Keith, your comments in response to Elliott's piece are more in-depth than I
would have given them.  I posted it mostly as a midsummer day's reading,
something to begin a conversation if, as I imagine it, we were all gathered
together in a wooded place near water, enjoying each other's company after a
hearty (and healthy) repast, an evening of debate and sharing ahead.  In
step with Natalia, I read it as a "commentary lite" with an eye and ear
noticing that there is more reflection and questioning these days about
unlimited consumerism, unlimited unrestrained "free" market capitalism,
unlimited acceptance of the status quo and unlimited tolerance to be led
like sheep.

It's funny.  When children are young we often use role models to help them
visualize and emulate a lifestyle or self-discipline or awareness (or all of
three) that intellectually and emotionally that are not mature enough to
grasp.  America and Americans are still in some ways reaching maturity, and
so like teenagers marching off into the unknowns of adulthood, comparing
ourselves to something already in existence is essential, say like France,
or Britain.  We are not, and neither may the French and British be,
self-evolved to the point where we can actualize what we imagine from our
own ingenuity.

Historically, that does not seem the case since our brief history has been
dramatic and had such an impact on the world stage.  However, we are
reaching a passage, a transition.  I do not have the wisdom or insight to
know if all the best minds in America can guide the rest of us to wherever
it is we are going.  Occasionally, we common folk have the insight to
glimpse the whole and sometimes, the people come together and sometimes we
do not.

Stay tuned.  As you have predicted, the ride may well get bumpy soon.

I'm off to the garden to restore quiet on an early Sunday morning.  The
bullies of the neighborhood, the crows and blue jays are complaining that I
have neglected to refill the bird feeders.  I hope to chase them away and
leave more for the little finches and attract the blue birds back.  KWC

Karen,

I'm not so sure that the French way of life has all that much to offer.
They are fast reaching their own impasse.

At 13:17 26/07/2003 -0700, you wrote:

>In what I'm coyly referring to as the midsummer version of the nearly
>furious Winter and Spring debate over the European and American divide,
>TIME's Michael Elliott writes from Paris:


I like what you wrote further below, but Michael Elliot gives the
impression (see below) that it's all week-end family parties over there,
and intellectuals sprawling about for hours in the caf�s of Paris
discussing philosophy . If I can throw a few slightly dampening facts into
the proceedings, let me quote some recent Financial Times statistics.
Americans work a 40-hour week, the French, 36 hours; Americans take 12 days
annual vacation, the French, 25; and both countries have the same number of
statutary days holiday -- 11 each. Thus, the difference is not quite as
great as you might infer from Michael Elliot's piece. Very few French
people are able to take 6 weeks' holiday a year, as the myth has it.

Yes, the French have a slightly more elastic view of time and holidays than
the Amercans. A friend of mine is having some building work done on his
French farmhouse. If the weather's nice on a statutory holiday, then the
builders are quite likely to take the next day or two off as well --
without, of course, giving notice. Yes, it's joy (if you can stand the
noise) to see French families having Sunday lunch in a restaurant in any
provincial town -- and going on well into the late afternoon. I also have a
lovely memory of a town square very late one evening where families had
gathered almost till midnight, where, instead of being in bed, the children
were larking about and a couple of grandfathers were playing with the very
youngest children, hardly able to walk. The fathers weren't there, though.
Presumably they were holed up in a drinking den.

But all is not well in France. Not by any means. I am not so sure that in
America you have places where the police daren't enter unless they go in
numbers inside armoured cars. Well, there are several very large suburbs of
Paris where this is so. In America, unemployment is only just reaching 6%,
but in France the rate has been nearer 10% for several years and is likely
to grow much higher. A French friend of mine had a restaurant in Paris and
was forced out of business by having to pay almost as much tax and
insurance to the government for each employee as he did in wages.
Fortunately, he had an English wife and he was able to get over here and he
now drives a taxi in Bath. Scores of small French firms are now settling in
Kent to avoid penal taxation over there, their personnel commuting back and
forth across the Channel.

And then, French scholarship and culture is not as cracked up as it's
supposed to be. The French complain about the heavy dose of American films
on their TV channels, but where are their own films? As for books, the
French still have good novelists but where are their books of scholarly
value? I can't recall a single one in the last 10 or 20 years. They are
still quoting Sartre and his reprehensible existentialism. Wearing my other
hat as a publisher of choral music, I sell more than 50 times as much music
to American choirs (on a population basis) than to French choirs. (And the
notation accuracy of music published in France is notoriously bad. I'm sure
they don't proof-read.) The French are supposed to be much more logical
than English people or Americans, and they're very good at launching new
ideas or hurling defiance at America. But their logic takes them into
crevaces from which they can only emerge with difficulty, as President
Chirac had to do recently after he had publicly snubbed both Blair and
Bush. A brand new theory of economics called Post-Austistic
something-or-other was proclaimed a few years ago and their intellectuals
got very excited about it but the articles in its journal were
incomprehensible to me and, as far as I could make out, mutually
antagonistic.

