It will take a miracle for this not to come true.

Fortunately, I am working on a few...

E



The Unraveling of America
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/political-commentary/covid-19-end-of-american-era-wade-davis-1038206/
(via Instapaper)

Wade Davis holds the Leadership Chair in Cultures and Ecosystems at Risk at the 
University of British Columbia. His award-winning books include “Into the 
Silence” and “The Wayfinders.” His new book, “Magdalena: River of Dreams,” is 
published by Knopf.

Never in our lives have we experienced such a global phenomenon. For the first 
time in the history of the world, all of humanity, informed by the 
unprecedented reach of digital technology, has come together, focused on the 
same existential threat, consumed by the same fears and uncertainties, eagerly 
anticipating the same, as yet unrealized, promises of medical science.

In a single season, civilization has been brought low by a microscopic parasite 
10,000 times smaller than a grain of salt. COVID-19 attacks our physical 
bodies, but also the cultural foundations of our lives, the toolbox of 
community and connectivity that is for the human what claws and teeth represent 
to the tiger.

Our interventions to date have largely focused on mitigating the rate of 
spread, flattening the curve of morbidity. There is no treatment at hand, and 
no certainty of a vaccine on the near horizon. The fastest vaccine ever 
developed was for mumps. It took four years. COVID-19 killed 100,000 Americans 
in four months. There is some evidence that natural infection may not imply 
immunity, leaving some to question how effective a vaccine will be, even 
assuming one can be found. And it must be safe. If the global population is to 
be immunized, lethal complications in just one person in a thousand would imply 
the death of millions.

Pandemics and plagues have a way of shifting the course of history, and not 
always in a manner immediately evident to the survivors. In the 14th Century, 
the Black Death killed close to half of Europe’s population. A scarcity of 
labor led to increased wages. Rising expectations culminated in the Peasants 
Revolt of 1381, an inflection point that marked the beginning of the end of the 
feudal order that had dominated medieval Europe for a thousand years.

The COVID pandemic will be remembered as such a moment in history, a seminal 
event whose significance will unfold only in the wake of the crisis. It will 
mark this era much as the 1914 assassination of Archduke Ferdinand, the stock 
market crash of 1929, and the 1933 ascent of Adolf Hitler became fundamental 
benchmarks of the last century, all harbingers of greater and more 
consequential outcomes.

COVID’s historic significance lies not in what it implies for our daily lives. 
Change, after all, is the one constant when it comes to culture. All peoples in 
all places at all times are always dancing with new possibilities for life. As 
companies eliminate or downsize central offices, employees work from home, 
restaurants close, shopping malls shutter, streaming brings entertainment and 
sporting events into the home, and airline travel becomes ever more problematic 
and miserable, people will adapt, as we’ve always done. Fluidity of memory and 
a capacity to forget is perhaps the most haunting trait of our species. As 
history confirms, it allows us to come to terms with any degree of social, 
moral, or environmental degradation.

To be sure, financial uncertainty will cast a long shadow. Hovering over the 
global economy for some time will be the sober realization that all the money 
in the hands of all the nations on Earth will never be enough to offset the 
losses sustained when an entire world ceases to function, with workers and 
businesses everywhere facing a choice between economic and biological survival.

Unsettling as these transitions and circumstances will be, short of a complete 
economic collapse, none stands out as a turning point in history. But what 
surely does is the absolutely devastating impact that the pandemic has had on 
the reputation and international standing of the United States of America.

In a dark season of pestilence, COVID has reduced to tatters the illusion of 
American exceptionalism. At the height of the crisis, with more than 2,000 
dying each day, Americans found themselves members of a failed state, ruled by 
a dysfunctional and incompetent government largely responsible for death rates 
that added a tragic coda to America’s claim to supremacy in the world.

For the first time, the international community felt compelled to send disaster 
relief to Washington. For more than two centuries, reported the Irish Times, 
“the United States has stirred a very wide range of feelings in the rest of the 
world: love and hatred, fear and hope, envy and contempt, awe and anger. But 
there is one emotion that has never been directed towards the U.S. until now: 
pity.” As American doctors and nurses eagerly awaited emergency airlifts of 
basic supplies from China, the hinge of history opened to the Asian century.

