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Politics in America


Part 3: The Hung-up Generations Continued



by Robert L. Kocher


Deficient Development of Self-Types:
The Show Business Personality

Old-timers in show business used to talk about entertainers who were born in
a trunk. It meant a person had parents in show business, usually vaudeville,
and was raised around the show business atmosphere. They were often
professional entertainers by the age of five or ten.

Since the mid-60s we have seen nearly entire generations of young adults who
were born into and raised in show business. Thanks to five hours a day of TV
and movies, these generations lived with show business--psychologically
surrounded by the comedians, the plays, the stage personalities, the
extravaganzas to which previous generations had only occasional access. The
generational graduates of this environment are entertaining. They can act out
a set of lines or a part on cue. They can act and charm their way out of
responsibility. Many of them feel their acting and entertainment value should
be accepted sufficient for qualification as adults. There is considerable
social support for this view in a society that brings major focus and
importance upon entertainment figures who are demonstrably incompetent beyond
being able to look pretty, sing, or recite lines.

The situation is reminiscent of a conversation I had in 1978. While working
on the deck of a boat I looked up and saw an old man watching me and we began
to talk. In his late eighties, he still had a sound, perceptive and youthful
mind. Eventually he began to talk about his grandson who was in his early
twenties, saying, "My grandson's a handsome boy and he has personality plus."
Then, with a pained expression on his face he said, "But, there's no
substance to the boy. He's all personality without substance."

Actors Without Substance

That old man articulated what has been a characteristic of a large proportion
of recent generations. They are attractive and engaging. They have
meticulously-honed images. Their act is as believable as that of actors Jason
Robards or E. G. Marshall when they portray presidents or distinguished
attorneys on TV or in movies. They have good memories for lines. They look
good. They sound good. They smell good because they use the perfume and
colognes on TV commercials which you sprinkle on and each one "brings out the
real you." And they act good. Many of them have acted their way through law
school, through graduate school, through university departments, or through
corporation executiveships. Their show business personalities have served
them well.

But, beneath the surface there is a lack of substance, and often worse. While
they look good and they are affable, like a number of people in the acting
profession they have difficulty living a day-to-day life. They have no
identity other than their act. They are dependent upon their act as their
only way of existing and dealing with the world. It's an imitation of what is
supposed to be a real person dealing with reality. They don't know what
reality is. Beneath the cover-up, a number of them are highly pathological
and destructive. Many of the benign among them are like eight-year-old
mentalities who have graduated from charm school.

One facet of the phenomenon is illustrated by several recent TV science
fiction programs. In these particular programs the actors were required to
act out long conversations between beings from alien galaxies in alien
languages. The actors had memorized the lines and recited the conversations
perfectly. Temsop hnbjcoiu pszhjwds smorgeewidge. Mtyfguyng gqxxfmfp zoeih
stporiu! Qtoifa xdihubwe niuap xewwyt. The actors couldn't know what they
were saying because in the English language there is no meaning to the sounds
they were making. However, they were able to memorize those lines almost
instantly and repeat them accurately on command in front of the camera.
In the same way this country has an extensive population of people who are
able to breeze through advanced degrees and certifications by the same
process without understanding or being able to think or being able to
function appropriately. The college Economics 101 final exam is Act One,
Scene Three, and is delivered flawlessly. After obtaining a doctorate they
don't understand what the lines meant and no feeling for, or competence in,
their profession. Many of them then spend the remainder of their lives
desperately hiding in the safety of a tenured, artificial, degree-based
bureaucratic status system. The country is clogged up with them.

The show business personality is often plagued by a secondary effect of
superficiality--insecurity. Underneath the act, these are people who lack
realistic productive skill and ability. They put on a good show, but beneath
it they are way over their head in anything serious they attempt requiring
depth, real-world responsibility or productivity. The situation is roughly
equivalent to putting actors from daytime general hospital soap operas in a
real hospital to do neurosurgery. They would impress everyone up to the time
they were at the operating table having to work on the patient. Then,
everything would suddenly fall apart. However, after the patient died, they
could dramatize elaborate explanations to avoid confronting the issue that
they are not competent or real as far as day-to-day substance on the job.
Time after time I have seen people, and whole university or government
programs or businesses, which look impressive, which sound impressive, but
don't produce substance beyond the glitter and words they use to describe
themselves. There are too many people where the imagery and self-imagery is
good, but day-to-day operation of their private and professional lives lacks
substance and productivity. They are highly articulate in devising evasive
explanations explaining why things go wrong.

