essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Note: This is a re-run, because my last post, about a book regarding the liberal class, a tragic
book that, like Russian literature, you should only read in bright summer, has
received more hits than the previous “poetics” post.
It’s still summer,
so here’s a similar post for those who liked last week’s.
Time To Start
Thinking
America in the Age of Descent
By Edward Luce,
2012
“Among many
liberals there is a resigned type of nostalgia that yearns for the golden age of
the 1950’s and 1960’s when the middle class was swelling and …
The right’s
nostalgia tends to be angrier. But in their different ways both tend to blot
out the sunlight. When a country’s narratives become this captivated by the
past, they rob the present of the scrutiny it deserves. They also tend to
shortchange the future. “America used to look ahead—we used to be good at
that,” Craig Barrett, the former chief executive of Intel, which could lay
claim to being America’s most consistently impressive company, told me. “Now we
spend our lives reminiscing about the ‘Greatest Generation’ (i.e., that of
World War II), We can’t stop looking in the rearview mirror.””
From the forward,
p. 7
I was standing
beside my friend Chuck, a fellow baby boomer, in the big box bookstore, when I
saw Luce’s book on the top shelf. “Oh boy!” I said as I reached up. To Chuck:
“I’ve been waiting for Americans to hit bottom.” I pulled it down, glanced at
the jacket, and said, “Oh no!” For Luce, although a resident of Washington and
chief U.S. columnist for the Financial
Times, was not American. He was British.
A few years
previously I had been sitting in Sunterra restaurant (our favorite) with a
university business school graduate, Christina. This was shortly after the Wall
Street meltdown. We were both dismayed. Not by the still spreading waves of
disaster, but by the undeniable fact, based on all we were reading and seeing
in the public forums, that even after this terrible shock, the U.S. still
hadn’t “hit bottom.” The phrase comes from the addictions field, where
onlookers are horrified at how an alcoholic, regardless of the ever-increasing
damage to his life, won’t admit he needs to change—won’t even see there is any
problem, not until he “hits bottom.” Only then may he get humble enough to
“see” and, perhaps, start the slow climb back up.
Television
sometimes shows a family gathering to “do an intervention.” This is to help the
addict to “see” and break through “denial” without having to go all the way
down to the bottom. The everyday example, I suppose, for not having hit bottom
yet, would be a neighborhood where the same people who, as children, had lived
in bungalows while enrolled in Scouts America, are now adults in McMansions who
live pay cheque to pay cheque, with ever-increasing debt, for their doodads. A
lone voice might say, “A Scout is thrifty” but overall, where is the communal
return to sanity?
From what
Christina and I could see, there was a little tinkering, specific to Wall
Street, but no widespread willingness to see the need for national change, a
change desperately needed in so many ways, NOT merely a change in their personal
credit buying—not to mention Wall Street credit. Relative to the rest of the
world, America was clearly still continuing to decline, and the slope was
getting steeper. Christina and I could see this about our dear U.S. cousins,
perhaps because we were living across the border, up in Canada.
Luce writes with
breadth. From the cover flap: “Luce’s research, analysis, and reporting covers
areas from education to health care to politics to business and innovation.
Luce frames the issues historically…”
Over ten years
ago, world wide syndicated Canadian columnist Gwynne Dyer pointed out that
anyone with access to a hand held calculator (or graph paper) could look at the
gross national products for China, India and (Germany?) and see how they were
going to intersect and surpass the GNP of the U.S. I believe the American
people are starting to see this fact, and starting to accept it. Not good enough.
Much more serious than their relative decline, to which they contribute in many
ways, is their absolute decline, a decline from things that are in their
control and are no one’s fault but their own. Luce writes on both sorts of
decline.
Is there any hope?
Yes, a little. Luce would not have written his book if he thought we should
write off America. I believe his phrase “age of descent,” not “decline,” was to
help people avoid giving up. I think if they don’t soon succeed in changing,
they are headed for a nation where the many are working to support the few to
have a good life, with the middle class small and irrelevant. Unfortunately,
the launch window is now barely ten years wide, and closing.
