Umair Haque is an economist and a brilliant analyst of social and political trends. I read whatever he writes with a sense of amazement at his insight and his ability to synthesize events and their underlying causes. The following post from his blog called “The Issue” is especially alarming. It explains a lot about why we don’t have good health care, why the public sector is neglected, why privatization has run amok.
If you read one thing today, read this.
He writes:
He’s cruising towards clinching the nomination—as we all knew he would. The dreaded Trump-Biden rematch appears to be squarely in the sights.
And there are many, many theories being floated about Trump’s resurgence. Did he ever really go away, though? Still, it’s worth examining them for a moment. Trumpism’s a form of racial power, in a society divided. Trump’s power’s amplified by technology and society’s dependence on social media. Trump might win, but the coalition’s going to be so unstable he won’t accomplish much. It’s the last gasp of a nation facing demographic change. And so on.
I think that all these carry water. But I also think…there’s a truer truth at work here. Perhaps, in a sense, Trumpism’s America’s destiny. I know that’s a provocative thing to say, but I don’t mean it that way. I just can’t help thinking it lately, because…
What’s the most salient fact about America? Americans? Even—especially—Trumpists? The vast majority of Americans want a very, very different society. A more…can I say it? Liberal one. Even Trumpists don’t agree with most of Trump’s policies—they just support Trump, the Father Figure, come hell or high water. But when we ask Americans what kind of society they want, invariably, the vast, vast majority will plead for things like healthcare, childcare, retirement, stability, security. In short, Americans want eudaemonia—genuinely good lives.
But a kind of Stockholm Syndrome’s set in. They won’t…choose that form of sociopolitical economy. Even when it’s offered to them time and time again, whether in the way of a Bernie, or a Liz, and so forth.
Why is that? What explains that? This isn’t just “voting against your own interests”—it’s something stranger, deeper, weirder: remember, even Trumpists don’t agree with much of Trump’s agenda. So what can explain this pattern persisting over decades?
Let’s look at America objectively for a moment. What do you see? We’re going to speak factually, empirically—this isn’t about politics at all, really.
America’s a nation which failed to modernize, as I often say. It didn’t invest in itself. Europe and Canada’s investment rate is about 50%—while America’s is just 20% or so. Hence, Europeans and Canadians have cutting edge social contracts—made of the very things Americans desperately lack, like universal healthcare, childcare, high-speed rail, retirement, and so on. It’s true that in recent years, for example, in Europe, investment hasn’t kept pace—and hence, pessimism has grown there, too.
But America’s a special case. Its flatly refused to build a functioning social contract for…the entire modern era. Decade after decade, America’s rejected basic public goods. And so the result of course is that Americans pay eye-watering rates for everything that’s free in most other rich nations—education, healthcare, etc. My favorite example is universities. Harvard will set you back north of $60K a year—the Sorbonne in Paris is free. That’s the difference a functional social contract makes.
America’s social contract, sadly, is more pre-modern, Darwinian, Victorian: the strong survive, the weak fall and or perish, and that’s what’s not just right and just, but “efficient” and “productive.” Life is dog-eat-dog, and brutal competition defines every aspect of life. But how has that worked out?
Before we get there, another question needs to be asked. Why did—do—Americans fail to choose a modern social contract, time and again? There are many reasons, each one like the layer of an onion. It wasn’t offered to them. They were offered a lukewarm choice between Reaganomics, and then Clintonomics—etcetera. All of these, while they differed in the details, were variants of the same form of economy: nobody should have anything much as a basic right, everything should be financialized and capitalized, profit-maximization in “free” markets would unleash prosperity for all, and the wealth would trickle down.
But the very opposite happened. The wealth trickled up. We recently discussed how billionaires have gotten so much richer just during the pandemic that every American household would be $40,000 better off. That’s more than the median income—an astonishing statistic. And that comes after yet another wealth transfer upwards, during the last few decades—$50 trillion to the very richest. That’s half of the entire world’s GDP. Another startling statistic.