One of the symptoms of this has been the emergence of a new breed of
corporate leadership built upon imagery, showmanship and personality. Several
recent examples come to mind. The Mary Cunningham/William Agee Bendix fiasco
in the early 80s epitomizes recent trends. Cunningham, an attractive woman in
her twenties, stepped into the vice-presidency of Bendix almost immediately
out of school. I have never seen or heard of any of the concrete
accomplishments at Bendix that propelled her into the vice-presidency. Nor
has there been any credible explanation as to what made her more qualified to
move into that position than the thousands of other people at Bendix who had
equal educations, greater experience, and greater knowledge of the company.

She and the president of the company, Agee, were glamorous impressive
presences, crisscrossing the country like corporate Barbie and Ken dolls as
they engaged in wheeling and dealing corporate takeovers of what other people
had built. They were charisma incorporated. They looked good. They sounded
good. But there was no substance to what they were doing. When they tangled
with the president of Martin Marietta in their attempted takeover of his
company, they suddenly found themselves facing someone who was the real thing
whereupon he broke their backs and sent them packing. It's as simple as that.

Cunningham gave fascinating alternative explanations to what happened. None
of these explanations are very convincing. She became a cult figure and a
symbol among the subculture of those practicing imagery without substance who
instinctively recognized and supported her as one of their own. She became
successful on the college lecture circuit where she bowled them over with her
chatter, her image and her manner.

Cunningham seems to have a quality about her such that she seems to be the
type of person who tends to become defended as a social or political cause.
She had hysterical supporters who insisted she was a brilliant and successful
woman. None of them have ever been able to explain what she's brilliant and
successful at. They mistake style and some type of psychological
identification with her and her life style for substance.

Dress for Success

There has been a social trend toward self-appraisal based upon substitution
of empty image and style for real content. Commercials and magazine ads are
fond of exhorting people to dress for success. They dress for success. They
public image for success. They act success. One day they look in the mirror
and evaluate their clothes, cologne, image and mannerisms and decide they are
God's gift to the world. However, in reality they still haven't produced
anything.

Would-be automobile maker DeLorean impressed me as a
imagery-without-substance operation. He was a man of impressive appearance
and manner. He was married to one of the world's most glamorous and fashionabl
e women. He maintained an impressive and palatial set of corporate offices.
Every aspect of the DeLorean image was very impressive. But, in my opinion,
something critical was missing in DeLorean's psychological structure. The
substance in terms of production of the DeLorean automobile never fully
materialized.

Donald Trump is another grandiose operation built on some kind of
manufactured public acclaim. He has sold himself to the public, but I need to
ask whether there is any solid content to what he is selling or whether it
will all fall apart for lack of realistic content.

Gary Hartpence, better known to the world as Senator Gary Hart, is a man for
this age. He is reminiscent of people whose entire life in high school was
the debate team. They never took any math or sciences. They were primarily
uneducated showpieces--often self-infatuated showpieces. They could stand up
before an audience and debate any subject endlessly with no knowledge or
substance whatsoever. Very impressive and presentable, they were not the kind
of people you would want to run anything because they could talk people into
a disaster and make it sound good.

Hart is an engaging show business personality. Nothing about him is real.
Somewhere along the road from jug-eared high-school nerd to the man who
almost became president, he learned how to charm and how to present a public
image. His entire career seems to have been a public relations manipulation.
He changed his name. At one point there was confusion over whether he
attempted to change his age to make himself appear younger and to fit in
better with 1960s generational politics. To devise a military background, at
the age of nearly fifty he wrangled a naval officer's commission at elevated
rank. He created a public relations rubric of "new ideas" to represent some
sort of hypothetical intellectual formulation or program. At best the new
ideas were glossy reformulations of empty left-wing dialogue from the 1960s
youth movements.

