17 March 2009

What Is Really Important In Life, And What Does That Have to do With Europe?

The same self-absorption in whiling away life as pleasantly as possible explains why Europe has become a continent that no longer celebrates greatness. When life is a matter of whiling away the time, the concept of greatness is irritating and threatening. What explains Europe’s military impotence? I am surely simplifying, but this has to be part of it: If the purpose of life is to while away the time as pleasantly as possible, what can be worth dying for? Murray
In a recent American.com article, Charles Murray talks about "The Europe Syndrome", and how European public policy (and the current batch of Euro-copycats in American government) affects the things that he sees as truly important for a well-lived life.
To become a source of deep satisfaction, a human activity has to meet some stringent requirements. It has to have been important (we don’t get deep satisfaction from trivial things). You have to have put a lot of effort into it (hence the cliché “nothing worth having comes easily”). And you have to have been responsible for the consequences.

There aren’t many activities in life that can satisfy those three requirements. Having been a good parent? That qualifies. A good marriage? That qualifies. Having been a good neighbor and good friend to those whose lives intersected with yours? That qualifies. And having been really good at something—good at something that drew the most from your abilities? That qualifies.

...The problem is this: Every time the government takes some of the trouble out of performing the functions of family, community, vocation, and faith, it also strips those institutions of some of their vitality—it drains some of the life from them. It’s inevitable....If we knew that leaving these functions in the hands of families and communities led to legions of neglected children and neglected neighbors, and taking them away from families and communities led to happy children and happy neighbors, then it would be possible to say that the cost is worth it. But that’s not what happened when the U.S. welfare state expanded. We have seen growing legions of children raised in unimaginably awful circumstances, not because of material poverty but because of dysfunctional families, and the collapse of functioning neighborhoods into Hobbesian all-against-all free-fire zones.

...Drive through rural Sweden, as I did a few years ago. In every town was a beautiful Lutheran church, freshly painted, on meticulously tended grounds, all subsidized by the Swedish government. And the churches are empty. Including on Sundays. Scandinavia and Western Europe pride themselves on their “child-friendly” policies, providing generous child allowances, free day-care centers, and long maternity leaves. Those same countries have fertility rates far below replacement and plunging marriage rates. Those same countries are ones in which jobs are most carefully protected by government regulation and mandated benefits are most lavish. And they, with only a few exceptions, are countries where work is most often seen as a necessary evil, least often seen as a vocation, and where the proportions of people who say they love their jobs are the lowest.

What’s happening? Call it the Europe syndrome. Last April I had occasion to speak in Zurich, where I made some of these same points. After the speech, a few of the twenty-something members of the audience approached and said plainly that the phrase “a life well-lived” did not have meaning for them. They were having a great time with their current sex partner and new BMW and the vacation home in Majorca, and saw no voids in their lives that needed filling.

...

If that’s the purpose of life, then work is not a vocation, but something that interferes with the higher good of leisure. If that’s the purpose of life, why have a child, when children are so much trouble—and, after all, what good are they, really? If that’s the purpose of life, why spend it worrying about neighbors? If that’s the purpose of life, what could possibly be the attraction of a religion [AF: or moral theory] that says otherwise?

....We are seeing that infiltration appear most obviously among those who are most openly attached to the European model—namely, America’s social democrats, heavily represented in university faculties and the most fashionable neighborhoods of our great cities. We know from databases such as the General Social Survey that among those who self-identify as liberal or extremely liberal, secularism is close to European levels. Birth rates are close to European levels. Charitable giving is close to European levels. There is every reason to believe that when Americans embrace the European model, they begin to behave like Europeans.

_______________

This is all pretty depressing for people who do not embrace the European model, because it looks like the train has left the station. The European model provides the intellectual framework for the social policies of the triumphant Democratic Party, and it faces no credible opposition from Republican politicians.