America, in other words, was the subject of Grand Social Experiment. Call it what you like—hypercapitalism, free markets, neoliberalism. We’re at the point where labels don’t matter much anymore—just the point does. The experiment failed. I’m not saying that American life is all bad, but I am saying that the results are self-evident: democracy’s on the brink, there’s a feeling of hopelessness on every side, among every social group, generation after generation’s experiencing rapid, sharp downward mobility, and young people say they “can’t function anymore”—just a smattering of statistics of social collapse.
So. America was a nation that failed to invest in itself—the Grand Social Experiment. We can put it in yet another way, a more philosophical one: all the old guff about “standing on your own two feet” and “pulling yourself up by your bootstraps” and whatnot. The results have been catastrophic: now democracy itself faces an existential challenge from a figure who’s already tried to unseat it once.
How are those two things linked? I think they’re connected in many, many ways. You see, when people experience what Americans have, especially those in the former working and lower middle class—a profound sense of dread, hopelessness, even trauma, shaped by downward mobility, and the disappearance of a future, community, social bonds, security, stability—they seek just strength and succor in the arms of demagogues. Those wounds open the door for an omnipotent Father Figure—they practically invoke the need for one.
These are shades of Weimar Germany, of course. The demagogue arrives, and scapegoats long-hated groups in society, blaming them for the woes of the pure and true. Isn’t that more or less what Trumpism’s appeal is based on? And doesn’t it begin to explain just why plenty of those who support Trump as demagogue even when they want a very, very different society from the one he’s going to deliver? They’re not thinking straight, as we all say. But there’s a reason why. The wounds go deep, right into existential territory itself. And then there’s an existential backlash, too. It’s me or you. I’m the master, you’re the slave. I deserve to live, you deserve to…
All Grand Social Experiments need…maybe not propaganda, but a certain ideological hardening to take place. They can’t happen otherwise. And this, too, is what happened in America. People were fed the myths of “free markets” and “trickle down economics” and so on for decades. So much so that even to this day to challenge them is to be labelled a “socialist.”
This was a process of ideological politicization. That is, these were all theories. Politics trucks in theories. But when those theories come true—or not—then we’re in the realm of empiricism, facts, reality. Americans were told that these theories had to come true. So much so that both parties offered slightly different versions of them. Sadly, that’s still true today—the Democrats are there for democracy’s sake, true, but they’re hardly offering much in the way of a modern social contract. Yes, on issues like abortion, the Democrats offer something better than theocracy. Still, their notion of progress falls well short of a truly modern social contract. Both parties agree, basically, that a modern social contract isn’t something Americans enjoy. That’s how deep this ideological hardening goes.
“Conditioning” might be too strong a word—but certainly, Americans were told to believe in the Grand Social Experiment for decades, to the point that any other alternative was considered “radical,” or even “communist” and so on—even while Europe and Canada proceeded to forge a different, socially democratic path. And of course it’s eminently true that there was a racial component to all this: Americans were told to reject “paying for those people’s schools” or educations or what have you, the clear implication being that “they” were different, lazy, foolish, liabilities. No clear aspiration to universalism was had, and in no sense were Americans bonded together as equals—the strong were to survive, and the weak perish, and that was what was moral, just, true, and theoretically sound, the key, somehow, to prosperity. Lead was to turn to gold. And to question it was taboo.
America still lives in the residue of this process of ideological hardening. This conditioning, though like I said, I think that’s too strong a word. I think that’s what explains this strange Stockholm Syndrome: Americans want a modern social contract, by and large, and yet here they are, unable to bring themselves to back one. In that vacuum, in that gap, what choice is left? The insecurity and instability, the fear and trauma—they turn people towards demagoguery. They reopen old wounds of hate and spite, instead of healing them with prosperity and trust and progress. They reduce people to their animal selves, seeking what stability and security they can find in older hierarchies of power and dominance, in which there appears to be some nostalgic certainty.
That’s a lot to chew on. I’m not saying I’m right. But I am saying that this may be where a society that fails to forge a modern social contract ends up. Haven’t we seen just this in plenty of “third world” countries? This oscillation between democracy and authoritarianism? I’m not saying America’s a “third world” country—don’t kid yourself, it’s not exactly Bangladesh. But I am saying that this place isn’t a stable equilibrium. The place the Grand Social Experiment—everyone’s a competitor, rival, adversary, in a brutal game called only the strong survive—ends? It might be right here. Destiny.