Hart was transparently lacking in substance and character. For years, the
media had helped cover up his extramarital affairs the same as they had
covered up the activities of John Kennedy in the 1950s and 1960s. The
difference between Hart and Kennedy was that Kennedy continued to charm the
media while Hart arrogantly came to assume a right to demand that they cover
for him. In their anti-establishment attitude the media would be willing
participants in helping to put one over on the folks in Peoria, but they
didn't want to be dictated to and insulted. They didn't want to be the ones
made into suckers. This betrayal of the press by Hart produced a resentment
and indignation among the press that they acted upon, culminating in Hart's
downfall. But for that, he would have won the Democratic nomination.

Tragically, John Glenn, who was among the finest the country could produce,
never received any significant support for the presidency among Democrats. In
recent decades, the Right Stuff is the wrong stuff. Personal substance did
not strike a chord of consonance in Democrats. They were looking for a slick
character to express both a diffuse anger and their trendy attitude toward
life.

Lack of substance coupled with fear that lack of substance will be discovered
has produced a class of people who live a type of constant suspicion, fear,
and an adversarial relationship with a world around them which threatens to
expose them. They are forced to reject reality as well as reject American
culture representing reality or responsibility because they are unequipped to
deal with it.

Word Shrouds

Symptomatic of deficient substance are clever phrases or concepts that are
defensive cover-ups or forms of denial which periodically tend to circulate
around, and sometimes inundate, the country. One of the recent cover-ups is a
diagnosis, either by one's self, or by a mental health professional, that a
person is "perfectionistic." Usually there is an attempted psychological
tie-in back to parents, saying, "Your parents put pressure on you to be
perfectionistic as a teen and this instilled desire is causing you to be
perfectionistic, nervous, and fatigued now." The argument has been adopted as
an explanation for many problems, especially nervousness, feelings of being
overwhelmed, and fatigue. I have particularly heard a large number of women
calling in to radio psychologists with complaints and being given that
interpretation of their problem.

However, under close analysis, there are three elements in the concept of
perfectionistic. First, there is a person's performance or capacity for
performance of a task or tasks. Second, there are the standards a person is
required to meet in performing a task. Third, there is a person's level of
aspiration. Now suppose there is a gap between a person's performance level
and the standards to which he or she is expected to accomplish. Is this
failure of a person to meet those standards because of a deficiency in the
person's performance, or is it because the standards are too high or too
perfectionistic?

The condition is roughly as follows. In the 1960s and 1970s the same
standards were applied to teen-agers as were applied to previous generations.
Because of softness in childrearing, deficiencies in education, and a
debilitating social atmosphere, generations escaped attaining the most
minimal standards or responsibilities. Kids who graduated from endless hours
per day of TV pap and who were deficient in scholastic development, deficient
in social development, deficient in self-discipline, deficient in capacity to
accept responsibility or discomfort were suddenly confronted with
responsibilities for which they were unprepared and which, as a defense, were
labeled perfectionistic. The same levels of development and responsibility
were being prepared for and were being met ten years earlier by previous
generations. The level of performance was not perfectionistic, but new
generations unable to meet the most minimal standards saw them as beyond
reach and felt severely pressured. In the deficiency of early development,
minimal standards were impossible to meet.

Concurrently, these same generations expected high levels of achievement and
aspiration. They were encouraged by parents who vowed their children would
never need to work like their parents did. The media constantly whip people
into a frenzy with achievement and high-status exhortation or imagery while
magazine ads picture people none of whom look as though they make less than
$300,000 per year. There's a local Washington, D.C. radio commercial which
starts out with a series of images something like, "The Washington Woman!
Affluent! Committed! Active! Dynamic! On the move!" Again, there is a pattern
of images without content. Nobody is supposed to be average.

While nobody is supposed to be average, it's a grim fact that most people are
nearly average and half the population is below average. Nobody has been
prepared to accept this.

More than two generations, now, have been surrounded and programmed with
belief in their specialness. They have internalized it, and they believe that
is the way their lives are supposed to be. They were raised to be special.
They were encouraged in the fantasy that they would be something special--in
a developmental atmosphere which did not train them, which did not cause them
to test their capacities and fantasies against reality, and which did not
harden them enough to face the rigors of achievement and the real world. In
many cases they aspire to high levels of achievement or status, whether as
executive officers, sales executives and other high positions in which a
person is under stress to produce and in which a person is not allowed to
make very many mistakes then survive or remain on top. Perfectionism is part
of the territory. They are committed over their capacity and endurance.

