Monday, April 10, 2017

Two pernicious cultural movements in America

Understanding history and current affairs is a signal-to-noise problem. There are always fundamental shifts taking place in the culture that will shape the future, but they are usually largely masked by a great deal of day-to-day noise, ephemeral fads, political battles, hyped news, and the like. I spend a great deal of time trying my best to discern the fundamental shifts through the fog of the daily noise of life.  And by the way, this whole election and its aftermath - important and emotional as it seems to many people right now – is really just noise in the long term, as were similar upsets, now largely forgotten, when Reagan was elected, when Roosevelt was elected, etc, etc.

The fundamental shifts that seem to me to be important for the future direction of American culture include the encroachment of automation and the resulting changes in the labor market, the effects of worldwide interconnectedness (the internet, cell phones, etc), the demographic changes producing an older population, and the rise of China as an economic powerhouse, just as examples.

Of all of these, there are two movements in American culture which I think are pernicious and a threat in the long run to national survival:

The first is the emergence of a victim-centered culture, or as one writer named it, the grievance culture. The essence of this culture is the assumption that whatever is wrong with one’s life is someone else’s fault, and that they therefore owe recompense for it. We see it everywhere. Lawyers put up billboards advertising their services for litigation to those involved in auto accidents (in my youth such lawyers were called “ambulance chasers”, and it was a derogatory term). African-American leaders demand payment to themselves for indignities visited upon slave ancestors many generations back. Doctors go out of business because their liability insurance rates are unsupportable – patients sue them because medical procedures, always chancy by their very nature, didn’t turn out the way they expected.

Certainly there are real grievances in the world. Prejudice based on gender, on race, on sexual preference, on religion, on politics, etc is alive and well. Corporations and bureaucracies on occasion do terrible injustices. There are careless and incompetent doctors in the world. All of these are valid reasons to try to change the culture. But they are not valid reasons to assume that any misfortune in life is someone else’s fault.  Life is uncertain, unfair, and probabilistic in nature. We all – even the wealthy of us – are born with disadvantages. We all – even the privileged among us – have bad things happen to us.  The measure of our character is how well we handle the misadventures of life – how much responsibility we take for our own condition.  Women do rise to be CEOs of major corporations, despite the glass ceiling. Blacks do rise to be president, despite the prejudice. Poor people do rise to become wealthy, despite the economic disadvantage.

The essence of American culture through most of our nation’s history has been the Horatio Alger story – poor boy works hard and succeeds.  The essence of American culture though most of our history has been embodied in the hearty settler family, fending for themselves in a wilderness, facing off hostile Indians, uncertain weather, and wild bears. Yes, these were in many ways myths, but they expressed the expectations of the culture – that people were responsible for their own condition.  We are losing that, to be replaced with the expectation of a sort of childlike dependence on others, on the system, on government, to make up for whatever ills happen to befall us in life. That attitude will, I think, seriously harm our culture and our nation in the long run

The second pernicious cultural movement is the rise of identity politics, of attempts, for political advantage, to divide Americans into distinct “tribes” – women, blacks, Hispanics, Asians, etc., and set them against each other in zero-sum political games. America is a nation of immigrants, and the great success of America has been to accept a wide variety of peoples from around the world  and weld them within a generation or two into a common culture and a common nation – something Europeans have not done so well and far East nations haven’t even tried yet. As Theodor Roosevelt said in a speech 1915:
There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism. When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an American at all … The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that nationality, than with the other citizens of the American Republic … There is no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.
More recently, Whoopi Goldberg expressed the same sentiment last year in an interview:
I can’t keep up with it. I went from being colored to being a negro to being black to African-American. I figured I would land on American……You know what uh-uh! This is my country. My mother, my grandmother, my great-grand folks, we busted ass to be here. I’m an American. I’m not an African-American. I’m not a chick-American. I’m an American!...... Any time you hyphenate American, any time you put something in front of it, it’s like you’re not a real American. Well, I’m a whole lot of all-American. This is my country and I’m an American.
The attempt to divide people with identity politics – a staple for example of Hillary Clinton’s failed presidential campaign – is an existential threat to the nation. One only has to look at European countries that have within them ghettos of disaffected immigrants who don’t feel part of the nation they live in to see the problems it causes.