I have hope, not
blind faith: I have seen Americans rise to the challenge before. In my youth
there were scattered voices warning of something called “the deficit.” Not many
voices, and not very loudly. Very few, if any, university students were going
home at Christmas and warning their families. Finally, at last, a man in the
White House, Ronald Reagan, roused the nation (and the universities) and put
the D word into people’s vocabularies. Now we could see! Then came a lot of
work. Initially, as I recall, politicians would promise to cut the deficit, and
then find themselves merely slowing down the rate at which the deficit grew.
Part of the problem, for the poor politicians, was getting the public to become
willing to bite the bullet.
In my own province
(state) of Alberta we were much like the folks over in Greece today: we who had
silently endorsed a rising deficit would not immediately become willing to take
responsibility for lowering the deficit. There were street protests. In my own
city we had to blow up (implode) our biggest hospital because not only could we
no longer afford to run it, we didn’t even have the funds to mothball it until
the deficit could be slain. Thank God we had courageous leadership. At last we
won. We slew the dragon of deficit… of course we never did get our big central
hospital back.
Happily, I’m sure
Luce is not the only voice. Two weeks ago I heard a CBC radio interview with a
U.S. professor from New York, an expert on tribalism. The prof said something
like, “We joke about how a big part of the U.S. problem with tribal politics is
the ‘decline of drinking bourbon.’” He explained that without the excuse of
drinking together politicians of the two main parties were no longer
socializing together. The cover flaps to Luce’s book note the same problem:
“In domestic
politics, things are also dire: conversation between Republicans and Democrats
has all but ceased—Barney Frank call it “the dialogue of the deaf,” and the
once noisy Senate dinning room, specifically designed so that members of
different parties would be forced to talk to one another, is now empty most
lunch hours. No surprise, when the politicians are busy talking to lobbyists
and trying to raise campaign funds.”
I think it is
important to remember that an empty lunchroom is not an “airy fairy” opinion:
it is stark and measurable, as is the newest fundraising and lobbying. There
have been measurable changes to the latter things, such as recently saying that
a corporation, being legally “a person,”
has the “free speech” to go and lobby without the lawful financial controls and
legal constraints faced by any organization of citizens, changes that have led
to a measurable change in the state of the lunchroom. In other words,
throughout his book, Luce, a gifted financial writer, is not talking in
generalities. And neither are the leaders he interviews. Luce understands laws
and incentives; he writes about pragmatic opportunities; he is not some
longhaired innocent. And if Luce says America is in descent, you had better
grab a parachute.
At this point in
my “book announcement” I can imagine an offshore reader eagerly asking for some
examples of what Luce has seen and diagnosed. I won’t do so. For one thing,
this is an announcement, not a review. Also, with a book of such breadth, I am
sympathetic to the “addict thinking” of a few of my many U.S. readers. However
hard I tried to give random examples, their temptation would be to think that I
have shown the most important ones. As well, if an example could be discounted,
it would be, by an addict eager to discount the entire body of research, sight
unseen. I suppose I could show here the table of contents, but no: If a citizen
picks up the book, and reads a page, then the contents page won’t matter, he
will buy the book regardless. Yes, it is that good.
A final word on
leadership: Peter Drucker, without using the phrase “rearview mirror” once
noted how the U.S. people were alone in how they responded to the Wall Street
crash. The Europeans all despaired: for years they kept glumly comparing
everything to pre-depression times. It was only in the U.S., with the
leadership of “nothing to fear” President Roosevelt, that people kept looking
ahead.
Sean Crawford
Living in
interesting times
May 2015, June
2012
(30.23)
Footnotes:
I have deleted the
2012 footnotes; they referred to various essays of mine on Luce’s topics.
Next week I shall
return to doing “poetic” essays.
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