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- <text id=91TT2647>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: David Duke and American Decline
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 110
- David Duke and American Decline
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> Our mental image of a major nation in decline is Britain.
- And, in retrospect, the British handled their decline pretty
- gracefully. In just a couple of generations Britain sank from
- economic and political superpower to second-rank member of a
- second-rank regional bloc. Yet the transformation happened
- without much domestic rancor, despite Britain's supposedly
- bitter class divisions. At worst, the general attitude was a
- certain sullen resignation. At best, there was a jolly,
- fatalistic insouciance. The Brits almost seemed to enjoy their
- ride down.
- </p>
- <p> America will not be so lucky. In David Duke, we have seen
- the face of American decline. Of course you can argue about
- whether the United States has entered a long-term decline
- similar to Britain's. And even if it has, you can argue whether
- politicians of one party or the other have the right formula for
- reversing course. But if decline is America's destiny, American
- society is not likely to take it as mildly as Britain did.
- </p>
- <p> America is so much more diverse and so much more
- contentious. Americans may be about to discover just how much
- of our ability to get along with one another has depended on
- that spiritual sense of American manifest destiny--and, more
- practically, on a steady rise in the average person's
- prosperity. For almost two decades now this rise, which
- Americans take as their birthright, has stalled or at least
- slowed dramatically. David Duke is a political expression of
- that reality.
- </p>
- <p> The former Nazi and Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard ran for
- Governor of Louisiana in a campaign based on an open appeal to
- white people who feel they are being cheated of their American
- birthright by blacks, immigrants, liberals, New Yorkers and
- similar bogeys.
- </p>
- <p> The message is enticing because people are frightened
- about their standard of living. Yet whatever you may think about
- affirmative action, immigration and other "hot button" issues,
- economic stagnation is far more responsible than these
- controversial social policies for the sense of shrinking
- opportunity off which the David Dukes feed. When the pie isn't
- growing, people become more obsessed with their slice.
- </p>
- <p> America is not homogeneous. We have no ethnic or religious
- bonds to unite us. We are proud of having built a working nation
- out of so many disparate parts, and proud of the tolerance that
- has made that possible. But was ever increasing prosperity the
- crucial glue? It's easy to welcome newcomers to the party when
- the banquet table is overflowing. It's easy to settle
- disagreements by splitting the difference if there's plenty to
- go around. In bad times hospitality shrivels and disagreements
- fester.
- </p>
- <p> Firm class divisions may actually have helped Britain
- weather its decline. They made for social stability. By
- contrast, America's social stability came from opportunity. Our
- "classlessness," as many observers have noted throughout the
- years, has always rested on the possibility of self-improvement.
- With unlimited opportunity, no one ever needed to feel stuck in
- his or her place.
- </p>
- <p> The first time people worried that this special American
- dispensation might be ending was a century ago, with the end of
- Western expansion. The West was America's social safety valve.
- American philosopher Henry George went even further. In his
- famous book Progress and Poverty (1879), he wrote that the empty
- West was responsible for America's egalitarian and optimistic
- spirit. "The child of the people, as he grows to manhood in
- Europe, finds all the best seats at the banquet of life marked
- `taken.'" Freedom from such limitations, George believed, could
- explain "all that we are proud of in the American character."
- But this gift was imperiled, he predicted, now that "our advance
- has reached the Pacific."
- </p>
- <p> Henry George was wrong. Geography ran out but prosperity
- didn't. America remained the land of opportunity. But he was
- right that America's sense of itself as a nation is wrapped up
- in the promise of ever rising prosperity in a way that is not
- true of other nations. The closing off of the West didn't shut
- the social safety valve, but a long period of stagnation might.
- Geographical claustrophobia didn't pervert the American
- character, but economic claustrophobia could do so.
- </p>
- <p> The current wave of "declinism" got its start with Paul
- Kennedy's 1988 best seller, The Rise and Fall of the Great
- Powers. That book posed a conundrum: a nation's military
- strength rests on its economic strength, but economic strength
- tends to wither when a nation devotes too many resources to the
- military. "Imperial overstretch," Kennedy called it.
- </p>
- <p> The world has changed since 1987, and the danger of the
- United States bankrupting itself through military overextension
- seems a lot slimmer. Furthermore, the thought of losing our
- status as a military "great power" with defense commitments all
- over the world does not traumatize most Americans, I suspect.
- What does traumatize Americans is the thought of economic
- stagnation as a permanent condition.
- </p>
- <p> But there's another conundrum: the politics of decline
- produce exactly the wrong formula for reversing the economics
- of decline. The result: as decline becomes more evident, it also
- becomes harder to correct. We need politicians who can persuade
- the voters to make short-term sacrifice for long-term gain, and
- small personal sacrifices for the good of society as a whole.
- Yet the more people suffer from economic claustrophobia, the
- less amenable they are to such an appeal. Instead, they listen
- to David Duke, who tells them that Others are stealing their
- life-style.
- </p>
- <p> It's an oddity of today's populist rage that it is
- directed at Washington rather than the more traditional target
- of Wall Street. That could change, and the editors of the Wall
- Street Journal are fools to be so gleeful. If the general sense
- of a nation in decline is not reversed, there will be plenty
- more David Dukes in America's future, looking for fresh
- scapegoats.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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