It
isn’t just the far Right Wing in the U.S. that believes that
the nation is unraveling, if not headed for collapse, but the same
rightists take no small amount of satisfaction from the thought. In
fact, many of them seem to be hoping for a collapse.
There
is a great deal of scurrying around on the Internet by their sites,
warning that the only to save family wealth is to buy this or sell
that. Many are touting the purchase of gold, a commodity that will
not rot or deteriorate in any way, so that, when the long crisis is
over, the wise buyers will be on top of the economic heap.
This
is nonsense, because when the crisis is over (whatever that may be),
those people will still be living in a nation of 320 million people
of very diverse backgrounds and ethnic varieties and races and all of
that vast number will still have to find a way to live together, to
put food on their tables, and to keep a roof over their heads. And,
they will have to discover a way to play their politics so that they
do not end up trying to destroy the opposition, as it now happening.
But
the more liberal elements of the nation also are concerned about the
seemingly unsolvable problems of many kinds now facing the nation.
This week, the headline on a New York Times op-ed piece was, “Is
America Coming Unraveled?” In it, Ross Douthat took an excerpt
from a work of fiction by Joan Didion, quoting the first line: “The
center is not holding. We are not a country in open revolution. We
are not a country under enemy siege.”
Even
a casual outside observer would start off judging the state of the
nation with the killing of unarmed black citizens over the past few
years (even though it has been going on far longer than that) by
police in various parts of the nation and the assassination in the
past week of five police officers who were assigned to a Black Lives
Matter rally and protest in Dallas. We are assured by top
politicians, especially President Obama, that things are not as bad
as they may seem, that we are not as divided as many claim.
However,
it is clear to many that something is grossly wrong in a nation that
has seen a presidential primary that has resulted in candidates of
the two major parties who are seen in poll after poll to be
untrustworthy and, in the case of the Republican, as racist and
xenophobic, to name a few of his character descriptions. The
majority of the electorate seems not to like or want either one, but
that’s what has come from our interminable electoral process.
Do
you not think that this may be one of the main reasons that nothing
seems to be getting done in Washington, that the gridlock in the
law-making body of the nation is headed toward permanent status?
Members of Congress seem not to care about social programs, the
environment, the lack of jobs that pay a living wage, the deplorable
state of our housing, the so-called free trade agreements that have
sapped the country of its manufacturing capacity (and of its
high-paying jobs), the deterioration of roads and bridges, the lack
of potable water to millions in our cities, the sewage that goes into
our waterways, the air that is killing our youngsters, especially
those who live near refineries and fracking operations. It’s a
long list and this barely scratches the surface.
What
the lawmakers are interested in, however, is “increasing our
military strength,” as if a majority of our federal budget is
not enough for defense and the military. And, the other important
thing that they see is releasing Corporate America from the
restraints of regulation. Those are the two overriding issues that
seem to gain the most attention, unless the nebulous issue of
“national security” is thrown into the mix. That latter
issue covers a wide array of governmental intrusions into the private
lives of citizens. When whistleblowers tell the press about these
violations, they are hounded into unemployment or, in the worst case,
they are tried as traitors and imprisoned (in Edward Snowden’s
case, exiled to Russia).
The
press is complicit in all of these matters, since they have been
reduced, in most cases, to being the stenographers of the powerful.
Newspapers are in deep trouble and have cut their staffs to the bone,
while trying desperately to move into the ether of the Internet,
where they won’t need many ad sales staff and certainly few
news gatherers (a quaint term for those who dug out and wrote the
news in days gone by). The people are left bereft of the facts of
life that they would need to make political decisions when they do
approach the voting booths, because of the failure of the free press.
On
a side burner for politicians is the privatization of everything,
including education, Social Security, the military, the U.S. Postal
Service, Medicare, and any other agency of government where there is
a pile of billions of dollars just lying around for the taking by the
1 percent. They know where the easy money is and they are going
after it, and not only is the government standing by while
corporations and the rich begin their depredations, they are helping
them accomplish it. For the most part, the revolving door between
government and Corporate America involves only a small percentage of
the citizenry and they are the ones who benefit from their
machinations.
