America, it seems, is always in decline.
Searching through Amazon.com reveals plenty of works arguing that America's best days are behind her. From the 1974 novel The Decline and Fall of America; to William Dietrich's 1991 book, In the Shadow of the Rising Sun: The Political Roots of American Economic Decline, about Japan's inevitable surpassing of America economically; to the more recent The Death of the West by the always upbeat Patrick Buchanan, most such works of gloom-and-doom have usually been followed by years of tremendous peace and prosperity. After a while it is hard to take any book about American decline seriously.
However, if there a reason to treat the idea of our society's fall with grave concern, it is that a book has now been written about it by Thomas Sowell.
Entitled Dismantling America, it is a collection of some of his more recent newspaper columns grouped into five sections -- government policies, political issues, economic issues, cultural issues, and legal issues -- with some added commentary beginning each section.
Sowell's thesis is encapsulated in the following passage:
The collapse of a civilization is not just the replacement of rulers or institutions with new rulers and new institutions. It is the destruction of a whole way of life and the painful, and sometimes pathetic, attempts to begin rebuilding amid the ruins.
Is that where American is headed? I believe it is. Our only saving grace is that we are not there yet.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
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