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- <text id=90TT2881>
- <title>
- Oct. 29, 1990: Some Well-Wishing Advice From Europe
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 29, 1990 Can America Still Compete?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 116
- Some Well-Wishing Advice from Europe
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Dominique Moisi
- </p>
- <p>[The author is associate director of the French Institute of
- International Relations and editor of Politique Etrangere.]
- </p>
- <p> Nineteenth century Europe had two dreams: socialism and
- America. Those who wanted to improve their lives could either
- fight for a more egalitarian society at home or move across the
- Atlantic to join a new nation. The 20th century has seen the
- triumph of America--if by America one means democratic
- pluralism. America has won not only the ideological battle but
- the cold war as well. Socialism, certainly in its Soviet
- Marxist incarnation, has failed. The Soviet Union retains large
- military forces, but it is no longer a superpower; in fact, it
- finds itself fighting for its very survival.
- </p>
- <p> America is immensely popular in Eastern Europe. Newly
- liberated, East Europeans crave for America, for them a mixture
- of freedom and modernity, of the Statue of Liberty, of
- Coca-Cola and of blue jeans--a symbiosis between liberating
- principle and pop culture. West Europeans, celebrating the
- regained unity of the Continent and the prospect of a
- renaissance there, also yearn to keep close to America. Still
- not autonomous in terms of security, they want Americans to
- stay on European soil, not only to provide a balance vis-a-vis
- the remaining military power of the Soviet Union but also
- vis-a-vis the inevitable political and economic weight of
- Germany. More profoundly, Europeans see the continuation of an
- American presence as insurance against the possible return of
- dark nationalist and xenophobic impulses from their past.
- </p>
- <p> In the Persian Gulf, the U.S. has the dubious honor of being
- virtually by itself in the front line. There is simply no
- substitute for American leadership: for the time being, the
- U.S. stands alone in the global power category.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the contrast between America's global position and its
- internal condition is painful. Just stroll through America's
- cities and consider the dark side of daily life. As someone who
- travels regularly to the U.S., who was partly educated there,
- whose vision of life has been transformed by the openness and
- dynamism of American society, and who cherishes the generosity
- of its political principles and respects the strength of its
- democratic creed, I can only witness the deterioration in
- American life with dismay and sorrow.
- </p>
- <p> A country that is bound to lead should not have cities whose
- centers look like Third World slums or sections of Beirut. It
- should not have a lackluster educational system or an
- infrastructure that is falling apart. It should not have people
- being turned away by hospitals because they lack insurance, or
- dying in the street of drug overdoses, or becoming victims of
- random crime because they were in the wrong place at the wrong
- time.
- </p>
- <p> The great society dreamed of by John Kennedy and Martin
- Luther King Jr. and planned by Lyndon Johnson has not come to
- pass. America's racial problem is exacerbated by the de facto
- exclusion of blacks from the core of national politics, in part
- because, traditionally Democrats, they face an age of
- Republican hegemony in the White House. In an era of weakened
- Federal Government, blacks feel increasingly isolated. It was
- the Federal Government, after all, that saved them twice in
- history: from slavery in the 19th century; from segregation in
- the 20th. The reduction of that government's powers by a new
- American consensus has led to the political marginalization of
- blacks.
- </p>
- <p> Economically, the U.S. has become a consumer society that
- no longer produces, a market where others sell and no longer
- buy. When one looks at patents, levels of education and
- financial power, America is losing the economic battle against
- Japan, if not yet against Europe.
- </p>
- <p> Americans are aware of their problems but refuse to confront
- the fact that in order to maintain their influence in the
- world, they must change their life-style. Americans have no
- constitutional right, for example, to cheap gasoline. In Europe
- we pay the same price for a liter of gas as Americans pay for
- a gallon--or four times as much.
- </p>
- <p> The additional amount we lay out goes to taxes that provide
- the infrastructures that make our cities civilized and safe.
- Yet we do not feel cheated at the pump. Instead of being lulled
- by a reassuring Reagan line or a comforting Bush stance,
- Americans should accept the necessary: sacrifices and more
- taxes.
- </p>
- <p> America cannot give the impression that it wants power
- without incurring risk, influence without cost. There is a
- contradiction, exemplified by the gulf crisis, between
- internationalist principle, which is supported by most
- Americans, and emotional isolationism, which is psychologically
- self-sufficient and takes account of the outside world only
- when it directly impinges on America. Americans must not harbor
- the illusion that they can recover inner strength by
- dissociating themselves from the affairs of the world. America
- needs to assume its dual role as a world power and as a healthy
- society. To be fully respected in tomorrow's world, it has to
- reform internally. There is no alternative to higher taxes.
- </p>
- <p> In the necessary attempt to reform itself, America can learn
- from the outside world, particularly from Europe. America may
- epitomize, in European eyes, democracy and insurance against
- old, inner European evils; it may incarnate, in the eyes of
- Chinese students, freedom; it may even constitute paradise for
- Albanian refugees who, having been taken in by France earlier
- this year, besieged the U.S. embassy in Paris to be allowed to
- move to the land of their dreams.
- </p>
- <p> What Americans should learn from Western Europe is how to
- instill a greater sense of social justice; what they should
- learn from Eastern Europe, which has just emerged from 40 years
- of darkness, is how to frame the kind of solidarity that has
- been lost in the extreme individualism and consumerism of
- modern American life. Socialism may have failed, but the plea
- for social justice that made it thrive echoes more than ever
- through the streets of American cities. America, the winner,
- has the historical responsibility to confront this challenge.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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