No empire long endures, even if few anticipate their demise. Every kingdom is 
born to die. The 15th century belonged to the Portuguese, the 16th to Spain, 
17th to the Dutch. France dominated the 18th and Britain the 19th. Bled white 
and left bankrupt by the Great War, the British maintained a pretense of 
domination as late as 1935, when the empire reached its greatest geographical 
extent. By then, of course, the torch had long passed into the hands of America.

In 1940, with Europe already ablaze, the United States had a smaller army than 
either Portugal or Bulgaria. Within four years, 18 million men and women would 
serve in uniform, with millions more working double shifts in mines and 
factories that made America, as President Roosevelt promised, the arsenal of 
democracy.

When the Japanese within six weeks of Pearl Harbor took control of 90 percent 
of the world’s rubber supply, the U.S. dropped the speed limit to 35 mph to 
protect tires, and then, in three years, invented from scratch a 
synthetic-rubber industry that allowed Allied armies to roll over the Nazis. At 
its peak, Henry Ford’s Willow Run Plant produced a B-24 Liberator every two 
hours, around the clock. Shipyards in Long Beach and Sausalito spat out Liberty 
ships at a rate of two a day for four years; the record was a ship built in 
four days, 15 hours and 29 minutes. A single American factory, Chrysler’s 
Detroit Arsenal, built more tanks than the whole of the Third Reich.

In the wake of the war, with Europe and Japan in ashes, the United States with 
but 6 percent of the world’s population accounted for half of the global 
economy, including the production of 93 percent of all automobiles. Such 
economic dominance birthed a vibrant middle class, a trade union movement that 
allowed a single breadwinner with limited education to own a home and a car, 
support a family, and send his kids to good schools. It was not by any means a 
perfect world but affluence allowed for a truce between capital and labor, a 
reciprocity of opportunity in a time of rapid growth and declining income 
inequality, marked by high tax rates for the wealthy, who were by no means the 
only beneficiaries of a golden age of American capitalism.

But freedom and affluence came with a price. The United States, virtually a 
demilitarized nation on the eve of the Second World War, never stood down in 
the wake of victory. To this day, American troops are deployed in 150 
countries. Since the 1970s, China has not once gone to war; the U.S. has not 
spent a day at peace. President Jimmy Carter recently noted that in its 
242-year history, America has enjoyed only 16 years of peace, making it, as he 
wrote, “the most warlike nation in the history of the world.” Since 2001, the 
U.S. has spent over $6 trillion on military operations and war, money that 
might have been invested in the infrastructure of home. China, meanwhile, built 
its nation, pouring more cement every three years than America did in the 
entire 20th century.

As America policed the world, the violence came home. On D-Day, June 6th, 1944, 
the Allied death toll was 4,414; in 2019, domestic gun violence had killed that 
many American men and women by the end of April. By June of that year, guns in 
the hands of ordinary Americans had caused more casualties than the Allies 
suffered in Normandy in the first month of a campaign that consumed the 
military strength of five nations.

More than any other country, the United States in the post-war era lionized the 
individual at the expense of community and family. It was the sociological 
equivalent of splitting the atom. What was gained in terms of mobility and 
personal freedom came at the expense of common purpose. In wide swaths of 
America, the family as an institution lost its grounding. By the 1960s, 40 
percent of marriages were ending in divorce. Only six percent of American homes 
had grandparents living beneath the same roof as grandchildren; elders were 
abandoned to retirement homes.

With slogans like “24/7” celebrating complete dedication to the workplace, men 
and women exhausted themselves in jobs that only reinforced their isolation 
from their families. The average American father spends less than 20 minutes a 
day in direct communication with his child. By the time a youth reaches 18, he 
or she will have spent fully two years watching television or staring at a 
laptop screen, contributing to an obesity epidemic that the Joint Chiefs have 
called a national security crisis.


Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. in Akron, Ohio on April 3rd, 1944. When the 
Japanese within six weeks of Pearl Harbor took control of 90 percent of the 
world’s rubber supply, the U.S. dropped the speed limit to 35 mph to protect 
tires, and then, in three years, invented from scratch a synthetic-rubber 
industry.

AP

Only half of Americans report having meaningful, face-to-face social 
interactions on a daily basis. The nation consumes two-thirds of the world’s 
production of antidepressant drugs. The collapse of the working-class family 
has been responsible in part for an opioid crisis that has displaced car 
accidents as the leading cause of death for Americans under 50.

