By Michael Moran | Posted
Monday, Nov. 7, 2011, at 1:21 PM ET
America’s insularity knows no bounds. This is a paradoxical
statement, of course, but it’s an apt way to describe America’s current
debate about “our future,” and not a bad way to view Washington’s
strained efforts to grapple with an economy wounded by two decades of
economic Puritanism. As grand as the rhetoric may be, politicians in the
United States remain incapable of looking beyond the next election—this
goes for the haughty Democrat in the White House and goes double for
the Republican opposition. The fact is, airy-fairy optimism still sells
on the campaign trail, particularly when the day-to-day reality of the
average American is so difficult. Christian, agnostic, Jew, Muslim, or
otherwise, we’re a country of people constantly seeking redemption, and
we’re suckers for a smooth-talking messiah.
Not this time. At the risk of breaking the hearts that throb for Rick
Perry, Mitt Romney or Barack Obama, they cannot deliver us from the
future. Thanks to a catastrophic series of decisions by presidents of
both parties that radically deregulated our financial system and
arrogantly dismissed the “lessons of Vietnam” as dusty, irrelevant
history, the United States has shortened the period during which it will
remain the dominant power in the 21st century. I know, I
know, all the presidential candidates say we’re still the best! And so
we are, in almost every economic and military measure. But measurements
of power are like the altimeter of an aircraft: It’s not the altitude
that matters, it’s the trajectory, and by now most Americans finally
understand that Captain America is trending downward.
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