Often,
the politicians do the bidding of the rich and the corporations in
the hope that they will be rewarded at the end of their service to
the empire. And, just as often, they receive a nice job with some
Right Wing think tank or other entity of the powerful, at a rate of
pay five or 10 times of their paltry government jobs as lawmakers.
These minions of the powerful will never make it into the 1 percent,
but they are satisfied with their rewards from those who are guiding
the destiny of the U.S.
The
people may not be aware of the details of how all of this is being
done to them, but they know what the effects are and they express it
in one of the only ways they can. They don’t vote, because
they have seen over generations that not much changes through the
years by the incremental changes that are allowed to happen by their
representatives in both state and national legislators. For example,
if there is not forgiveness of student debt, right now, the
possibility of buying a house will be only be a possibility for the
next generation, keeping in mind that some workers now are retiring
still saddled with student debt, either of their own or their
children’s.
As
always, the new wealth in the country is going to the wealthiest and
the disparity in wealth and income is growing with no sign of slowing
down. That does not leave much for the majority of the people. For
those in the lower one-third of the population in income are for the
most part not even able to think about college for their kids, buying
a house, taking time off from their two or three minimum wage jobs.
The people know this and they respond by not participating in the
political system. For them, it is economic chaos and that leads to
chaos in most of the rest of their lives.
A
nation’s budget and economic policies are direct signs of the
philosophy and policies of the politicians who purport to lead them.
A look at the U.S. federal budget is the best sign of the
depredations that are allowed (and which will be allowed in the
future) by politicians at every level of government. There are a few
exceptions at the most local levels of government, but their budgets
are very dependent on state budgets and the federal government’s
largesse and that portion shrinks year by year. By and large,
though, the problems of the people grow continually. There are
hungry people by the millions, there are millions, urban and rural,
in poor housing, there are millions who do not have the wherewithal
to see a doctor, and there are middle-aged people who have not ever
had a steady job. This is economic chaos and politicians are leaving
many millions to fend for themselves.
Wars
of choice are now a part of official U.S. policy and our never-ending
wars around the world (even if they are not called wars) are sapping
the life out of the people and the nation’s resources. But
there are billions to be made by the defense industries every year by
engaging in endless war, so that policy is not likely to stop until
the people are not able to pay another penny in taxes for it.
The
treatment of black and other minority citizens seems to have
deteriorated after the small advances that were made after the most
recent mass civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Until that
time Jim Crow was in effect throughout the South and, for the most
part, in the North, as well. We now have the Jim Crow of mass
incarceration of black and other minorities. This affront to people
of good will is fully ensconced in the context of our economic
problems that affect everyone.
While
the president tells us that we are “not that far apart”
in race relations, we have a substantial element for whom the idea of
a “race war” would not be unwelcome. That’s social
chaos and, in large part, stems from economic chaos. All of this is
exacerbated by politicians who stir up the pot of racism and
xenophobia. And, those of a more liberal bent who advise the people
demanding change now that they should wait and change will
come…eventually, are talking to people who have heard the same
thing for three or four generations. They are not willing to wait
any longer. Incrementalism and neglect are the things that have
brought us to the current state of affairs.
These
are signs of unraveling or collapse, however one chooses to
characterize it. Whether we are in a free fall or not is a matter of
degree. Whether we will stop the downward slide or reverse it is
another matter and, to listen to some of our Right Wing politicians,
changing course is going to be very difficult. We may have to deal
with the unraveling (we wouldn’t use the word collapse, yet) as
a people and without the help of those who are supposed to be
“leading” the nation.
However
we deal with it, no amount of buying of gold or investing in this or
that stock is going to help us recover. The only thing that will is
our sense of taking care of one another. It’s being a good
neighbor and adhering to the Golden Rule. These are simple things,
to be sure, but in the end, they will be the only things that will
work to bring us out from under the cloud that is hovering over our
society and country.
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