Tuesday, September 15, 2020

The Decline and Fall of America



When I came to America in 1960, it towered over the rest of the world economically and politically. It played a dominant and generally benevolent role in the world. It had saved the world from fascism, rebuilt Europe and much of Asia, including its former enemies, and it was containing communism.
After the Vietnam debacle, the US was less sure of itself. By the late 1970s, during the Carter presidency, the country seemed to be in retreat, while the Soviet Union was still on the march. The dominoes seemed to be falling. After Cuba and Vietnam, next to go were Nicaragua, El Salvador, Angola, soon Afghanistan...
The Third World was more sympathetic to the USSR than to the US, which was frequently isolated in forums such as the United Nations. Despite generous foreign aid to dozens of countries, international anti-Americanism was widespread, as was US flag burning in many parts of the world.
While the US and its ubiquitous CIA did engage in some mischief, this country was not morally bankrupt, certainly not so in comparison with its great geo-political communist rival.
Today, of course, the Soviet Union no longer exists.

In the 1970s, America remained by far the richest country in the world. More importantly, the distribution of wealth was much more equitable than what it has become today. The average CEO’s compensation was 20 times that of his employees. Now the ratio is 300 to 1. Taxes were more progressive, Unions were far more powerful, the public sector was not being starved, the US resembled the Western European welfare states more than now.

As early as 1962, Michael Harrington’s Other America reminded us that not everything was perfect in this country. But by and large, most Americans enjoyed a quality of life unparalleled even in Western Europe. Public health, life expectancy, rates of home ownership and the standard of living were all higher here than in other major western countries, with the possible exception of a few small islands of wealth such as Switzerland (8 million people), Norway (5 million),or Luxembourg (600,000).

But During the past five decades, American inequality, homelessness and hunger have increased dramatically and the standard of living has stagnated or declined. The working class has lost enormous ground. Union membership has plummeted.

The nation’s public sector is being starved. Public assistance and services such as welfare, food stamps, unemployment compensation, sick leave and childcare have deteriorated. Home ownership has declined. Republicans aim to privatize social security, prisons and other public functions. Despite Obamacare, which barely survives on life-support, health insurance remains highly inadequate. Public health is deteriorating. America is one of the few countries on earth with a DECLINING life expectancy. Public schools are underfunded and the quality of secondary education is often dismal. Despite all this, the Republican plutocracy continues to brainwash the population and reduce taxes, especially those of the rich. “Socialism” is once again a convenient bogeyman, as was the epithet “Communism” during the McCarthy era.
 American Capitalism, once the envy of the world, has malfunctioned. As the multinationals have gone global and outsourced their economies, the country became de-industrialized. The American Dream is dead. The country is no longer the land of opportunity. There is now more upward mobility in Europe than in the US.

In the early 1970s, the country’s total prison population was 263,000, or 120 per 100,000. Today, it is 2,200,000 million or 700 per 100,000. A black man’s chance of going to prison is over five times that of a white man. His chance of being killed by a policeman is three times greater. American crime and violence have risen far above the levels in other Western countries.

What about civil rights and race relations? The conventional wisdom is that there has been much improvement in this regard. Perhaps. Certainly most de jure segregation is no longer the law of the land, as it still was in many states when I arrived in the US. The Civil Rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s had significant results. However, the criminal justice system and the relationship between law enforcement and the black community are as problematic as ever, if not worse than half a century ago. With the exception of one short decade (1965-1975), the economic position of blacks relative to whites has not improved. If the upper strata of many professions exhibit greater diversity now than fifty years ago, this reflects America’s demographic transition from a largely white society (88% white in 1960. 61% today).

When I moved to this country, it also dominated the world in science and technology. While many of the world’s great universities are still in this country, the US advantage is no longer clear-cut. In the 1960s, in my own field of Sociology, the bulk of the research and literature was produced in the US. And when it comes to the arts, the humanities, and popular culture, America’s preponderance was overwhelming, both quantitatively and often also qualitatively. Jazz and Hollywood flooded the world. America also had a rich and vibrant literature, the greatest classical orchestras in the world and museums featuring great classical art as well as modern domestic art. This is in contrast with the country’s cultural poverty today.

But it is in the political sphere that the worst deterioration has occurred. The country’s Right has been in the ascendancy for several decades, so much so in recent years that it is assuming fascist characteristics. The country is polarized. There is a resurgence of white supremacism and racism is arguably on the rise. The rise of the Right began with the neoconservative movement of the 1970s, it gained strength thanks to the Reagan and Bush administrations and the Tea Party, and it has culminated with Donald Trump.