Destiny, of course, isn’t fate. It can be made and remade. But will America understand that before it’s too late?

According to Robert Reich, the voting populace is now at about 50% Independent, 25% Dem, and 25% Rep. This just goes to show that many people are unhappy with The Parties (2) and the way that they have conducted “business” on behalf of the taxpayers/voters in this country. Unfortunately, we are grounded in this 2 party system that seems to want to “do good” only for those that can financially support their “win” for the system. It’s always a win for a Party, but never a win for the People.
My voter registration change from Dem to Independent is the ONLY way that I am able to protest against this rigged 2 party system….and yes, I do think it’s rigged in certain aspects. It’s time for change!
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Research showed a substantial number of independents consistently align with one party despite their claims otherwise.
Finding a Republican in US Congress who will vote against
the interests of the richest 0.1% is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. There is an economic progressive contingent in the Democratic Party. They fight for public schools, Social Security, progressive taxes, consumer protection, etc. There is “little guy” propaganda without votes in the GOP.
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Independent does nothing for me in New York, except shut me out of the primary process.
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YUP. Same in many other states.
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Same in my state….but that’s the point, really. That’s the part that’s rigged! I can tell you who will be on the ballot even before the primaries. Just look how it turned out in 2016 when the DNC decided it wanted what it wanted and killed Bernie’s momentum in the southern states. And I know I’ll get the crazy ones on this blog coming after me with paragraphs of nonsense, but Dems/Centrists/I’s stayed home because they didn’t want to vote for HRC. Yes, I know she won the popular vote, but she didn’t win the election. People didn’t want another 4 yrs of Obama-like politics.
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Anyone who lives in NYC understands that if some nameless evil democrat organization “controlled” the primary, there would be no Bill de Blasio, no AOC, no Jamaal Bowman, no Jumaane Williams.
There is a disconnect between someone claiming that the DNC did something to prevent Bernie from being the nominee and embracing a “No Labels” movement funded by dark money that they don’t care about that includes anti-progressive, Bernie Sanders-hating politicians like Joe Manchin, Krysten Sinema, Joe Lieberman and Susan Collins.
Manchin and Sinema have blocked good progressive legislation that Bernie Sanders wanted.
It is certainly true that the people who didn’t vote for the Democrat in 2016 got the right wing Supreme Court they wanted to have. Most people who voted against the Democrats are very proud to own their vote and celebrate that their vote helped bring about the far right future they wanted. A few folks incomprehensibly say that they didn’t want the far right agenda but they knew that voting against the Democrats and doing the opposite of what Bernie wanted was really to help Bernie’s agenda. How stupid do they think we are?
Stupid enough to believe that the way to get big money out of politics is to support Joe Manchin and Krystin Sinema?? lol!
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I don’t think the two-party system is rigged.
Who chose RFK Jr. to run? Or Jill Stein? Or No Labels? Or Cornell West or Marianne Williamson?
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They have $$….but not BIG MONEY
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I really wish we had a parliamentary system. It makes so much more sense.
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Or some kind of ranked voting. But that will never happen because politics has become a well oiled and well funded (by the rich) machine. I’m not a fan of Ronald Reagan, but I wish we could go back to the early days of Reagan-omics knowing what we know now. I really do believe that Bush 1 tried to plug the hole once he saw what was happening but only had the 1 term.
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One of the most “Democratic” city in the country has ranked voting. I support it, but having a politician like Eric Adams who only a No Labels person would love is hardly a good argument.
Meanwhile, AOC and the squad and Jamaal Bowman won elections as Democrats, while the No Labels party is for those who believe Joe Manchin is the savior of getting money out of politics.
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NYC,
After the election of Eric Adams, I’m dubious about ranked choice voting. Others in the race would have been better mayors.
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Diane,
I see your point. For me, the jury is still out, although the election of Eric Adams is definitely NOT a ringing endorsement of it working.
