| ... Independence Day was designed by the first
state propaganda agency, Woodrow Wilson's Committee on Public
Information (CPI), created during World War I to whip a pacifist
country into anti-German frenzy and, incidentally, to beat down the
threat of labor which frightened respectable people after such events
as the IWW (Industrial Workers of the World) victory in the Lawrence,
Mass., strike of 1912. The CPI's successes greatly impressed the
business world; one of its members, Edward Bernays, became the leading
figure in the vastly expanding public relations industry. Also much
impressed was Adolf Hitler, who attributed Germany's failure in World
War I to the ideological victories of the British and U.S. propaganda
agencies, which overwhelmed Germany's efforts. Next time, Germany
would be in the competition, he vowed. The influence of the great
generalissimo on the propaganda front, as Wilson was described by
political scientist Harold Lasswell, was not slight. Independence Day
was one contribution.
This particular propaganda exercise began with business-government
initiatives to Americanize immigrants, to inculcate loyalty and
obedience and expel from their minds alien notions about the rights of
working people. Such programs would turn immigrants into the natural
foe of the IWW and other destructive forces that undermine the
country's ideals and institutions, the CPI founding document read. At
a major conference of civic organizations (organized labor excluded),
government and private organizations of all kinds and creeds had
pledged themselves to cooperate in carrying out Americanization as a
national endeavor, the organizers reported, while issuing plans for a
successful Americanization program for the coming Fourth of July. The
CPI took up the cudgels, now using the wartime fanaticism it had
helped engender as another weapon against pacifists, agitators and
other anti-American groups, notably the hated Wobblies. The
Generalissimo joined in with a May 1918 endorsement. The title of the
indoctrination ceremonies was to be Americanization Day; on
reflection, Independence Day seemed preferable.
Labor leaders were aware of what was happening. A United Mine
Workers (UMW) official objected that the business-government project
was
attempting to set up a paternalism that will bring the workers of
this country even more absolutely under the control of the
employers, ... strengthening the chain of industrial tyranny in this
country. ... [That is what lies behind these efforts] to sanctify
and confirm oppression by waving the American flag in the face of
its victims and by insidiously stigmatizing as unpatriotic any
attempts they may make to throw off the yoke of the exploiting
interests [that the organizers] represent.
But labor could not compete with state-corporate power, and lost
this battle just as it failed to save May Day. (A jingoist holiday in
the U.S., it is celebrated elsewhere as a labor festival which was
begun in solidarity with the struggles of brutalized American
workers.) ... |