Let's face it, scholarship and research in the best French universities, in
both science and the arts, simply doesn't compare in quality or quantity
with that of MIT or Harvard. On a population basis, there ought to be
*something* to remark upon, but there's really nothing I can think of.

Having tried to come to the defence of America, I must confess that
Americans have reached their own cul-de-sac as regards their lack of
leisure time and capacity to absorb much more, whether of culture or
consumer goods. Despite all the reasons that are given for the present
economic slowdown of America, I am increasingly persuaded that, underneath
it all, there's a profound unease about where society should be heading.
The French still hang onto their myths and past glories; the Americans
don't have so much of either, so their intellectuals can probably see the
future a little more clearly and a little more bleakly, too. The title of
Francis Fukuyama's book, The End of History, had more than one meaning in
his mind, I'm sure. Consumerism has now reached the end of the line --
there's no more time or energy left for more. The Americans only work for
four hours a week more than the French, but that's enough to take America
to the edge of its economic philosophy. And yet, while America and the rest
of us are so dependent on oil and natural gas, I can see nothing
constructive at present --only more trouble ahead -- the Iraq invasion
repeated and multiplied several times more in the decades to come as long
as cheap fossil fuels last.

KH

 >>>>
Excerpt from Time Magazine 28 July 2003

EUROPEANS JUST WANT TO HAVE A LITTLE FUN
Long vacations. Lots of dancing. So why can't we loosen up?

Michael Elliot

In a famous series of essays collected in his 1976 book, The Cultural
Contradictions of Capitalism, Daniel Bell noted how the decline of the
Protestant small-town ethic had unhinged American capitalism from its moral
foundation in the intrinsic value of work. By the 1960s, Bell argued, "the
cultural justification of capitalism [had] become hedonism, the idea of
pleasure as a way of life." This magazine agreed. In a 1969 cover story
titled "California A State of Excitement," Time Mazazine reported that, as
most Americans saw it, "the good, godless, gregarious pursuit of pleasure
is what California is all about ... 'I have seen the future,' says the
newly returned visitor to California, 'and it plays.' "

But the American future didn't turn out as we expected. While Europeans cut
the hours they spend at the office or factory in France it is illegal to
work more than 35 hours a week and lengthened their vacations, Americans
were concluding that you could be happy only if you work hard and play
hard. So they began to stay at their jobs longer than ever and then, in
jam-packed weekends at places like the Hamptons on Long Island, invented
the uniquely American concept of scheduled joy, filling a day off with one
appointment after another, as if it were no different from one at the
office. American conservatives, meanwhile, came to believe that Europeans'
desire to devote themselves to the pleasures of life and the shame of it!
-- six weeks annual vacation was evidence of a lack of seriousness and
would, in any event, end in economic tears.

Why do Europeans and Americans differ so much in their attitude toward work
and leisure? I can think of two reasons. First, the crowded confines of
Western Europe and the expansive space of North America have led to varied
consumer preferences.  Broadly speaking, Americans value stuff -- SUVs,
7,000-sq-ft. houses -- more than they value time, while for Europeans it's
the opposite. Second, as Bell predicted, America's sense of itself as a
religious nation has revived. At least in the puritanical version of
Christianity that has always appealed to Americans, religion comes packaged
with the stern message that hard work is good for the soul. Modern Europe
has avoided so melancholy a lesson.

Whatever the explanation, the idea of a work-life balance is a staple of
European discourse, studied in think tanks, mulled over by policymakers. In
the US, the term, when it's used at all, is said with the sort of sneer
reserved for those who eat quiche. But it might still catch on. When Bill
Keller was named executive editor of the New York Times last week, he
encouraged the staff to do "a little more savoring" of life, spending time
with their families or viewing art.
 >>>>

<<<<
KWC
Most of us on Futurework List have argued or agreed that the Puritanical
influences are alive and well in America today, we take ourselves much too
seriously.  It's led to a religious idolatry of Free Market sects, created
mass markets of medicated and numb worker bees, and allowed the
proliferation of a consumer culture based on plastic and home ownership,
not much else.  So is one solution to Pax Americana and Big Brother 2004 a
big party?  I am interested in American culture being less identified with
product lines and profit margins and more recognized for its literary and
artistic performances; indeed, we cannot sustain (note how popular this
word is now and generically applied) the momentum of a superpower for much
longer if we forget what we are fighting for, and that does include real
culture and sense of time and place and play?  We cannot even have a good
time being patriotic these days, its become an exercise in intensity and
loyalty.

Is it arrogance that led us down this path?  Or ignorance?  Or what
else?  We have reminders all around us, from friend and foe that empires do
not last forever.  Blair managed to sneak that warning in his speech to
Congress, and Italy's Berlosconi added his two cents worth (also in this
same issue of Time Magazine) that what Italy learned from the Roman Empire
is that every prince needs allies, and the bigger the responsibility, the
more allies he needs.

So should Americans be stepping back and looking at the horizon, reflecting
on the small and simple things that make life worthwhile, rather than being
force-fed superpower heroic vitamins?  I vote yes.
 >>>>




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