I brought that up because LisaM said that ranked choice voting “will never happen because politics has become a well oiled and well funded (by the rich) machine.” But it HAS already happened in one of the most Democratic cities in the country, and yet she continues to condemn the Dems and scapegoat them for the problems that the conservative Dem politicians in No Labels and the Republicans caused.
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NYC, I am not a fan of our mayor. I voted for Maya Wiley. My second choice was Garcia.
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What’s needed is, of course, a good ole Stalinist purge of the ideologically impure.
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“Why do Americans fail to choose a modern social contract…shades of,”
the Great Hunger in Ireland, the alignment of priests and despots when 1,000,000 Irish died of starvation. The modern political alignment of the Catholic Church, evangelicals and Charles Koch sealed the nation’s fate.
As example, last week, in South Dakota – an almost $100,000,000 budget surplus but, the vote against $570,000 for school lunches for the needy won. Rep. Phil Jensen explained the reason, St. Paul said the Catholic Church should provide for the needy not the government.
The Keloland Media Group’s reporting about the vote against school lunches should be an accompaniment to the Umair Hague article but, it doesn’t fit the narrative. Influencers and most mainstream media prefer to explain voting in the central states sans religious influence.
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Gee. I thought a potato blight caused the famine in Ireland and that the wealthy, mostly PROTESTANT English landlords did little to alleviate the hunger, to the extent that Great Britain issued an apology for this during Tony Blair’s administration. But here it was the Catholic Church all along, sneaking into fields at night and infecting potatoes. But that’s not surprising, given that EVERY EVIL is caused by Catholics or Catholicism. For example, right now, I need to vacuum my rug in the living room. Doubtless this is because of the dust wafting in from the incense used in Catholic masses. And, of course, that school shooter in Nevada? I have it on good authority that his mother’s friend’s fourth cousin was an altar boy one Sunday when he was a kid. Need I say more?
And to show you just how sneaky and underhanded these Catholics are, troglodyte South Dakota state representative and Trumpanzee Phil Jensen must only pretend to be a member of The Calvary Chapel Community Church in Rapid City, a protestant evangelical church, because he is actually a spokesperson for Catholics and Catholicism. Insidious!
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Each party has its wackos and weirdos. But, at least on the national level, only one of the parties takes its wackos and weirdos and makes them the leadership of the party.
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There is a profound false equivalence in this perspective that is far too prevalent in our discourse. MAGA Republicans have no position but chaos. They make no effort to use reason for their machinations because they simply want power. They are funded by forces that want everything for themselves while excluding the majority from opportunity. The liberals in the House, some referred to as the progressive caucus, do attempt to use justification for their position. It is because they advocate universal healthcare for all, free education, and affordable housing (All policies carried out by almost all developed nations) that they are labeled radicals. The same forces who chastised Martin Luther King Jr. for going too fast toward civil equality are the same ones who say such social contracts promoted by liberals are too much and unrealistic today. AOC works to get things done while MTG wants to tear things down. Big difference.
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because they simply want power
That’s what it comes down to. There are many people in the world who actually have no ethical code whatsoever. They are entirely amoral. And to them, it’s all about power. Might determines the right.
The psychopathic Henry Kissinger. Any garden-variety psychopath like Trump.
This is far more widespread than people think. There are a lot of people who just do not give a microbe on a hair on a rat’s tushy about anyone else. I had a guy say to me once, “Come on, Bob. If you had a sprained finger and could stop the pain by having some guy in China die, you would do it, right?”
He was serious, this guy. He thought that that’s how everyone thinks.
As I watch the MAGA movement, I’ve come more and more to believe that there are a LOT of people like that. They really don’t care if Trump orders the Border Patrol to SHOOT asylum seekers, if some toddler gets tangled up in Governor Abbott’s razor wire.
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Paul, I’m confused about what false equivalence you thinking I’m making. I didn’t mention AOC, you did. I’m not an AOC fan but I don’t view her as a wacko. In my view most of the wackos and weirdos on the left are in local governance and the non-profit sector.