One aspect of the situation is exemplified by a successful woman who receives
a salary more than twice the average in the Washington, D. C. area. She
complains of the striving for "perfectionism" in her life. When asked to
explain what she means by perfectionism: As an assistant manager who receives
commissions on not only her own sales, but also commission on the sales by
those she directs, she is expected to set an example by having one of the
highest consistent overall sales records in the branch. She is expected to
have one of the highest proportions of sales closings in the branch, implying
few mistakes in presentations. She is expected to instruct her staff. She is
expected to study and take tests each week on new sales strategies. It
represents many hours a week and she doesn't have what she considers to be
enough time for herself. She's pushed and under constant stress. It doesn't
feel as good as the imagery in the ads or the radio commercials look.

In fact, that's not perfectionism. It's reality. It is minimally doing the
job. That is what came with that salary of more than twice the area average.
She applied for a high-achievement position and she found it. It's taking a
toll on her.
Many products of recent generations have a high aspiration level and a
fantasy about what performance is expected, about what commitment is
expected, and about what their own capabilities are. The term perfectionism
is a way of rationalizing excuses when hard reality fails to conform to
fantasy and when they are asked to deliver substance instead of just imagery.

Hit and Run

In both their professional and personal lives, show business personalities
are often people who are hit-and-run operations. They enter dramatically.
They impress people on an image level and then move on before they become
involved with concrete substance. In corporations and organizations they
often enjoy a meteoric rise and moving upward and back and forth among
various positions. Close examination behind the image of the attractive
dynamic winner reveals they haven't produced very much. Somewhere there is
something missing. If they remain in a responsible position for more than two
years, things start to go wrong unless there are other talented people of
substance who can cover for them.

Their romantic relationships are similar and have a superficial dynamic
quality. They have an engaging line of patter. They know the best night clubs
or restaurants and can interpret the best wine lists. The men cook impressive
meals, which become a fad for a while. They know the right music to set a
romantic mood. They run through a series of perfect performances at high
speed which fill or constitute the relationship. When the repertoire is
completed, they must either find a way to re-perform it, or must move on. It
is as if they are playing a programmed recording tape which runs through a
series of carefully set up superficial romantic performances at high speed.
When the tape comes to an end the relationship stops because the tape is all
there is and there is nothing else to the relationship. Sometimes, they will
be in a panic to rewind the tape and replay it in order to continue the
relationship. These are people who can't live day to day in a one-to-one
relationship with somebody because the relationship would fall to pieces for
lack of substance. They are very promising people. They will promise you
anything, but they can't deliver.
There are large numbers of women, some of whom are national figures, who fall
into this pattern. They walk into a room, are very striking, and men will
say, "Hey, who is that?" Having a certain glitter or dazzle or image or sweep
and enough beauty to put it over, they can intrigue men on the basis of their
image. They have no trouble getting men on this basis and they have the image
of being super-women and men-conquerors who do not form permanent
relationships because of what is glamorized as independence or liberation.

In fact, what is mislabeled independence is basically an incapacity. For lack
of substance they are not the kind of people with whom someone could live day
to day and hence they cannot participate in day-to-day permanent
relationships. They can tease or parcel out evenings of engaging superficial
image, including in bed, but they can't stick around. If they do stick
around, the relationship doesn't work and the man leaves. They can only
conduct hit-and-run operations. They are like attractively-wrapped packages
which can hold interest only until opened and found to be empty.

This is a basic problem for too large a proportion of several generations.
They are empty. Even many of those who are financially successful have not
developed to any extent in terms of character, depth of emotion, conviction,
sense of honor, or much of anything else. They may have temper tantrums, but
temper tantrums are not the same as substance. Their list of desires and
superficial image have developed, but little else has. They aren't anything.
They have no definition or structure.

In summation, American culture has a great number of people who have
superficially attractive personalities and who look good and sound good and
may even be quite impressive on the surface, but haven't substantial
mentality or maturity. While they are attractive and engaging, they are
impossible to live with in a day-to-day situation as they have no substance
or sense of responsibility. They are destructive in the business world. They
are catastrophically successful in the political world. Two of them made it
to the White House as Bill and Hillary Clinton.

