
Wilson noted that one of the best ways to understand American exceptionalism is to look at polls. Three-quarters of Americans say they are proud to be Americans; only one-third of the people in France, Italy, Germany, and Japan give that response about their own countries. Two-thirds of Americans believe that success in life depends on one's own efforts; only one-third of Europeans say that. Half of Americans, compared to one-third of Europeans, say belief in God is essential to living a moral life.
American constitutionalism is unique in its emphasis on individual rights, decentralization, and suspicion of government authority.
I like that one!
Half of Americans, compared to one-third of Europeans, say belief in God is essential to living a moral life.
We need a moral revolution in this country.
Yes, all these God-believers are scary:
But the article points out something very important. America is not all about ego and selfishness:
But for American popular culture, the system of self-restraint has broken down due to cultural and technological changes. And now, around the world, "what people see [in our movies and music] is a quite striking distortion" of what America actually is. It is an America of individualism and personal freedom, divorced from the bonds of neighborhood, community, and family. Bayles argued that "we can't reclaim or bring back the self-restraint." There is no political will for censorship, she concluded, but "I wouldn't mind soul-searching among the entertainment industry."
I think that this is a pretty shallow conclusion. The broader truth is that there is deep corruption of fundamental moral values in American culture that is breaking down the fabric of our democracy. There is broad room for people to have their individual "pursuit of happiness" but that's not to say that only good can come out of selfishness. As the article points out we're in a period where America's great blessings are not shared fairly by all who help to create them. We have more billionaires than any other nation on the planet - and more people in prison than any other nation, one fourth of the world's total prisoners, in fact. So is it really a free nation that's creating these benefits today? Or is it the vestiges of a free nation that's swung into totalitarianism for most people while a thin layer of society whoops it up on the top end?
At the end of the day it's not as important to be unique as it is to be doing the right things. I'd be happier if more nations were able to emulate our system effectively. The fact that they cannot do that spontaneously seems to indicate that there may be flaws in our exceptionalism as well. Perhaps we've been the benefactors of some great conditions that we thought were inherent to the goodness of our success which in fact were fairly short-lived circumstances.
I believe that there is indeed a curious and powerful genius to the American system, but I don't see it as an excuse to justify immorality. Excessive greed is immoral. Excessive power over other people's lives is immoral. Excessive exercise of governmental power without the consent of the governed is immoral. These are things which our system of government was in theory designed to countervail, but it does it haphazardly at best sometimes.
PH, do you agree that the problem is the fact that the US is (at least since Reagan) a greedy ME society and NOT a WE society?
PH, do you agree that the problem is the fact that the US is (at least since Reagan) a greedy ME society and NOT a WE society?
Greed has always been a part of the American consciousness, but somewhere we got Gordon Gecko in the 1980s telling us "Greed is good." It somehow became codified that for the average American if you played by the rules you were a chump, if you didn't "have it all, pinstripes and rock and roll" to quote an old beer commercial, then you were not good enough. There's always a balance between me and we in U.S. society, and it's not like we weren't born of a breed with pretty sharp elbows, but we've lost much of the "we" in our consumer society. I think that's starting to change, though.
I think that's starting to change, though.
I think so too. I think we are being forced to change it, really. We are on the precipice of a decline in our economy like none that any of the Baby Boomers and beyond have seen. They will be looking for the perpetrator and Big Corporations
will find they have a bulls-eye on their backsides.
Big Corporations will find they have a bulls-eye on their backsides.
After nearly thirty years of downsizings, benefits cuts, turning loyal employees into disposables, I think that the backlash is growing indeed.
I don't think We have any choice But to change our thinking! With the state of the world, we must get on the human track and off the fast track. Move away from the material girl and toward the Ethereal girl so to speak. If we want to advance as a society. IMO
Move away from the material girl and toward the Ethereal girl so to speak.
I love this, thanks!
Your welcome, It is true!!
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