It is not clear when America’s decay began, or when it became precipitous. At first, during the first few post-war decades, one could expect this country to lose some of its advantage, as the rest of the world recovered from the war.

Thereafter, the US continued to lead the world in many ways, albeit more and more tenuously. By the end of the millennium, the country’s internal contradictions were becoming blatant. Its claim to be a model democracy for the rest of the world became less and less plausible. Its government in fact became a “minority government.” That is, the federal government’s three branches were no longer representative of the people. Rich, white, Republican men were over-represented, at the expense of all other categories.

This became possible due to built-in, undemocratic devices: The electoral college, the undemocratic senate, the life-time Supreme Court, plus practices like gerrymandering, voter suppression and campaign financing practices. America ceased to be a democracy and became, instead, a plutocracy ruled by strongman Trump in alliance with Wall Street.

Government corruption and paralysis have reached a zenith just when the country faces a devastating pandemic . In a brilliant article in the September 9 issue of the Atlantic: America is Trapped in a Pandemic Spiral; Ed Yong compares America’s response to Covid-19 to the behavior of ants. Sometimes, ants get into a death spiral. They begin to walk in circles, each following the one in front, until they die. They are the victims of their own (faulty) instinct. This metaphor illustrates America’s response to Covid-19.
Unlike other countries, the US has reacted with a “serial monogamy of solutions,” focusing upon one solution at a time, thus making no headway in solving the problem. It has created false dichotomies (e.g. combating Covid-19 vs. opening the economy). It has fallen into the “normality trap.” That is, it glossed over the pandemic while attempting to “return” to a normal lifestyle. Led by President Trump, the country has descended into an “intuition death spiral,” relying on theatrics such as travel bans, magical thinking (heat and light, hydroxychloroquine, etc.) and blaming everyone (China, the WHO, governors, Barack Obama, etc.).

Most terrifying is Yong’s conclusion, titled The Habituation of Horror: “The US might stop treating the pandemic as the emergency that it is. Daily tragedy might become ambient noise. The desire for normality might render the unthinkable normal. Like poverty and racism, school shootings and police brutality, mass incarceration and sexual harassment,... and changing climate, COVID-19 might become yet another unacceptable thing that America comes to accept.
The author points out that if ever there was a time for this country to shed its arrogant claim of “exceptionalism,” that moment is upon us. To which I'll add this: America is neither God’s gift to humanity, nor the opposite of that. Like the rest of the world, it struggles and makes mistakes. It is time for Americans to talk less and do more; to stop bragging and waving the flag and, instead, start fixing the country. Is Covid-19 the force that defeats America, once and for all?

All countries face social problems, intermittently. Unlike other Western democracies, the US has become uniquely unwilling and unable to tackle its social problems. The country has reached a perfect storm. It is facing not one, not two, not three, not four but at least five catastrophic and simultaneous crises: Covid-19, the collapsed economy, the environmental crisis (California and the West are burning, the Gulf states face relentless hurricanes), race relations and “president” Trump. Add to these the following long-term problems: growing poverty and inequality, inadequate health care and deteriorating public health, gun violence, a decrepit infrastructure, deindustrialization and astronomical trade and government deficits.

Before a social problem can be tackled, it must be recognized. A vast segment of the American population is unwilling to face, recognize and understand the problems they face. We are politically paralyzed. The country is becoming ungovernable. In time, a country that is ungovernable becomes a failed state. There are countries in the world - Somalia, Honduras, etc - that are de facto only countries on paper, not in reality. Other countries’ degree of disintegration is less severe; they still function, although badly. Mexico is an example.

And then there is America. Here, the tragedy is not that the country is in imminent danger of total disintegration. It is the spectacular deterioration that has occurred over the past half century. The waste of a country that was once the envy of the world, and became a struggling and dysfunctional semi-democracy, in the same league as, say, Russia or Brazil. It is in comparison with what it was in the past that one wants to cry when looking at America. Once I was a young and idealistic immigrant, proud to become an American and eager to contribute to the welfare of my new country. Can one hope that the election on November 3 will be the beginning of a long and arduous recovery?

© Tom Kando 2020;All Rights Reserved

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22 comments:

Hutch said...

Tom, this is a great summary in my view of connecting the many "dots" and flows of our current life. I'm amazed at how you can keep it all in your overall perspective.