This contrast between attractive superficiality and deficient substance is
often a source of confusion--and entrapment. People will often remark how
somebody divorced a well-known actress or actor or a glamorous movie star and
wonder how it is possible to leave such an attractive and engaging person.
They think whoever was married to such a person was the luckiest man or woman
in the world.

Whoever it was did have luck and it was all bad. Beneath the attractive
exterior and the engaging public personality was a lack of real content and a
personal mess. They are not the kind of person who can be lived with. This
has been a characteristic of a large proportion of at least a generation.

The Decline of Productivity

People in America who inhabit and graduate from the culture of attractiveness
and image without substance lack either the capability or motivation to
examine each other, or anything else, for substance or content beneath the
surface.

A spin-off from lack of individual substance is the decline in productivity
and the incompetence crisis in this country. Having become incapable of
participation in the substance of necessary industrial production, Americans
have Orientals do it for them. Either Asians do it over there, to the tune of
what is becoming a $250,000,000,000 or more trade deficit--we import more
than the gross national product of many countries to make up for the lack of
productivity here. Or we have them come over here to do it.

We have become dependent upon Orientals and the imported self-discipline and
personal substance of other cultures for domestic engineering expertise.
Sitting in front of me is a set of statistics from an engineering college of
a major university indicating out of 794 engineering graduate students, 293
are foreign and 67 are naturalized, mostly Asians. The best students are
usually Asians. In the best schools, forty percent of the students in
engineering and the sciences are Asian. Thank God. But for Orientals and
other foreign cultures, America would be technologically and industrially
bankrupt. In a shameful act of discrimination and resentment, it is now being
claimed that Asians are racially over-represented in schools and professions.
The disgraceful assumption in this is that achievement and success are to be
based on vended demographic representation rather than industriousness.
One of the benefits of the Viet Nam war is that it has furnished America with
a major proportion of its necessary engineering and industrial talent for the
40 years as the hardy, intelligent, educated, self-disciplined Vietnamese
have filled the ranks of American engineering colleges.

It is rationalized that we are becoming a service economy. That assertion is
a verbal manipulation attempting to obscure the fact we are becoming a nation
of incompetent hot-house-plants producing no substance. What a service
economy means is that Japanese, Koreans, Chinese and Germans are supposed to
produce the industrial goods used in America while Americans strut around
with fancy clothes and fancy titles, charging each other for passing those
goods back and forth among themselves, calling it productivity. A spring 1991
60 Minutes segment stated that only four percent of consumer electronics sold
in the United States were manufactured in the United States. That's not
productivity. It's industrial bankruptcy.

On December 6th and 7th of 1991 a special Ted Koppel Nightline dealt with the
economic competition between the U. S. and the Japanese. When Koppel asked
three Japanese leaders why America was failing economically, one of the
Japanese mentioned the permissiveness in U.S. society in the last forty years
as a factor. Nobody in an American guest audience of hundreds of people acted
as though what he said was important or that they had even heard it. It was
the most important things that was said in two nights of discussion.

His observation can be put in plainer language that will be more difficult to
ignore. For decades our educational system and our social value system has
been oriented toward producing hippies, fops, "social activists" and
pathological personalities. During that same period the Japanese produced
engineers and scientists. There's no way American generations that were
incompetent graduates of the 60s and 70s can compete economically with the
competence of Japanese scientists and engineers who are now many years ahead
of Americans. We're paying the economic price for the mindless, borderline
psychotic, incompetent liberalism of decades.

For more than 25 years America country has become progressively top-heavy
with people who believe they are special--too special to participate in the
production of basic goods and services. You can barely pay all these special
people enough money to get the necessary work done. There is nobody left to
do the work. Your money is no good. The American inflation of the 70s was in
truth an incompetence tax which has been reduced my importing massive amounts
of foreign goods at cumulative trade deficits of trillions of dollars.


