But the honor code has also been decimated by the culture of the modern meritocracy, which awards status to the individual who works with his mind, and devalues the class of people who work with their hands.
Most of all, it has been undermined by rampant consumerism, by celebrity culture, by reality-TV fantasies that tell people success comes in a quick flash of publicity, not through steady work.
Revolt of the Masses
International New York Times | 28 June 2016
| David Brooks |
Anybody who spends time in the working-class parts of America
(and, one presumes, Britain) notices the contagions of drug addiction and
suicide, and the feelings of anomie [social instability resulting from a breakdown of standards and values], cynicism, pessimism and resentment.
Part of this pain arises from
deindustrialization. Good jobs are hard to find. But hardship is not exactly
new to these places. Life in, say, a coal valley was never a bouquet of roses.
What’s also been lost are the social
institutions and cultural values that made it possible to have self-respect
amid hardship — to say, “I may not make a lot of money, but people can count on
me. I’m loyal, tough, hard-working, resilient and part of a good community.”
We all have a sense of what that working-class honor code was, but if you want a refresher, I recommend J.D. Vance’s new book “Hillbilly Elegy.” Vance’s family is from Kentucky and Ohio, and his description of the culture he grew up in is essential reading for this moment in history.
He describes a culture of intense
group loyalty. Families might be messed up in a million ways, but any act of disloyalty
— like sharing personal secrets with outsiders — is felt acutely. This loyalty
culture helps people take care of their own, but it also means there can be
hostility to those who want to move up and out. And there can be intense
parochialism. “We do not like outsiders,” Vance writes, “or people who are
different from us, whether difference lies in how they look, how they act, or,
most important, how they talk.”
It’s also a
culture that values physical toughness. It’s a culture that celebrates people
who are willing to fight to defend their honor. This is something that
progressives never get about gun control. They see a debate about mass murder,
but for many people guns are about a family’s ability to stand up for itself in
a dangerous world.
It’s also a culture with a lot of
collective pride. In my travels, you can’t go five minutes without having a
conversation about a local sports team. Sports has become the binding religion,
offering identity, value, and solidarity.
Much of this pride is nationalistic.
Vance’s grandparents, he writes, “taught me that we live in the best and
greatest country on earth. This fact gave meaning to my childhood.”
When I lived in Brussels, this
sort of intense personal patriotism was simply not felt by the people who ran
the E.U., but it was felt by a lot of people in the member states.
This honor code has been decimated
lately. Conservatives argue that it has been decimated by cosmopolitan cultural
elites who look down on rural rubes. There’s some truth to this, as the reactions
of smug elites to the Brexit vote demonstrate.
But the honor code has also been
decimated by the culture of the modern meritocracy, which awards status to the
individual who works with his mind, and devalues the class of people who work
with their hands.
Most of all, it has been
undermined by rampant consumerism, by celebrity culture, by reality-TV
fantasies that tell people success comes in a quick flash of publicity, not
through steady work. The sociologist Daniel Bell once argued that capitalism
would undermine itself because it encouraged hedonistic short-term values for
consumers while requiring self-disciplined long-term values in its workers. At
least in one segment of society, Bell was absolutely correct.
There’s now a rift within the
working class between mostly older people who are self disciplined, respectable
and, often, bigoted, and parts of a younger cohort that are more disordered,
less industrious, more celebrity-obsessed, but also more tolerant and open to
the world.
Trump (and probably
Brexit) voters are in the first group. They are not poor, making on average
over $70,000 a year. But they perceive that their grandchildren’s world is
quickly coming apart.
From 1945 to 1995, conservative
and liberal elites shared variations of the same vision of the future. Liberals
emphasized multilateral institutions and conservatives emphasized free trade.
Either way, the future would be global, integrated and multiethnic.
But the elites pushed too hard,
and now history is moving in the opposite direction. The less-educated masses
have a different conception of the future, a vision that is more closed,
collective, protective and segmented.
Their pain is indivisible:
economic stress, community breakdown, ethnic bigotry and a loss of social
status and self-worth. When people feel their world is vanishing, they are easy
prey for fact-free magical thinking and demagogues who blame immigrants.
We need a better form of
nationalism, a vision of patriotism that gives dignity to those who have been
disrespected, emphasizes that we are one nation and is confident and open to
the world. I’m thinking we have a lot to learn from Theodore Roosevelt, but that’s
a topic for another day.
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