At the root of this transformation and decline lies an ever-widening chasm 
between Americans who have and those who have little or nothing. Economic 
disparities exist in all nations, creating a tension that can be as disruptive 
as the inequities are unjust. In any number of settings, however, the negative 
forces tearing apart a society are mitigated or even muted if there are other 
elements that reinforce social solidarity — religious faith, the strength and 
comfort of family, the pride of tradition, fidelity to the land, a spirit of 
place.

But when all the old certainties are shown to be lies, when the promise of a 
good life for a working family is shattered as factories close and corporate 
leaders, growing wealthier by the day, ship jobs abroad, the social contract is 
irrevocably broken. For two generations, America has celebrated globalization 
with iconic intensity, when, as any working man or woman can see, it’s nothing 
more than capital on the prowl in search of ever cheaper sources of labor.

For many years, those on the conservative right in the United States have 
invoked a nostalgia for the 1950s, and an America that never was, but has to be 
presumed to have existed to rationalize their sense of loss and abandonment, 
their fear of change, their bitter resentments and lingering contempt for the 
social movements of the 1960s, a time of new aspirations for women, gays, and 
people of color. In truth, at least in economic terms, the country of the 1950s 
resembled Denmark as much as the America of today. Marginal tax rates for the 
wealthy were 90 percent. The salaries of CEOs were, on average, just 20 times 
that of their mid-management employees.

Today, the base pay of those at the top is commonly 400 times that of their 
salaried staff, with many earning orders of magnitude more in stock options and 
perks. The elite one percent of Americans control $30 trillion of assets, while 
the bottom half have more debt than assets. The three richest Americans have 
more money than the poorest 160 million of their countrymen. Fully a fifth of 
American households have zero or negative net worth, a figure that rises to 37 
percent for black families. The median wealth of black households is a tenth 
that of whites. The vast majority of Americans — white, black, and brown — are 
two paychecks removed from bankruptcy. Though living in a nation that 
celebrates itself as the wealthiest in history, most Americans live on a high 
wire, with no safety net to brace a fall.

With the COVID crisis, 40 million Americans lost their jobs, and 3.3 million 
businesses shut down, including 41 percent of all black-owned enterprises. 
Black Americans, who significantly outnumber whites in federal prisons despite 
being but 13 percent of the population, are suffering shockingly high rates of 
morbidity and mortality, dying at nearly three times the rate of white 
Americans. The cardinal rule of American social policy — don’t let any ethnic 
group get below the blacks, or allow anyone to suffer more indignities — rang 
true even in a pandemic, as if the virus was taking its cues from American 
history.

COVID-19 didn’t lay America low; it simply revealed what had long been 
forsaken. As the crisis unfolded, with another American dying every minute of 
every day, a country that once turned out fighter planes by the hour could not 
manage to produce the paper masks or cotton swabs essential for tracking the 
disease. The nation that defeated smallpox and polio, and led the world for 
generations in medical innovation and discovery, was reduced to a laughing 
stock as a buffoon of a president advocated the use of household disinfectants 
as a treatment for a disease that intellectually he could not begin to 
understand.

As a number of countries moved expeditiously to contain the virus, the United 
States stumbled along in denial, as if willfully blind. With less than four 
percent of the global population, the U.S. soon accounted for more than a fifth 
of COVID deaths. The percentage of American victims of the disease who died was 
six times the global average. Achieving the world’s highest rate of morbidity 
and mortality provoked not shame, but only further lies, scapegoating, and 
boasts of miracle cures as dubious as the claims of a carnival barker, a 
grifter on the make.

As the United States responded to the crisis like a corrupt tin pot 
dictatorship, the actual tin pot dictators of the world took the opportunity to 
seize the high ground, relishing a rare sense of moral superiority, especially 
in the wake of the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The autocratic 
leader of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, chastised America for “maliciously 
violating ordinary citizens’ rights.” North Korean newspapers objected to 
“police brutality” in America. Quoted in the Iranian press, Ayatollah Khomeini 
gloated, “America has begun the process of its own destruction.”

