turn.
If any
group in the U.S. was completely free, it was the plains Indians, even more so
than the iconic cowboy, who owed his allegiance to the rich ranchers. Since
when did any American have the right to make up his or her own rules?
Even the
revolutionary war, which relieved us from the laws of a monarchy, didn’t free
us from the rule of law, whether federal, state, or local. So, is American “liberty”
itself a myth? Is U.S. history a myth, fantasy, fiction? Is there really no
such thing as our constitutional rights?
How about
the American Tea Party, claiming our freedoms were being violated just like the
Boston Tea Party back in the day.
Well, let’s
take a look. According to Benjamin Culp, professor of history at the Brooklyn
colleges, who is an expert on the subject, in 1773, twenty-two percent of the
tea dumped into Boston Harbor was “green” tea, the favorite of elites, like,
our Founding Fathers George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. Dumping their
favorite green tea didn’t make either “Founding Father” happy, especially
Washington who tried avoid violence or trouble with the English king.
Were the “tea
dumpers” patriotic Bostonians, angry at the English king’s increased taxation, as
so many American, today, believe? No! There was no tax increase. Tea was already
taxed. No big deal. In fact, the king’s tea wasn’t even the king’s tea. It
belonged to the privately owned British India Tea Company and sold cheaper in
the colonies than any purchased from colonies own wealthy tea merchants.
Turns out, the
East Indian Tea Company had a surplus of tea, and the king wanted to sell it in
the colonies at bargain prices, which pissed off the tea scalpers, mostly
wealthy merchants in the colonies, like Amazon wanting to keep out foreign
Amazons to keep prices high.
Scholars argue
the “tea-dumpers” were criminals and thugs hired by the colony tea merchants to
pretend to be citizen-patriots, like outsiders, today, who come in a usurp
peaceful protests and start violence giving the protest movement a bad name.
The tea merchants
called themselves Sons of Liberty to fool the public. They wanted to keep the
price of tea high and make a bigger profit off the unsuspecting colonists. You
know? Follow the money. It wasn’t about liberty or independence but about the
almighty dollar. Duped again.
The thugs didn’t even attack the king’s ships. They destroyed tea on American ships bound for the colonies. But, if you see a movie about it, you will see patriots (actors) crying, “Unfair taxation! Liberty! Freedom! USA! USA!”
From where I sit, I see freewheeling
journalists, Hollywood screenwriters, and slippery politicians as more responsible for the myth of the independent
American spirit than any real historical events or people. John Wayne, Edward
G. Robinson, Audie Murphy, Humphrey Bogart, Katherine Hepburn, Rita Hayward, Henry
Fonda, and the rest--actors, all, have more to do with our views of the free
American spirit than anything real or historical.
Ever ask
how Russia became America’s nemesis? At the end of WWII, the U.S. wanted to
loan Britain five-billion dollars to “restore London as a financial center.” President
Truman believed this would “revitalize world markets.” In exchange, the Brits
promised to remove trade limits affecting the U.S. Though, not all countries
trusted the British, who had brutalized many in their colonies and lorded over other
European countries.
Democrats were
on board but not the Republicans, who believed the U.S. had already helped
Britain enough, not only with money but also with troops during the war. To
convince the Republicans, Truman knew he needed a “boogey man.” He told the
Republicans if the U.S. withheld the loan from Britain, the English might “swing
into the Russian orbit.” Fat chance. Russia was a poor as any other wrecked country after the war.
As
economist Jeffrey Frieden writes in his book Global Capitalism, “…he [Truman] persuaded
them [Republicans] that economic engagement would serve their anti-Soviet goals.”
At the time, Russia had suffered massive losses to the Nazis. They had just helped the allies defeat the Germans. The Russians,
even though communists, weren’t our enemy. Communism wasn't even such a nasty word until we needed it to be.
Republicans,
taking the bait of a Soviet scare, agreed to the loan. Dean Acheson, Under Secretary
of State, who helped create the tale, later lamented, “This [the Soviet scare] was almost certainly
overblown.” Acheson’s biographer wrote, “Acheson regarded it as unfortunate
that the loan had to be justified with veiled illusions to the Soviet threat,
but he accepted it as a price that had to be paid….”
I guess some
times politicians can be as creative at stretching the truth as reporters and
screenwriters. Maybe that’s why so many are hired as presidents’ speech writers
and spokes people. But consider: would our fixation on Russia as a threat have
been more nuanced if not for the Acheson’s machinations? Might Kennedy and Khrushchev
have worked out the Cuban issue without the threat of atomic weapons? Might we
never had fought North Korea? Might 60,000 Americans killed in Vietnam still be
alive? After all, Vietnam, like Iraq, were both started because of lies.
If you believe
Honest Abe never told a lie or George Washington admitted to chopping down the
cherry tree, you just might believe Kurt Russell saved Tombstone from a
murderous card shark. I can even hear Kurt-Wyatt tell the independent-minded
tyrant as he walked out the door, “And put on a mask, idiot! We have rules in this town.”
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