A secondary crisis resulting from the rampant stagflation of the 1970s due to
incompetence and reluctance of the Bill Clinton hip generation was the
collapse of the retirement and social security system in this country. People
who put money away when five dollars or ten dollars was worth something
suddenly found their retirement savings became worthless. If they were
clever, they might have been fortunate enough to buy CDs (certificates of
deposit) paying more than 20 percent interest in the late 1970s, but even
those weren't sufficient to keep up with economic decline.

Trickle-Up Stupidity

The assertion by left-wing and counter-cultural hacks is that the 1980s was
the Reagan Supply Side Economics (re-labeled Trickle-Down Economics) Decade
of Greed. That, it is asserted, was the cause of subsequent economic
difficulties. This assertion has not been questioned on TV and elsewhere
because the TV network mentalities are characteristic of the mentalities
making the initial assertion. It should be questioned. We were experiencing
serious economic difficulties before Reagan. The problem was not, and is not,
supply-side economics. The problem is trickle-up softness, trickle-up
disinterest in economic productivity, trickle-up self-indulgence, trickle-up
degeneracy and trickle-up stupidity. In the last 25 years there have not been
enough quality people in recent generations to take the place of the previous
generations who built America on the concrete real level and made it work.

Trickle-up economics, trickle-down, trickle-sideways, torrential downpours
from all directions, supply side, socialism, free enterprise--no economic
concept or no economic system of any kind will function with the numbers of
people showing the type of personal characteristics and large scale deficient
level of competence which have been seen in America during recent decades.

The problem was not Reagan's decade of greed, but three or more decades of
degeneracy culminated by the election of a president, Bill Clinton, who never
worked an outside real job or at anything else beyond pursuit of political
ambitions. Neither Bill or Hillary has ever produced anything in their
lifetimes. A generation of Bill and Hillary Clintons lacked the
characteristics necessary to replace the productivity of previous
generations.

We are now facing an economic crisis of disastrous proportions. Since the
1960s we have had a series of cyclic economic recessions which have become
progressively severe and of progressively longer duration. There has been
more American unemployment in this country as the substantive industrial work
has been done elsewhere. Given the incompetence levels in America, the
Japanese and Chinese are charging us for doing the substantive work in this
culture. They were using the money to buy property in this country and at one
time owned more than thirty percent of the prime commercial real estate in
major American cities although they have been bailing out under pressure. In
the early 1990s, America went through what can only be called a depression.
America is in a state of temporarily hidden economic and technological
collapse. There was a cry for the President to do something in 1991 and 1992.
If everyone in America had been given an outright gift of $10,000 to "prime
the economic pump" there would have been a party that would have lasted for a
month with massive purchase of Japanese electronics and automobiles, and
Chinese and Korean clothes without creating one new job over here--and
inadvertent passage of an additional entire state into foreign ownership.

A special NBC Brokaw Report: Families in Crisis on March 20, 1992 unwittingly
explained aspects of the situation very well. The hour was dedicated to
examining the crisis in deterioration of families in the U.S. and the affect
upon mothers, children and whatever. In reality the concept of family had
little to do with much of the show. In many cases it was a matter of
unmarried people having children with the level of commitment of a quick shot
in a back alley--some of them by multiple partners at various times. Family
had nothing to do with it. In other cases there were marriages which lasted
until somebody bumped into somebody else they liked better for a while or
found something more interesting they wanted to do.

The revealing part was a brief discussion toward the end of the show by
several people who, unfortunately, were members of a presidential commission.
With characteristic indignation, one of the members said it should be made
the responsibility of American business to finance rehabilitation of the
people involved in the problems and life styles indicated in the show. This
view is alarming from several aspects.

In the first place it contains assertion of an act of criminality against a
free society in the assumption that anyone requires permission or is required
to meet outside preconditions to start a business or that there should be a
right to impose unwanted impositions upon businesses. In a free society any
individual or group has a right to offer a product of manufacture, or a
service, to other individuals or other groups. If other individuals or other
groups want to buy that product or service, it is their decision and freedom
to do so. Third parties or groups have no standing or right to intervene in
that agreement. Agreeing parties do not need to justify their right to make
that agreement by benefiting, or engaging in social work, with third parties.
The only limitations should be that all parties are acting within the agreed
upon scope of the agreement. Outside interests have no right to impose the
rule that two people solve their drug problems or shack-job problems before
entering into private agreement to manufacture items or exchange services.

