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Nickdfresh
11-30-2011, 08:04 PM
November 18, 2011
Decline of American Exceptionalism
By CHARLES M. BLOW

Is America exceptional among nations? Are we, as a country and a people and a culture, set apart and better than others? Are we, indeed, the “shining city upon a hill” that Ronald Reagan described? Are we “chosen by God and commissioned by history to be a model to the world” as George W. Bush said?

This year, for the first time, most Americans did not say yes.

According to a report issued on Thursday by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project, when Americans were asked if they agreed with the statement “our people are not perfect but our culture is superior to others,” only 49 percent agreed. That’s down from 60 percent in 2002, the first time that Pew asked the question.

Perhaps even more striking was that, among young people (those ages 18 to 29), the percentage of Americans who believed that their culture was superior was lower than young citizens of Germany, Spain and Britain.

Even if you put aside the somewhat loaded terminology of cultural superiority, Americans simply don’t seem to feel very positive about America at the moment. A Time Magazine/Abt SRBI poll conducted last month found that 71 percent of Americans believed that our position in the world has been on the decline in the past few years.

And an NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey conducted earlier this month found that most Americans believed that we aren’t simply going through tough times as a nation but are at “the start of a longer-term decline where the U.S. is no longer the leading country in the world.”

We are settling into a dangerous national pessimism. We must answer the big questions. Was our nation’s greatness about having God or having grit? Is exceptionalism an anointing or an ethos? If the answers are grit and ethos, then we must work to recapture them. We must work our way out of these doldrums. We must learn our way out. We must innovate our way out.

We have to stop snuggling up to nostalgia, acknowledge that we have allowed a mighty country to be brought low and set a course to restitution. And that course is through hard work and tough choices. You choose greatness; it doesn’t choose you.

And that means that we must invest in our future. We must invest in our crumbling infrastructure. We must invest in the industries of the future. We must invest in a generation of foundering and forgotten children. We must invest in education. Cut-and-grow is ruinous mythology.

We must look out at the world with clear eyes and sober minds and do the difficult work as we’ve done time and time again. That’s how a city shines upon a hill.


chblow@nytimes.com.

Link (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/19/opinion/blow-decline-of-american-exceptionalism.html)

NPR's "Talk of a Nation" Discussion Here (http://www.npr.org/programs/talk-of-the-nation/)

Nitro Express
11-30-2011, 10:35 PM
Well it sure beats the fake optimism when everyone ran to Wall-Mart bought a Chinese made American flag, waved it and yelled,"Go George Go!" The average person in this country was thrown under the bus 30 years ago. We have been lied to about how great free trade is and what a good thing NAFTA was. Good if you profit from slave labor. It went to shit a long time ago people just didn't notice when the loans were easy and there was shopping to do thanks to Alan Greenspan. As far as the future is concerned the big debate is if the situation is fixable or if the American people have been dumbed down and fucked over enough to be beyond pulling out of the mess. History shows the latter usually happens. But then the US has always been unique so maybe the typical regression analysis doesn't apply. We will see. I think most people with a brain are going to try and do what they can do to fix things but they have a plan B exit strategy.

A sure sign that it has really gone to shit is when the government builds a wall. Not to keep the illegal aliens out but to keep the US citizens in.