Brendan Bannon for The New York Times |
Are We Unraveling?
Sunday Review / International New York Times | 9 July 2016
Ross Douthat |
THE center is not holding.
We are
not a country in open revolution. We are not a country under enemy siege. We are
the United States of America in the sticky summer of 2016, and the market is up
and the unemployment rate is low and the president’s approval ratings are solid
and it could have been a moment of brave hope and national resurgence, but it
is not, and from the grandstands at Trump rallies to the streets of Dallas to
the mad world of social media everyone knows that it is not.
The
alert reader may have noted that I’m plagiarizing here: Those are the opening
lines, condensed and somewhat altered, of Joan Didion’s “Slouching
Toward Bethlehem,” written just as America entered the
maelstrom of the later ‘60s and the ‘70s.
History
rhymes rather than repeats; we are not reliving the widening gyre that Didion
discerned. But there are echoes and recurrences linking this difficult moment
to the American berserk of two generations back.
Now as
then there is urban unrest, a
sudden rise in homicides, tensions between protesters
and cops; even white nationalism is re-emerging from its post-segregation
sleep. Now as then there is campus activism, the New Left reborn as Social
Justice Warriors. Now as then there is a spate of domestic terror attacks. Now
as then — much more now than then, in fact — there is a pervasive mistrust of
institutions, a sense that the country is rotting from the head down.
Our
personalities echo the past as well. Donald Trump as George Wallace. Bernie
Sanders as Gene McCarthy. Hillary as the Democrats’ own Richard Nixon. Even Pope
Francis, our era’s defining religious figure, is very much a character out of
Catholicism’s 1970s-era civil wars.
There
are also demographic echoes. The millennial generation has just overtaken
the baby boomers as America’s largest cohort. Like
the boomers, they’ve been shaped by a communications revolution (TV then, the
internet now), various sexual revolutions (gay and transgender rights, online
dating, ubiquitous pornography), a retreat from churchgoing and family
formation (the U.S. birthrate is scraping its 1970s-era lows). And millennials
are in roughly the same place in the generational life cycle as the boomers
were in mid-1970s — the 1990s were their prosperous childhood Fifties, 9/11
their Kennedy assassination, Obama-era liberalism their Great Society — and we
could be entering their dark wood, their crisis years.
But
now for a reality check, a reminder of the stark differences between
Nixon-era America and our own. There is no Vietnam War, no draft, no Weather
Underground, no spate of political assassinations. There is no massive crime
wave, no urban collapse, no surge in social pathology. Our campus protests are
more “days of wounded self-righteous hypersensitivity” than days of rage. The
millennial generation seems atomized but relatively well-behaved, their
passions channeled into virtual realms (Twitter fights, video games, porn)
rather than the streets. The post-Ferguson spike in homicides is real, but the
generation-long decline in violent crime is still the more important social
fact.
Such
is the case for relative optimism in the face of the present feeling of unraveling.
But
optimism only carries you so far. I would rather not repeat even part of the
national nervous breakdown that “Slouching Toward Bethlehem” saw coming, not
least because many of our institutions never fully recovered from that era’s
crises.
The
chaos of the Nixon era enfiladed a culture with stable-seeming families,
healthy civic life, well-attended churches, trusted public institutions — a
culture in which leading Republicans and Democrats still seemed to like one
another, in which civil rights activists and white Southerners shared a common
theological tradition, in which wages had been rising for a decades while
divisions of class and ethnicity diminished.
Whereas
our present nervous breakdown is happening in (to borrow the title of Yuval
Levin’s excellent new book) “a fractured republic” —
a society where elites are widely loathed, where the political parties are
polarized and one of them is so hollow that a rank demagogue could seize it,
where diversity and distrust have risen together, where wage growth has been
disappointing, where families are fragmented and churches and civic
organizations are in eclipse, where the metaphysical common ground provided by
the old Mainline-Protestant consensus has all but disappeared.
The late 1960s and 1970s
weakened many instruments of American consensus, many institutions that seemed
to guarantee stability. We’ve been muddling through without them ever since,
often confounding pessimists along the way. We’ll probably muddle through
again.
But still — may the cup
of crisis pass from us, and soon.
Sin, when it is conceived bring forth death. Personal, National and Governmental. Torah gives freedom, lawlessness bring confusions and all the right political analysis will not change the disorder by continual rebellion.
ReplyDeleteWhen people reject the True God they love death! The Christian kingdom rejected the Torah, because they thought it is a bondage [because apostle Paul said so]. Yet somewhere in Psalm it says, "the law (Torah) of the LORD is perfect.." So why opt for an imperfect laws that are made by men? Doesn't make perfect sense in reasoning. But in the end...this world will be rule by the Torah (Law) of God. God was right all along, it is the imperfect humans who refused to obey what is good for man, instead, choose Democracy. What's good for Israel is good for all nations. One law, One God, and One Truth.