Anonymous said...

This post breaks my heart and it's spot on with the exception of your statements about American cultural and scientific contributions. Silicon Valley changed the face of the planet starting in the late 70s. And you can't overlook Facebook and the fundamental and often-catastrophic shift it has caused in human behavior? The majority of social media apps that the world uses are still being developed in this country, albeit often through the genius of immigrants. And, the worst developments online, like 4Chan and other repositories of the worst human behaviors, are also American products. To this end, our country is destroying itself and the world with media addiction, fomenting rebellions, and paranoia. But, on the other end of the spectrum, America's arts, music, and cinematic contributions have exploded in the last five decades and continue to shape the world. We have new museums all over the country, major art events that attract worldwide participation and attendance, and outstanding arts educational programs which are continuing through this pandemic. And, while Hollywood is on a bit of a pause, we are living through what many consider a golden age of cinema, with better representation and diverse storytelling. DKK

Gail said...

You did it again Dr. Tom! Excellent presentation of critical human issues.I felt everyone’s concern in this blog, “ The Decline and Fall of America .” Our country is in a crisis. I too am concerned that November 3rd is a make or break moment. I hope we don’t accept COVID-19 as our new normal. It does appears likely based on how we have dealt with the many past epidemics in this country. I thought about Sandy Hook, the Charleston Church Massacre and all of the insidious statements made by our current President Trump. The callous regard for humanity and the degree of reckless behavior by our current leaders easily creates despair. I hope that we will turn the corner and rise from this broken state American democracy. On November 3rd, I hope that whatever decision is made our country will be civil! We could only hope.

This is an excellent piece,

Gail

Lita said...

Well said, Tom.

Don said...

Hey Tom, this is one of your very best essays. I hope you’re sending it to the Times and maybe the Post, at least to the Sacramento bee.

Ron said...

Tom,
A spot-on personal reflection. I would like your permission to post it on my blog (Phronesis) as a guest commentary. Would that be OK?

Tom Kando said...

Thank you all for your kind words. They mean a lot to me.

To Ron: By all means, the more people read our pleas, the better.

Some specifics for anonymous:
Regarding American contributions to culture and science: the more I can be corrected about this, the happier I become, since my remarks are so negative.
As far as Silicon Valley, Facebook, Apple, Google, Microsoft, etc. Are concerned: You tally these entities on the negative side of the ledger, when adding up America’s total score. I see your point.
How we measure “contribution to science” is a murky question, One of many possible indicators could be the number of Nobel prizes.
And here is another question: Is a scientific contribution positive or not? How do we classify the Manhattan project? Did Einstein and Oppenheimer make a great scientific contribution with the atom bomb?

The one area where I am happy to surrender to you is that of the humanities: Being old inevitably causes one be less in touch. You know, grandpa always claiming that everything was better in the old days, when he walked to school ten miles in the snow every day. Some might even say that this article of mine is a liberal version of MAGA. Ouch! Since I haven’‘t explored much of today’s avant-garde things, I should tone down that part of my judgment.

And here is another thought: My article couples America’s current turmoil with cultural decay. But throughout history, times of turmoil have often been times of extreme cultural creativity - from Antiquity to 19th century Russia, the Weimar Republic, etc. So, thanks for alerting me. Like Harry (Orson Welles) tells Joseph Cotten in the Riesenrad: Switzerland has had 500 years of peace and prosperity, and what have they accomplished? The cuckoo clock.

June said...

ANOTHER USEFUL PIECE, TOM. I WISH YOU WOULD INCLUDE A URL SO I COULD SOMEHOW SHARE THIS ON FACEBOOK AND TWITTER.

Sylvia Navari said...

Let's hope so.

Sylvia Navari said...

Let's hope so.

Anonymous said...

Democrats are such downers. The DOW has gone up over 10k points since Trump was elected. Life is damn good and now that football is back, it will be even better!

Scott said...

Tom:
Like most of your work this is an excellent piece and I like the reflective tone. I'd say it was a pleasure to read, but your description of the state we are in is, frankly, depressing. It's also the reality. I have been stunned virtually every day about our Attorney General Barr and what he is willing to do for Trump. His comparison of a lockdown to slavery is insane and allows the alt-right to see themselves as civil-rights warriors. I want the Republican Party crushed in the coming election.

John said...

I recognise the image you sketch. I missed the the Iraq war, which is a strong symbol of American deterioration for a younger generation.
Silicon Valley sits at both sides of the equation, but I would say it is a strong sign of America's remaining abilities.

