As extremists scaled the wall of the U.S. Capitol, I sat less than four miles away, staring at my computer screen and trying to follow the news reports covering what some called an attempted coup[1]. Sirens wailed faintly in the background, and I kept refreshing my social media feeds, the news websites, the chats with friends, the livestreams.

The prevailing reaction I saw was that of shock and disavowal. Former President George W. Bush compared the insurrection to how disputes are resolved in a “banana republic”[2]. Rep. Lowenthal of California said it felt like a “coup in a third world country”[3]. Pundits and armchair commenters compared the scene to “Syria” or “Bogotá”, while President-elect Biden made a public speech saying, “This is not who we are”.

The assumption in all of these statements is that political violence or rejection of democratic norms happens elsewhere; that its existence in the United States is not an outcome of inflammatory rhetoric or racialized division but an anomaly, as unpredictable as it was unavoidable. Careless statements that the U.S. was “joining Latin America” leaned on essentialist depictions of Latin American countries that reduced them to their democratic shortcomings and ignored the United States’ own complicity in these countries’ weakened governments.

Citizens vote in a classroom at the teacher’s college in Tegucigalpa, Honduras during the 2017 Presidential election. Photo by Katerina Parsons

I’m no stranger to the “banana republics” politicians love to cite. In November 2017, I sat at home under an imposed curfew in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, scrolling through news and election reports until my eyes blurred. I tried to understand how the sitting president, who was only able to run for reelection after the Supreme Court he nominated rewrote the Constitution, had propelled himself to victory after early counts saw him trailing. Unlike the 2020 U.S. election, where multiple reviews have discovered no evidence of widespread fraud, this election was “characterized by irregularities and deficiencies with very low technical quality and lacking integrity” according to the Organization of American States. But the president’s impulse to hold onto power, to reject, perhaps, the will of the people in favor of the benefit of the elite – this is a theme that I see repeated in the United States.

It’s true that Honduras, like other countries in the region, suffers from extensive corruption. Its health and education budgets are decimated by graft, leaving schools with no walls and hospitals with no medicines. The brother of its President sits in jail in New York for drug trafficking. In 2009, it saw a military coup that marked a slide into more extreme violence and impunity.  

But Honduras’ democracy barely stood a chance. Colonized first by Spain and then de facto by U.S. companies Standard Fruit and United Fruit, Honduras survived decades of military dictatorship and emerged as a democracy only in 1983, by then already a transit stop for illegal narcotics destined for U.S. consumption. Like so many other former dependencies, colonialism in Honduras gave way not to strong democracy but to a sort of oligarchy, where those with power and wealth bent the law to their purpose, and when that failed, acted outside of the law with impunity.

A pan damaged over the course of a cacerolazo, a type of protest common throughout Latin America, in which citizens bang pots and pans to communicate dissent. Hondurans used the cacerolazo, among other things, to protest fraud after the 2017 presidential election. Photo: Katerina Parsons

The United States has been largely complicit in the weakness of Latin American governments like Honduras, from supporting a 1954 coup in Guatemala[4] to refusing to acknowledge that the the ouster of the president of Honduras in 2009 was in fact a coup. The U.S. has praised corrupt leaders who sign the right sort of trade and immigration deals and has failed to take responsibility both for the U.S origins of gangs and firearms and the overwhelming U.S. demand for illegal drugs.

By condemning coups and violence as something reminiscent of other countries, we in the United States fail to see how those countries hold up a mirror to ourselves. We succumb to the heresy of American exceptionalism, which says that our actions are right precisely because they are ours.[5] As Yousef Munayyer wrote in the Washington Post, “Americans are no less prone to political violence than any other peoples on earth. If anything, we might be more prone to it, precisely because we convince ourselves that when we do it, it is justified and when it isn’t justified, it is not really us.”

As others have noted, “This isn’t who we are” rings false in a country that has yet to fully wrestle with its original sins of colonization and slavery, and its ongoing sins of racism and imperialism. Acknowledging how the United States has fomented division and violence is a necessary first step into imagining a better way to be.

Protestors at the Capitol building during the 2019 climate march. Photo: Katerina Parsons.

We can start by looking outward, to the “Bogotá”s and “Tegucigalpa”s of the world where there is hope, solidarity, and resistance alongside pain and violence. When I think of love for country, I think of my Honduran friends who, in the words of Wendell Berry, “denounced the government and embraced the flag,” loving their neighbors, celebrating their culture, and demanding that their government fulfil its mandate.

Like any country, the United States is big enough to contain both light and darkness, peaceful protests and violent riots, the election of Georgia’s first Black senator on the same day that white supremacists interrupted the building where he will serve.  

As we in the U.S. consider the violence at the U.S. Capitol, we have the opportunity both to see ourselves reflected in it, and to choose a different path. We can begin the work of acknowledging this country’s flaws, humbling ourselves, and committing to contribute to the same democratic principles we hope to see flourish around the world.

This is love for country – both a recognition that this is who we are, and the daily decision to work toward a different way to be. 


Kate Parsons is Legislative Associate for International Affairs for Mennonite Central Committee’s U.S. Washington Office, where she works on Latin America and North Korea policy. She lived in Tegucigalpa, Honduras for four years, first as a SALT fellow with MCC partner organization Asociación para una Sociedad más Justa (ASJ), and then as Director of Communications for ASJ’s U.S. affiliate organization. She currently lives in Washington D.C.


[1] Coup d’état: A sudden decisive exercise of force in politics especially: the violent overthrow of alteration of an existing government by a small group (Merriam-Webster).

[2] Banana republic: A pejorative term for a politically unstable country dependent on exporting a single resource, such as bananas. Coined by U.S. short story author O. Henry based on his experiences in Honduras, where U.S. fruit companies exploited natural resources and destabilized politics to benefit their industry at the expense of human well-being.

[3] Third world country: A term that “arose during the Cold War to define countries that remained non-aligned with either NATO or the Warsaw Pact” (Wikipedia). Currently, an outdated term for poor and previously colonized countries that carries the assumption that these countries are lesser than those in the “first world”.

[4] At the behest of U.S. banana companies

[5] American exceptionalism: A belief that the United States is better, more virtuous, and more powerful than other nations, and as such, normal rules or predictions do not apply to it.