Enemies II
Peter Schultz
The political world is filled with “enemies,” a concept that is packed with meaning. Are there “friends” in the world viewed and lived politically? Doubtful. “Allies?” Yes. “Enemies?” Yes. “Friends?” No.
Central to politics, to power politics especially is identifying, controlling, fighting, and eliminating enemies. This is the citizen’s view, his or her reality, his or her way of life. Once the US treated the Vietnamese as enemies, “My Lai’s” were only a matter of time. One way or another, enemies must be defeated and eliminated. Enemies are central to imperialistic politics.
Rick, at the end of Casablanca, was wrong: his interaction with Frenchy, like the US relationship with France, was not “the beginning of a beautiful friendship.” Friends, unlike enemies, are not intrinsic to a world lived in politically. In fact, they are nowhere to be found. As later confirmed when the US considered eliminating De Gaulle, perhaps even with “extreme prejudice.”
In a world lived in politically, Elizabeth and Darcy would not be lovers. Politically, their love would have been impossible, as illustrated by Lady Catherine De Bourgh’s view of Lizzy as a potential polluter of Pemberly, Darcy’s estate. British politics, Britain lived politically “disses” love and romance, as was illustrated recently by the television series The Crown, as well as by Austen’s novel, Persuasion and her anal sex joke about the British navy. In Britain, and perhaps elsewhere, living romantically or even lovingly is radical. [For another representation of this, see the movie “The American President.”] While living ambitiously and avariciously is all-too conventional and repeatedly praised as central to living politically. Hence, the avaricious and the ambitious dominate politically. So it goes.
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