The individuals or groups offering their products or services and the
individuals or groups agreeing to purchase those goods or services have a
responsibility to each other and none other. In a free society or free
enterprise system, no government or outside group has a right to restrict or
impose conditions upon that agreement for their own purposes. That means
individuals or groups are not required to solve the personal problems of
outside parties in the community as a precondition for being allowed to
conduct their own business or personal affairs.

Other people were not put on this planet to be forced to be made responsible
for personal excesses or personal irresponsibility of the people involved, or
for anybody else. Out of respect for people, they are not to be forced to do
it. This basic lack of respect for anything or anybody is what got the people
involved in the situation they were in.
Secondly, there is little indication of desire for rehabilitation. There was
not the most remote sign of receptiveness toward self-examining the morality,
the behavior, or the values which produced the conditions about which the
people were complaining. One thing that would have been nice to be heard,
just once, in more than 30 years of analysis and debate over personal and
"social" conditions in this country, would have been the sincerely asked
question, "Is it possible I am doing something wrong?" Not once in 30 years
has anyone sincerely asked what self-improvements they might make in terms of
personal morality, personal responsibility, truthfulness, or diligence. Many
of the behaviors in question were engaged in as militantly asserted
statements of personal choice or freedom with arrogant indifference toward
consequences. What is being demanded is support for those actions within no
intentions to change the activity or the underwriting value system. That is
not asking for rehabilitation. That is not change.

Somewhere there has grown a serious misconception and an inversion of
responsibility. It is the responsibility of individuals in this society to
seriously manage their lives and develop their capabilities so that they are
able and ready to make a contribution to business, to industry, and to the
economic needs of the community. Starting at an early age. It is not the
obligation of other people, including the business community, to constantly
pick up after people who have shown little such seriousness or
responsibility.

Personal Responsibility

What is being displayed is precious little humility, precious little
realistic interest in rehabilitation, precious little admission of personal
responsibility, endless demands upon other people, and great amounts of
arrogance.
What has not been heard in all the assertion of demands to make choices among
various life styles and value systems is the willingness to live with the
consequences.

How Americans supposed to compete with the Japanese and Germans while adding
the cost of unreasoned sex lives and inability to form serious human
relationships on to the cost of goods and services is never discussed.
Similarly, the person attempting to start a business or maintain a business
is faced with, or is to be made responsible for, underwriting the cost of a
recalcitrant and indignant social pathology and a social activism attempting
to divert responsibility for actions away from those committing the acts. As
a prerequisite for being allowed to start a business, someone cannot, and in
a free society, should not, be billed for the drug excesses, the sexual
excesses, and the pathological life styles throughout the country. Both the
levels of pathology and irrational demands for others to pay the bills are
escalating faster than anyone or any group can keep up with it. Then there is
complaint about the loss of jobs or the lack of new business creating jobs.
Buying and selling each other junk bonds isn't the answer.

Neither is selling junk relationships in our personal lives going to work.
The economic problems and the interpersonal relationships problems in America
have the same root cause--deficient personal substance, deficient sense of
reality and deficient self-discipline. More will be said about economics
later.

Would-be experts and analysts point out that Japan and other economic
competitors are also experiencing economic difficulties. There is an
important difference between any economic adjustments being experienced by
Japan and similar countries versus the years of decline which have occurred
here. The problems of Japan and similar countries are economic--and probably
transitory adjustments. America is ridden by problems of a far more profound
nature which have economic consequences.
If other countries are smart, they will avoid economic linkages with America
that will make them vulnerable to American problems.

As far as negotiations with other nations are concerned, there is nothing to
negotiate for. What we are demanding in our negotiations is that serious
Asians become less disciplined, less diligent, less intelligent, less well
educated, and more childish so that weakling American generations can compete
with them. America is a morally, psychologically, and economically decaying
society. Other countries know it. Americans have no leverage. America has the
same leverage in negotiations of any kind with any other developed country
that a dying man has in negotiating with the circling vultures.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert L. Kocher is the author of "The American Mind in Denial," as well as
many other articles. He is an engineer working in the area of solid-state
physics, and has done graduate study in clinical psychology. His email
address is [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-30-
from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 3, No 45, November 22, 1999
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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