Tuesday, October 7, 2014

America, the World’s Umpire: Somebody Has To Do It



After reading Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman’s American Umpire, I realized how effective the United States has served as the world’s umpire. If you asked me the question before I read this book, Is the United States an empire? I would have answered yes with little hesitation. Now I am going to explain why my preconceived notion was wrong, and why America is an Umpire for the world and not an empire.
The first thing you need to know is what is an “Umpire.” No, I do not mean the old guy who stands behind the home plate at a baseball game. An umpire is  having the authority to decide finally a controversy or question between parties.”[1] This definition is fitting to the United States right? The most powerful country in the world is certainly going to have the ability decide the outcome in a controversy between nations.  There is a reason at the Major-League Baseball World Series this October that the umpire will be someone who is qualified and not a third-grade student at A.E. Phillips Elementary School. The same reason the United States is the Umpire of the world and Uganda is not!
Which brings me to my next point, Should the United States serve as the Umpire to the world? Why can’t China or Russia be the Umpire? They are superpowers with capability of umpiring the world. Oh yeah, they are communist and don’t stand for things like “Freedom” and “Democracy” as Americans do. Cobbs Hoffman touches on who really should be the Umpire.  She says, “Ideally, the UN should act as an umpire, but too often it lacks the coherence and independent resources necessary to the task.“[2]  So why does the United States serve as the Umpire to world? It’s simple; America wants to preserve their beliefs and freedoms. If the United States just sat back on its continent, oceans away from other powerful countries, like George Washington advised in his farewell address. Then countries with imperialistic visions would gain an edge on the United States.
Opponents will disagree and say the United States only meddles with other countries because they are an empire and hungry for oil and money. Cobbs Hoffman says from “1898 to 1946 was the one and only period in which the United States sustained an empire”. [3]  My counter to this argument is why would the United States want to be the umpire of the world other than preserving their beliefs and freedoms? With great power comes great responsibility and headaches. Again, the baseball umpire analogy plays true. For example, an umpire sometimes makes the wrong call that could alter the outcome of the game. If the United States does not make the right call on a foreign policy on foreign policy situations the consequences can be tragic. In American Umpire, Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman agrees with my thought by stating, “The umpire role also carried substantial costs in blood, treasure, and identity that generally were not shared by others that benefited significantly under the new global order. “[4]  In history, “empire” originally designated two ubiquitous types of government that incorporated and commanded obedience from people who generally did not wish to yield it and who continued to seek political release after their annexation.[5]  This definition does not fit the United States in the slightest degree. If this was true then the United States would have a much larger country (land size wise) because it certainly has the power and capability to do this. Instead, the United States likes to serve as an arbitrator and not an imperialistic nation.
            Umpiring is a no win situation. If you mess up everyone says “Shame on you”; if you do happen to make all the correct calls, everyone says, “That’s your job or You’re supposed to make the correct calls” Umpiring exposes one to criticism, second-guessing, and dissection. Until the United Nations has the resources and ability to step us as the true Global Umpire, the United States will take on the responsibility. Umpiring is in and will forever be in the United States of America’s culture and DNA.
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674055476 




[1] http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/umpire
[2] Hoffman, Elizabeth Cobbs (2013-03-04). American Umpire (p. 17). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.
[3] Hoffman, Elizabeth Cobbs (2013-03-04). American Umpire (p. 13). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.
[4] Hoffman, Elizabeth Cobbs (2013-03-04). American Umpire (p. 18). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.
[5] Hoffman, Elizabeth Cobbs (2013-03-04). American Umpire (p. 12). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.

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