"Society never advances. It recedes as fast on one side as it gains
on the other. It undergoes continual changes; it is barbarous, it is
civilized, it is christianized, it is rich, it is scientific; but this
change is not amelioration [improvement]."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Self Reliance"
It has taken me nearly two decades, (and passing the 50-year mark, I
suspect) to digest this passage. But now it is suddenly very clear to
me.
I often write or read others' writings about why certain
defects still remain in society. An obvious example is the family of
topics related to social justice. Other examples include the
contrasting state of health care among civilized countries or how
animals are treated. Among other camps, some wish we could still raise
free-range children or stop regulating ourselves to death until it is
nearly impossible to start and run a small business or make s simple
home improvement without paying an army of accountants and lawyert to
navigate the process. I sincerely doubt there is anyone left in America
who doesn't wonder, "Why does our political process seem so polarized
and broken?"
Emerson had the answer. Society, as a whole, does
not improve. Some of us can march and suffer until the Civil Rights Act
gets signed into law, but doing so does not transform society. It
shifts the power of the force of law from favoring one element of
society to favoring another, but it has no power to change hearts or
minds. We should act a little less surprised when, decades later,
elements of society who have hated and resented the legislation begin to
find ways to undermine it (such as the relaxing of federal oversight on
elections in the South and the weakening of Title IX protections for
LGBT students at universities).
When our country has a serious
economic downturn, the kind that ends careers and breaks up families,
such as the one we experienced in 2008, it turns out that many of our
citizens look for a scapegoat. This is an old story that has repeated
itself throughout history and even now repeats itself in Britain,
Poland, Brazil, and the Philippines. A strong leader comes forward,
promising a return to the glory days by getting rid of the undesirable
elements of society that were allowed to exists and flourish under prior
"weak" regimes. No country (as we have come to discover) is immune to
this siren call. But how can such a thing happen "in 2016" or "in 2018"
or "in 2019"? [as if the magic of a calandar year can SHAZAM! cure all
ills!]
The answer lies in the words Emerson wrote. You know
those greedy Baby Boomer bastards who run the Fortune 500, Washington
DC, college admission boards, and everything else we are supposted to
imagine are corrupt institutions? They were the ones listening to Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963. They were the
ones protesting the immoral Vietnam conflict. They were the ones who
held Woodstock, who started Earth Day, and who started the mass
recycling efforts. How could a single generation go from all of that to
what we all complain about today?
"Society never advances." It
turns out you come to care for different things once you have babies to
feed and a roof to pay for. It turns out you care a little less about
other things as well. We'd like to imagine (wouldn't we?) that this all
comes down to good and evil. But these tropes do not exist and never
have. Good people, doing the best they can, simply lose the capacity to
raise or maintain high ideals as time goes by and they find themselves
the surprise caretakers of the functions and institutions they claimed
to hate, but for which no workable, sustainable alternatives have yet been
presented. So, they roll up their sleeves and keep them going.
The alternative would be to try to dismantle and re-assemble the
jumbo-jet while it is still flying at 35,000 feet over the ocean.
Every few centuries somebody does do such a thing, but it is never
pretty. Did you ever stop to ask yourself what became of the friends
and neighbors of Colonial Americans, who supported the King's army, after the
end of the Revolutionary War?
Sunday, May 19, 2019
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