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I don’t have enough information on DSA to comment. However, I do know that the profound investment in the Republican Party is absolutely corrupt. When the press repeats the George Soros trope I can’t help but laugh when compared to the plethora of corporate oligarchs so willing to fund MAGA and the likes of Nikki Haley. The current struggle over democracy is driven by forces who are willing to spend whatever it takes to avoid any regulation that would hold them accountable for grifting too many Americans and fleecing our government. The so called wackos on the left have none of that leverage or influence. The right has bought out much of legacy media and fuels much of the techbro cabal that makes their wealth breaking things.
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Apologies for the ever-present autocorrect errors.
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I note that although I don’t view AOC as a wacko, I view the DSA as absolute wackos and dirtbags. Her association with that organization is not a positive thing in my view.
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I certainly see why you think this of the DSA in New York (was it New York or elsewhere?). I think that the national organization disavowed that group’s response to the Hamas terrorist attack.
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It was NYC and elsewhere (Chicago, LA). The large chapters are probably where most of the membership is located, so that’s where you see what these people are really about. The national umbrella organization has scrubbed most of the substance of the group’s platform over the years — I remember years ago you could find a lot of stuff there but now it’s a shell. But even there they still advertise that their platform includes the complete abolishment of prisons and police (by increments but with the goal of total abolition). That alone tells you that they are extremist and utopian (i.e. crazy).
https://www.dsausa.org/working-groups/abolition-working-group/
It’s fine to want national healthcare and affordable housing. But you don’t have to associate yourself with a group that seeks to abolish policing and prisons, abolish capitalism, pull out of NATO (because of course NATO is a force of imperialism), end border security and stop all deportations to do that. Stay clear of these people.
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Social Democracy, sometimes referred to as Democratic Socialism, is a political stance–the most widely practiced in Europe. That some group calls itself the DSA and has insane views is irrelevant to whether Social Democracy is a political philosophy worth holding. I emphatically DO NOT identify with the DSA, and I would not join this group, but I am a Social Democrat, meaning that I am, in European terms, a run-of-the-mill centrist progressive–much to the left of the Fascists but to the right of the Greens or, all the gods forbid, the idiots in these chapters of the DSA who posted that pro-Hamas excrement.
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That’s where I am, Bob.
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FLERP,
A good synopsis. FDR was a democratic socialist in the modern European sense, not aligned with those who have hijacked the label DSA.
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FLERP!,
I agree 100%. And thank you for pointing out that regardless of whether you agree with her political positions, AOC is not a wacko. Whether some chapters of the DSA that have absolutely no political power or influence have “wacko” views is in no way equivalent to the Republican party which essentially expells any politician who doesn’t have wacko views, or at least is terrified of admitting they do not!
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The DSA has a lot of influence in NY state and NYC. None nationally, thank God.
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What “influence” does the DSA have?
If there aren’t a significant number of politicians in office who are spewing the kind of far left DSA ideology that you are criticizing (as opposed to supporting Bernie Sanders’ positions), then what influence do they have at all?
If anything, it seems like if the DSA takes a position that confirms with mainstream progressive thought, there are people who agree, but if there are a few chapters who are as you call them “wackos”, they have no influence at all.
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The New Republic published a letter by 24 Democratic Socialists who left DSA because of its reaction to The Hamas atrocities: https://newrepublic.com/article/176781/open-letter-why-leaving-democratic-socialists-america
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“Americans want eudaemonia—genuinely good lives.”
In the writing of the founding fathers, eudomonia was a word Jefferson used for “happiness “ in his replacement of Locke’s phrase: Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. To the Greeks, this word meant: the happiness one derived from being empowered to direct one’s own destiny through collective participation in government, a sentiment political philosophers like John Stuart Mill lot on to justify the idea of the greatest good for the greatest number as the rule of thumb for the optimal society.
This author chose well to mention this concept, for modern political discourse has been reduced to trying to convince voters that there is more to fear from the them than the us.
I think Americans yearn for a political climate in which we rationally debate policy. What would help us get in that direction? I have a few ideas, as you might imagine.
One idea is related to antivax fervor. This is related to the fear that some abnormal aspect of an injection will lead to death, financial catastrophe, or both. If there were an adequate safety net for medical problems in general, it might go a long way toward alleviating this fear. Companies would not have to worry about the loss of their income, and families would not have to worry about the loss of their future if we just agreed as a society to pool the risk of trying to find answers to health challenges like Covid.
