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America's season of discontent

Bob Herbert, writing in yesterday's NY Times, touches on the nagging sense of dread felt by many these days. 

It was a July Fourth like many others. There was nothing overt to signal anything was wrong. The Red Sox had traveled from Boston to play a weekend series against the Yankees in the Bronx. In Washington, the National Independence Day Parade made its way along Constitution Avenue.

And yet, there was an undercurrent of anxiety in the land. Vacations have been curtailed because of the price of fuel. Since the holiday fell on a Friday, the monthly unemployment numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics were released a day early, on Thursday. They weren’t good. The Times summed things up with a Page 1 headline:

“Outlook Darker as Jobs Are Lost and Wages Stall.”

The high and the low were being buffeted. The bad news bears were loose on Wall Street, and the prospects for the summer employment of teenagers were abysmal. The national employment rate for teens in June was the lowest in 60 years.

But the anxiety seems more intense than the usual concern for a cyclical economic downturn. Something fundamental seems to have gone haywire. David Boren, a former U.S. senator who is now president of the University of Oklahoma, has written a short book that he called, “A Letter to America.”

His sense of alarm in the opening paragraph could not have been clearer. “The country we love is in trouble,” he said. “In truth, we are in grave danger of declining as a nation. If we do not act quickly, that decline will become dramatic.”

I couldn’t agree more. The symbols of patriotism — bumper stickers and those flags the size of baseball fields — have taken the place of the hard work and sacrifice required to keep a great nation great.

You know that matters have gotten out of hand when, as we learned this week, American instructors at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, gave classes on torture techniques used by the Communists to extract false testimony from American prisoners during the Korean War.

Talk about defining deviancy down! As Al Gore reminds us, this is the first time in American history that “the executive branch of the government has not only condoned but actively promoted the treatment of captives in wartime that clearly involves torture, thus overturning a prohibition established by Gen. George Washington during the Revolutionary War.”

There are signs galore of the nation’s turn for the worse. We are fighting a debilitating war in Iraq without any idea of how to pay for it — or how to end it. No one has any real idea about how to cope with the devastating energy crisis, or how to turn the economy around.

The airline industry is a first-class mess and the knees of the General Motors colossus have buckled. Locks are being changed on foreclosed homes across the country and working families lucky enough to meet their mortgages are watching the value of their homes decline.

We can build spectacular new stadiums for football and baseball teams (the Yanks, the Mets, the Giants and the Jets are all getting ready to move into staggeringly expensive new homes) but we can’t rebuild New Orleans or reconstruct the World Trade Center site destroyed almost seven years ago. ....

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4 Comments

  • joe bernstein said:

    Sometimes it seems like the production end of our economy has gotten tired.And no wonder.It's hard to start up a manufacturing business today.

    Essentially,our main competitors are India and China.Russia has lousy quality control on everything except vodka(which may explain the state of quality control)-China,in particular,has no problem starting up new industrial sites without environmental impact studies,they burn huge quantites of coal(they still run steam engines on many trains!!),the concept of OSHA is a bad joke over there,they pay little,and they extract natural resources without any concern for collateral damage.All the while we get ourselves into contortions over drilling for oil.

    And then we're surprised that their economy is aggressive,particularly in manufacturing/export?

    The Chinese had the equivalent of multinationals(the"Overseas Chinese")before we were independent.

    Any ideas on this?

    Oh-and India-competition in the "soft end" of cyberbusiness.

    July 6, 2008 4:44 PM
  • Ian Donnis said:

    The renewable energy, digital media and IT sectors, while hardly a cureall, offer promise for growth in RI.

    July 7, 2008 9:39 AM
  • joe bernstein said:

    I have no argument there ian,but those industries require good literacy and more than a HS diploma in most cases.People who have only a HS diploma,GED,or nothing also need decent employment to break the poverty cycle,because public funds are drying up for them.

    July 7, 2008 3:30 PM
  • Ian Donnis said:

    Agreed. A better educated workforce is a big need hereabouts.

    July 8, 2008 1:11 PM

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