Looking from the other side of the ocean I think it is not bad the world lost America as its sole super power, but I'm intrigued and a bit frightened by what now. My hope is on multiple super powers that cooperate in global institutions.

Tom Kando said...

John takes the words out of my mouth, regarding Silicon Valley.

In her earlier comment, above, anonymous mentions Silicon Valley (Facebook, etc.) in a negative way, which I acknowledge in my response to her. We all deplore many aspects of the Internet, the way the modes of communication and information have changed/deteriorated... etc.

At the same time, there is something absolutely impressive, almost miraculous, about the emergence of "Silicon Valley" from backlot garages in the 1970s. (Steve Jobs & Co.).

So, John's words are good: Silicon Valley sits at both sides of the equation."

Naida said...

You have summarized the sad but true situation. Yes, some of our voting structures are undemocratic by nature, and the loss of democratic norms (small d) crumble daily before our eyes. Governance has frozen solid into two camps. The press, that vital "forth' branch of government, is so splintered, politicized, and blended with fantasy & entertainment that it cannot function the way we need it. This began with the Reagan-era termination of "equal-time" policies on TV and radio. Add the crazy social messaging on phones and internet, in addition to Russia's participation. I'm afraid we're on our way to third-world violence and dictatorship.

Tom Kando said...

Naida adds important points to my article. I, too, get aggravated by the way the press is handling the problems afflicting this country - problems that begin (and largely end) with Donald Trump. The talk, now, is about whether or he’ll abide by the result of the election (if Biden were to win - an iffy proposition anyway). So, yes, we are sliding towards dictatorship.
So, sometimes I ask, what the hell is all this yakking by the likes of Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell accomplishing? Not to mention the 1200 books that have been published about Donald Trump since his election, all revealing horrible things about him. Meanwhile the man’s 42% support never budges, he owns the senate and soon also the Supreme Court...
But in all fairness to the New York Times/Washington Post/MSNBC/CNN folks: for four years, they have tirelessly harassed the president. What more can they do? In the 1930s, during Hitler’s rise to power, there was no such 4th estate resistance. I have no idea what more can be done, except massively voting him out.... If that doesn’t happen, then we can say that it is America’s destiny to fail...

Anonymous said...

Two points:
1) “The American Dream is dead. The country is no longer the land of opportunity” – then please explain to me why there are more people trying to immigrate to this country than any other.
2) “Undemocratic devices” – I think you and your readers don’t understand this country or its history. This is a REPUBLIC not a DEMOCRACY. It was never intended to be a democracy. I think you academic elites need to go back and read the Federalist Papers to understand the reasoning of the Founding Fathers. They designed the Constitution with its “separation of powers”, “checks and balances”, and independent judiciary to specifically prevent the “Tyranny of the Majority” (in evidence today with “tax the rich”, “cancel culture”, campus limits on free speech, etc).

Tom Kando said...

1) Land of opportunity? Already upward mobility in the US is less than in many other countries. Immigration? Aren’t the Trumpites the ones who want to curtail this?

2) Federalist schmederalist. An outdated and obsolete political system. Might as well hold Hammurabi’s code sacrosanct, because it was ahead of its time back then.... Today. We have the tyranny of the minority. 2 senators representing half a million Wyomingites and 2 representing 40 million Californians. So much for “all people are created equal.” Or do I misunderstand this, too?

Anonymous said...

1) Tom you are just like Biden and Harris with non-responsive answers to a question. Again, if it is so bad, why do they still want to come in great numbers.
2) Tom, whether you think it is obsolete or not is irrelevant, the Constitution is the framework for how the government was designed to function. I was just pointing out the errors in your thinking on that design. Besides, the Founding Fathers provided a well-defined means to modify the Constitution through the Amendment process. Apparently you think the Constitution needs major changes, and if and when the American voting public agrees with you, it is well within their means to petition their "representatives" in Congress to get the ball rolling.

Don G. said...

Tom,

This is a superb and very thoughtful essay. I am playing catch up with our computer.

Tom Kando said...

Thanks for your comments, Don. They mean a lot to me.
I have had many positive reactions to this piece. And the most positive responses are from, how shall I put it, people who themselves excel, such as yourself.
The few negative comments are from anonymous trolls and relatively uneducated folks (judging by their writing). So that’s significant.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, uneducated folks that have read the Federalist Papers.

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