Another is a focus on minority vs majority rule in government. Democracies function when the majority rules, but respects the input of the minority and attempts to choose policy that benefits as many citizens as possible.
Naturally, there are many more points.
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My understanding of the meaning of the term eudaemonia, from ancient Greek, is that it meant flourishing in general. It is a portmanteau of words for “good” (eu) and for “spirit” (daimon). One is of good spirits when faring well. It appears widely in many classical Greek philosophers and is a very general term for “the good life.”
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Exactly. You put it better than I did. To a political philosopher, the good life is having control over your good life. I sort of agree. I read a study of perceived stress that made the point that the largest contribution to stress was a feeling that you were not in control of your own destiny.
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having control over your life
This is why teachers cannot function under current conditions of micromanagement and low autonomy. NOONE functions well under such conditions.
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Precisely. The article I read was in reference to the comparison of stress levels felt across various careers. It argued that teaching had replaced air traffic controllers as the most stressful occupation. It has been a decade since I read it, but I do not see any reason to believe that it would have, over that decade, ch as need much.
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I can’t imagine why anyone would want to do it under such conditions as exist now. It’s insane. Freaking primitives making people cover up their classroom libraries. Principals requiring that teachers do Data Walls and Data Chats and idiotic online test preppy Behaviorist bs. No thanks. Enormous amounts of busywork that has nothing whatsoever to do with teaching. Idiotic test preppy Common Cored textbooks. Ewww.
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I was just reading a top ten list of countries based on quality of life. Needless to say, the US wasn’t on the list. Sweden was top ranked followed by all the other Scandinavian countries, Canada, Switzerland and New Zealand. We are dissatisfied, but we need work on ways to countermand our rigged economy, which is not easy in a two party system where the wealthy can buy political will.
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It’s interesting, isn’t it, that Americans think of Socialism as this GREAT HORROR, but it is always a bunch of Socialist Democracies that head the list of happiest countries. These are typically countries in with wealth is taxed at highly progressive rates in order to provide the general populace with what is needed for them to experience eudaemonia.
I’m a big believer in existence proofs. And there they are.
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I can’t help but think of the irony that the U.S. led Marshall Plan put centralized efforts in place to improve the conditions of Europeans after WW II. Yet, we are unwilling to use our vast resources to address our own challenges. Think of what such an effort would do for educating our children, improving health outcomes, and providing opportunity for everyone. I guess such aspirations are unAmerican.
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Wow. You said a mouthful there, Paul. YES. YES. YES.
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My nephew is a DOD employee living abroad. He is currently living in European countries and never intends to reside here in the states with his family. He cites much better living/economic conditions for families and children. A better education system based on the needs of children (not testing/text book companies), and accessible healthcare even for the poor.
My hairdresser (her family) fled Viet Nam and came over to this country (in 1980) in the wave of the Malaysian Boat people. They applied legally and got citizenship and played by the rules. She is married to an American (non-asian). She is going back to Viet Nam when her husband retires. She is tired of “working like dog” and never being able to get ahead. She is tired of paying the high cost of health insurance (thru her husband’s large employer!) and then still having to pay large deductibles /co-pays and having to “work the system” to get any medical care authorized. Most Vietnamese Doctors are trained in the US and then go back home. Many of her asian friends are feeling the same way.
There are whole small towns in Mexico/Costa Rica etc that are ex-pat communities of people who are tired of the American way of life as it is right now. I’m considering a move when our college nightmare ($$$$) is over.
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I enjoy watching House Hunters International on HGTV. I get a vicarious, armchair trip from the show. Many young people are moving to other countries often citing “a better work-life balance” for the move. Some young couples where one spouse has ties to a particular country will choose to move back to a European country because of child care and/or health care costs in the US. Of course, there are also the retirees looking for a lower cost of living and a slower pace of life. The American Dream is getting lost in pursuit of profit. Most Americans are willing to work hard, but they feel they their labor should be rewarded accordingly.
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All the happiest countries are Social Democracies. Socialist countries. There is still private ownership, but there is high progressive taxation in order to ensure GENERAL well-faring.