Trump’s performance and America’s crisis deflected attention from China’s own 
mishandling of the initial outbreak in Wuhan, not to mention its move to crush 
democracy in Hong Kong. When an American official raised the issue of human 
rights on Twitter, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, invoking the killing 
of George Floyd, responded with one short phrase, “I can’t breathe.”

These politically motivated remarks may be easy to dismiss. But Americans have 
not done themselves any favors. Their political process made possible the 
ascendancy to the highest office in the land a national disgrace, a demagogue 
as morally and ethically compromised as a person can be. As a British writer 
quipped, “there have always been stupid people in the world, and plenty of 
nasty people too. But rarely has stupidity been so nasty, or nastiness so 
stupid”.

The American president lives to cultivate resentments, demonize his opponents, 
validate hatred. His main tool of governance is the lie; as of July 9th, 2020, 
the documented tally of his distortions and false statements numbered 20,055. 
If America’s first president, George Washington, famously could not tell a lie, 
the current one can’t recognize the truth. Inverting the words and sentiments 
of Abraham Lincoln, this dark troll of a man celebrates malice for all, and 
charity for none.

Odious as he may be, Trump is less the cause of America’s decline than a 
product of its descent. As they stare into the mirror and perceive only the 
myth of their exceptionalism, Americans remain almost bizarrely incapable of 
seeing what has actually become of their country. The republic that defined the 
free flow of information as the life blood of democracy, today ranks 45th among 
nations when it comes to press freedom. In a land that once welcomed the 
huddled masses of the world, more people today favor building a wall along the 
southern border than supporting health care and protection for the undocumented 
mothers and children arriving in desperation at its doors. In a complete 
abandonment of the collective good, U.S. laws define freedom as an individual’s 
inalienable right to own a personal arsenal of weaponry, a natural entitlement 
that trumps even the safety of children; in the past decade alone 346 American 
students and teachers have been shot on school grounds.

The American cult of the individual denies not just community but the very idea 
of society. No one owes anything to anyone. All must be prepared to fight for 
everything: education, shelter, food, medical care. What every prosperous and 
successful democracy deems to be fundamental rights — universal health care, 
equal access to quality public education, a social safety net for the weak, 
elderly, and infirmed — America dismisses as socialist indulgences, as if so 
many signs of weakness.

How can the rest of the world expect America to lead on global threats — 
climate change, the extinction crisis, pandemics — when the country no longer 
has a sense of benign purpose, or collective well-being, even within its own 
national community? Flag-wrapped patriotism is no substitute for compassion; 
anger and hostility no match for love. Those who flock to beaches, bars, and 
political rallies, putting their fellow citizens at risk, are not exercising 
freedom; they are displaying, as one commentator has noted, the weakness of a 
people who lack both the stoicism to endure the pandemic and the fortitude to 
defeat it. Leading their charge is Donald Trump, a bone spur warrior, a liar 
and a fraud, a grotesque caricature of a strong man, with the backbone of a 
bully.

Over the last months, a quip has circulated on the internet suggesting that to 
live in Canada today is like owning an apartment above a meth lab. Canada is no 
perfect place, but it has handled the COVID crisis well, notably in British 
Columbia, where I live. Vancouver is just three hours by road north of Seattle, 
where the U.S. outbreak began. Half of Vancouver’s population is Asian, and 
typically dozens of flights arrive each day from China and East Asia. 
Logically, it should have been hit very hard, but the health care system 
performed exceedingly well. Throughout the crisis, testing rates across Canada 
have been consistently five times that of the U.S. On a per capita basis, 
Canada has suffered half the morbidity and mortality. For every person who has 
died in British Columbia, 44 have perished in Massachusetts, a state with a 
comparable population that has reported more COVID cases than all of Canada. As 
of July 30th, even as rates of COVID infection and death soared across much of 
the United States, with 59,629 new cases reported on that day alone, hospitals 
in British Columbia registered a total of just five COVID patients.

When American friends ask for an explanation, I encourage them to reflect on 
the last time they bought groceries at their neighborhood Safeway. In the U.S. 
there is almost always a racial, economic, cultural, and educational chasm 
between the consumer and the check-out staff that is difficult if not 
impossible to bridge. In Canada, the experience is quite different. One 
interacts if not as peers, certainly as members of a wider community. The 
reason for this is very simple. The checkout person may not share your level of 
affluence, but they know that you know that they are getting a living wage 
because of the unions. And they know that you know that their kids and yours 
most probably go to the same neighborhood public school. Third, and most 
essential, they know that you know that if their children get sick, they will 
get exactly the same level of medical care not only of your children but of 
those of the prime minister. These three strands woven together become the 
fabric of Canadian social democracy.

