Vicious Rancor versus Potential Future:
A commentary of this debate
Tony E. Hansen
22 Sep 2009


Vicious Rancor Versus Potential Future:
A commentary of this debate

What is so troubling about most of the rancor surrounding recent proposals around Washington is that for at least 8 years (perhaps since the late 1970s) we have waited in vain for real policies to move our economy into the future.  We watched as people pillaged the US treasury to fund huge banks (as well as S&Ls), wars, and conglomerate corporation expansions in addition to building up the bank accounts of the upper echelon.  We did all of this while doing nothing to protect taxpayers, nothing to protect the middle class investments (e.g. 401K, pensions, money markets), nothing to build sustainable energy, nothing to protect the environment, nothing to change health care costs, nothing to secure a better interdependent global future for everyone and nothing to improve our schools or society.  We made ourselves more vulnerable to extremists and terrorism. We simply kept borrowing to consume more without any sense of what the consequences were or any practical consideration and we kept blaming some other guy for our problems. 

There is and has always been a scapegoat (e.g. attention diversion): illegal immigrants, Contra funding, marital infidelity, gay marriage, women's rights or low prices at all costs. We have made abstract fears, polarization of society and denial of equality as priorities of public policy rather than to focus upon the public well-being, to focus upon the loss of living standards, or to address why prices are rising and quality lowers?  

In fact, we congratulate ourselves for obtaining "low" price on a tag without realizing we paid through taxes for the building and the parking lot for the store before we even walked into the store.  We congratulate ourselves for a low price despite having a continuous cost to replace the item. We congratulate the low price despite neighbors losing their jobs as companies move operations across the border or communities turning entire main streets into ghost towns as big box retail move that business elsewhere. We are given plenty of dramatic diversions to occupy our discussions while news and power elites quietly mock our ignorance and continue the status quo to maintain their profit formulas.  The elites mask their diversion as "fair and balanced" even though they are clearly not. We can no longer blame others for our blindness or our sins, and we can no longer afford to avoid the issues. 

Today, we are witnessing what happens when one keeps kicking the can down the street because we have ignored the issues for decades.  We can no longer wait on these issues. We can not take them one at a time because each affects the other and we have let all of them get wildly out of control and too big to ignore (or to fail) (e.g. health costs rise 5 times inflation, school test scores have dropped, importation of 70% of our energy, imperial intrusion in foreign countries, and severely under-funded mandates).  Sooner or later, you have to take care of the problem rather than continue to ignore them and all of these contribute to the massive over-spending that we have encouraged for the past few decades. 

Further, we can not be so blind to believe that what appeared to work in the past will work in 2010 or 2050.  Many of the assumptions were as wrong then as they are today (as noted by many industry analysts and academics).  The world is constantly changing; we have to be ready and to be competitive.  We need to be forward thinking rather than ego boasting and work with cooperative proposals to lead our country into the new technology age. Otherwise, we risk becoming a remnant power of the late 20th century similar to ancient Rome and the Ottomans before us.  Today, we are faced with decisions to move forward, to have progress in future technology and to prepare for inevitable changes.  Additionally, while some whine and moan over inevitable change or pray for administrations to fail, other countries move to advance beyond the United States. 

If we do nothing constructive towards those ends or let the inconsequential differences define us, we sacrifice valuable time and resources as well as our future generations. Above all, we must break these gluttonous selfish instincts that plague and fragment our society, and instead, we must rebuild our social framework in order to build our future.  We can not let petty differences keep us from our common potential and common good.  Only then, we can heal the wounds created by the recent divisions and only then, we can move forward to save our great country.


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Date of last update September 24, 2009
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