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Anyone who wants to understand why America is at this point in its history must — must — read “THESE TRUTHS: A History of the United States by Harvard historian Jill LePore. After reading it, you will have a genuine grasp of all the factors that have brought our nation to this point in our history. Read it now.
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Thanks for the recommendation, quickwrit!
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I second that recommendation!
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Thanks, Mamie!
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There are some/many? blog readers who will gain knowledge from Lepore only to the point where it becomes inconvenient.
The Marginalian website reviewed, “These truths….” with a focus on religion. “How the shift from mythology to science shaped the early dream of democracy.”
To introduce the topic, Marginalian examined a Jefferson draft that was corrected by Benjamin Franklin.
The gravity of the issue is described, “This divide has nearly rent the Republic apart.”
The book reviewers explained Jefferson’s original draft included (in the discussion of rights), the words, “sacred and undeniable.” Franklin believed those words implied “God-given and divine which were the stuff of religion,” (Franklin) opted instead for words that were, “the stuff of science.”
When the discussion about religion and American democracy is at an intellectual level, it’s not inconvenient. When the right wing churches implement a legislative campaign at odds with Franklin’s critical correction, and they are called out on it, then, the knives come out. And, Lepore’s points become mere textbook talking points albeit, inconvenient.
,
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My favorite sentence in Haque’s thought provoking essay:
“I’m not saying America’s a ‘third world’ country—don’t kid yourself, it’s not exactly Bangladesh.”
And my favorite grin inducing word in that sentence: “exactly”
“Exactly” how close is the United States from becoming another Bangladesh?
And on one point, I do not agree totally with Haque.
I think a lot of the problems the United States faces today is the fact that when the Democrats want to do something progressive and they do not have enough votes to pull it off, Republicans block it from happening.
Immigration reform is one example.
And when Democrats have the votes and make headway on progressive issues, eventually the pendulum swings back putting Republicans back in power again. Then they start dismantling anything progressive the Democrats achieved during their few years in the driver’s seat.
If Trump wins in 2024, will he put a stop the Biden’s infrastructure updates?
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There are places in America that are pretty darned close.
And they go to the polls and vote for Trump. Go figure.
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Lloyd,
If Trump wins, God forbid, he will dismantle everything Biden did. The GOP wants to roll back everything since Hoover. 1928 is their ideal time.
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Capitalism is the American religion and greed is the creed. Jamie Dimon’s justification in Davos to support Trump, should he be reelected, said it all. As long as Wall Street and the Banks get their take, they are cool with a dwindling middle class. The ongoing tripe about the “tyranny of the majority” simply justifies the actions of feudal lords to suppress as the minority.
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Unregulated, unrestrained, eventually, capitalism eats democracy and then itself. Empires rise, and empires fall.
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Brilliant article. Thank you.
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Americans have been taught that we’re number one. They need to get out in the world and see how other societies function.
When my daughter was 15, she did a week’s homestay in France, through her school. The following year, the French girl she had visited stayed with us. They kept in touch, and we met Pauline again when were in Paris for my daughter’s 30 birthday.
The different expectations for both young women were large. My daughter had a very large student loan debt (when you’ve got public school parents and two sibs there isn’t a lot of money) and though she has a secure job, it’s not an extraordinary salary because it’s government work. Pauline, by contrast, had zero student debt, but a degree from a very well respected university. She worked part-time learning the process for making goat cheese and volunteered helping women refugees with re-settlement in France and learning French. She received a small monthly stipend from the government, as her earnings were below a certain standard.
When we talked later, my daughter was dismissive that her friend wasn’t working harder, trying to get ahead and have a “real”career. I pointed out that helping vulnerable new citizens acculturate and working in a boutique industry which is an essential facet of French culture is important work. Pauline was still living at her family home, had medical coverage, no student debt, and was free to explore ways in which she might make a contribution to her society, while finding a satisfying personal life.
We didn’t raise our kids to believe that work the most important thing in life, yet it had seeped into her thinking. Keeping young people socially insecure – with debt, no medical coverage, pressure to do work to pay for those essentials – drives them in ways that are unhealthy.
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They need to get out in the world
You said a lot there, Christine!!!
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