Asked what he thought of Western civilization, Mahatma Gandhi famously replied, 
“I think that would be a good idea.” Such a remark may seem cruel, but it 
accurately reflects the view of America today as seen from the perspective of 
any modern social democracy. Canada performed well during the COVID crisis 
because of our social contract, the bonds of community, the trust for each 
other and our institutions, our health care system in particular, with 
hospitals that cater to the medical needs of the collective, not the 
individual, and certainly not the private investor who views every hospital bed 
as if a rental property. The measure of wealth in a civilized nation is not the 
currency accumulated by the lucky few, but rather the strength and resonance of 
social relations and the bonds of reciprocity that connect all people in common 
purpose.

This has nothing to do with political ideology, and everything to do with the 
quality of life. Finns live longer and are less likely to die in childhood or 
in giving birth than Americans. Danes earn roughly the same after-tax income as 
Americans, while working 20 percent less. They pay in taxes an extra 19 cents 
for every dollar earned. But in return they get free health care, free 
education from pre-school through university, and the opportunity to prosper in 
a thriving free-market economy with dramatically lower levels of poverty, 
homelessness, crime, and inequality. The average worker is paid better, treated 
more respectfully, and rewarded with life insurance, pension plans, maternity 
leave, and six weeks of paid vacation a year. All of these benefits only 
inspire Danes to work harder, with fully 80 percent of men and women aged 16 to 
64 engaged in the labor force, a figure far higher than that of the United 
States.

American politicians dismiss the Scandinavian model as creeping socialism, 
communism lite, something that would never work in the United States. In truth, 
social democracies are successful precisely because they foment dynamic 
capitalist economies that just happen to benefit every tier of society. That 
social democracy will never take hold in the United States may well be true, 
but, if so, it is a stunning indictment, and just what Oscar Wilde had in mind 
when he quipped that the United States was the only country to go from 
barbarism to decadence without passing through civilization.

Evidence of such terminal decadence is the choice that so many Americans made 
in 2016 to prioritize their personal indignations, placing their own 
resentments above any concerns for the fate of the country and the world, as 
they rushed to elect a man whose only credential for the job was his 
willingness to give voice to their hatreds, validate their anger, and target 
their enemies, real or imagined. One shudders to think of what it will mean to 
the world if Americans in November, knowing all that they do, elect to keep 
such a man in political power. But even should Trump be resoundingly defeated, 
it’s not at all clear that such a profoundly polarized nation will be able to 
find a way forward. For better or for worse, America has had its time.

The end of the American era and the passing of the torch to Asia is no occasion 
for celebration, no time to gloat. In a moment of international peril, when 
humanity might well have entered a dark age beyond all conceivable horrors, the 
industrial might of the United States, together with the blood of ordinary 
Russian soldiers, literally saved the world. American ideals, as celebrated by 
Madison and Monroe, Lincoln, Roosevelt, and Kennedy, at one time inspired and 
gave hope to millions.

If and when the Chinese are ascendant, with their concentration camps for the 
Uighurs, the ruthless reach of their military, their 200 million surveillance 
cameras watching every move and gesture of their people, we will surely long 
for the best years of the American century. For the moment, we have only the 
kleptocracy of Donald Trump. Between praising the Chinese for their treatment 
of the Uighurs, describing their internment and torture as “exactly the right 
thing to do,” and his dispensing of medical advice concerning the therapeutic 
use of chemical disinfectants, Trump blithely remarked, “One day, it’s like a 
miracle, it will disappear.” He had in mind, of course, the coronavirus, but, 
as others have said, he might just as well have been referring to the American 
dream.

Cardi B, Megan Thee Stallion Drop Steamy ‘WAP’ Video | RS News 8/7/20
More Videos
Next Up
‘High Fidelity’ Canceled After One Season | RS News 8/6/20
00:56
Live
00:00
01:14
01:14
Copied
Copied


Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/6B5A868E-86DB-436A-B188-E7F8D48E2607%40radicalcentrism.org.

Reply via email to