Why I cannot be an American
Dec. 22nd, 2010 10:15 pmI've had a few people lately remark on my lack of American citizenship. I agree, after living in a country for more than fifteen years it is not an unreasonable question.
I have given it a lot of thought. It wouldn't compromise my Canadian citizenship, though any risk of that would be a deal-breaker. On the other hand, while it is not much of a fudge to take the US oath of citizenship while still valuing my Canadian citizenship more highly, it's enough of a fudge to make me think twice. (Poorly-considered youthful recitations of the Pledge of Allegiance taken under duress in childhood may be regrettable but hopefully forgivable.)
After rolling it around in my head for a long time, the number one thing that prevents me from calling myself an American is this:

This puts the US in a place rather different from the Canadian position, which unfortunately was not included on this graph. Canada doesn't exactly shine in this department either, compared to the nations on the left hand side of this graph, and we do have our own oil-rich bible belt with correspondingly Texan attitudes. But on the whole, creationists are decisively in the minority.
Does it matter? In daily life, not really. Not in an immediate, practical sense - although the Republican war on science could very well eliminate funding for some of my own future work. No, it's more of a feeling of dread that comes about when the majority of a country denies something that I not only believe, but which I have verified directly. (At one point, I included my own dog in a cross-species genetic analysis designed to find regions where his DNA was homologous to ours. As much as anyone can be, I am sure we had a common ancestor.)
I obviously don't mean to disparage anyone for being American, whether by birth or by choice, and I don't even have any animosity towards individual creationists. I see them as victims of a toxic intellectual environment. But citizenship for me would be a mostly symbolic gesture, a matter of the heart, and on this level I find it very difficult to embrace a country that cannot converge on the truth. This is not a place where I could ever fit in. True, California is different - I like to call it "Baja Canada" - but it's not California citizenship that's in question here. Should California ever exercise its constitutional right to secede from the Union, I'll be right on board. :-P
It's kind of a strange issue, because in some ways it's a triviality, and in other ways it's the most important thing in the world. Do I really want to get on board with this?
I have given it a lot of thought. It wouldn't compromise my Canadian citizenship, though any risk of that would be a deal-breaker. On the other hand, while it is not much of a fudge to take the US oath of citizenship while still valuing my Canadian citizenship more highly, it's enough of a fudge to make me think twice. (Poorly-considered youthful recitations of the Pledge of Allegiance taken under duress in childhood may be regrettable but hopefully forgivable.)
After rolling it around in my head for a long time, the number one thing that prevents me from calling myself an American is this:
This puts the US in a place rather different from the Canadian position, which unfortunately was not included on this graph. Canada doesn't exactly shine in this department either, compared to the nations on the left hand side of this graph, and we do have our own oil-rich bible belt with correspondingly Texan attitudes. But on the whole, creationists are decisively in the minority.
Does it matter? In daily life, not really. Not in an immediate, practical sense - although the Republican war on science could very well eliminate funding for some of my own future work. No, it's more of a feeling of dread that comes about when the majority of a country denies something that I not only believe, but which I have verified directly. (At one point, I included my own dog in a cross-species genetic analysis designed to find regions where his DNA was homologous to ours. As much as anyone can be, I am sure we had a common ancestor.)
I obviously don't mean to disparage anyone for being American, whether by birth or by choice, and I don't even have any animosity towards individual creationists. I see them as victims of a toxic intellectual environment. But citizenship for me would be a mostly symbolic gesture, a matter of the heart, and on this level I find it very difficult to embrace a country that cannot converge on the truth. This is not a place where I could ever fit in. True, California is different - I like to call it "Baja Canada" - but it's not California citizenship that's in question here. Should California ever exercise its constitutional right to secede from the Union, I'll be right on board. :-P
It's kind of a strange issue, because in some ways it's a triviality, and in other ways it's the most important thing in the world. Do I really want to get on board with this?
no subject
Date: 2010-12-23 01:57 pm (UTC)Except if we made them, expect them to malfunction. You may be zapped, too!
no subject
Date: 2010-12-23 04:27 pm (UTC)Or something like that, anyway.