...Over the last half century, it can be demonstrated empirically that the new generation of elites have increasingly spent their entire lives in the upper-middle-class bubble, never even having seen a factory floor, let alone worked on one, never having gone to a grocery store and bought the cheap ketchup instead of the expensive ketchup to meet a budget, never having had a boring job where their feet hurt at the end of the day, and never having had a close friend who hadn’t gotten at least 600 on her SAT verbal. There’s nobody to blame for any of this. These are the natural consequences of successful people looking for pleasant places to live and trying to do the best thing for their children.

But the fact remains: It is the elites who are increasingly separated from the America over which they have so much influence. That is not the America that Tocqueville saw. It is not an America that can remain America. _American.com

Murray seems to believe that America's elites will somehow wake up to the fact that the foundations of their most deeply held beliefs are without substance. That will never happen. The existence of echo chambers such as the JournoList is a sign that leftist elites will never admit error or misunderstanding publicly.

And America can never be like Europe. Even Europe is finding it harder and harder to be like Europe these days, thanks to a suicidal drop in birth rates and a masochistic immigration policy. Europe's days are numbered by its own "Europe Syndrome" of being about essentially nothing -- like Seinfeld.

America will go broke and experience a painful re-construction along more sustainable lines, before it will approach the lack of relevance of today's Europe. Leftist elites have been wagging the dog for so long they believe it is their right to continue doing so indefinitely. But America cannot afford it much longer. Obama is the dream president for the elitist tail end of America, and he will be the instrument of its demise, as he continues to act out the script (however telepromptered).

Most Americans have not yet discovered how they have been "had" by the pompous idiots who have been telling them how to live, what to think, and who to vote for. When enough Americans finally discover the sad truth, there is no telling what they may do.

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4 Comments:

Blogger yamahaeleven said...

Charles Murray says "...These are the natural consequences of successful people looking for pleasant places to live and trying to do the best thing for their children."

If these trends are natural consequences, then it hardly matters which political party has its elites "in charge," it merely changes the flavor of the elites. Us sub-elites can get all worked up about the stupid things they do on the margins, but in the greater scheme of things, society will make its trends regardless of who thinks they are guiding the herd.

Even poor US citizens and immigrants follow the same birth rate to affluence ratios. The rate of the rate of the change of the world's overall birthrate is plummeting. World population will peak near 9 million, around 2050, then drop off a cliff. This is simply due to affluence. Like the young people described above, they will be much too busy having fun to have offspring.

No elite has control over these trends, the world will be a much different place very soon. Looking from our perspective, we won't like a lot of it, but when we get there, it will almost make sense.

Tuesday, 17 March, 2009  
Blogger al fin said...

I agree on one thing, Yama: it makes no sense to get worked up about the way things are. Unless, of course, you are the sort of person who has to get "worked up" before he can act in his own interest.

Population dynamics does not work the way current conventional consensus believes it works. That is because politics has worked its way into the consensus-making machinery of our popular culture. Politics introduces a bias that destroys science. It can't be helped, the way things are.

We do not have the luxury of passivity, if we want to have a say in our future. If you want to be passive, that is a choice you will always have. Exercise the option today or any time in the future.

Wednesday, 18 March, 2009  
Blogger yamahaeleven said...

Actually, I think most people in western society do have the luxury of passivity. There really isn't any conceivable crisis that will ever need the attention of all or even a large minority. Gandhi's famous line "..it doesn't matter how small a thing you do, just that you do it." sums up the role of individual humans. The role for some is passivity, the role for others is action. Like you say, the choice is individual, we just don't get to judge the path others take.

Wednesday, 18 March, 2009  
Blogger al fin said...

On the contrary, everyone judges everyone else. It is the most popular pasttime of human beings in any society.

Creative persons are even paid to invent people and entire universes for the viewing, listening, playing, and reading public to judge.

Think of what happens to passive people in the context of a Hurricane Katrina, or a disaster a thousand times worse and more extensive.

In the slow motion disaster that is California, passivity causes one to sink ever deeper in the quagmire. The disaster of Detroit was a bit faster, and harder on the passive ones. The disaster of the US financial system is still being designed by our narcissist in chief, so stay tuned.

Wednesday, 18 March, 2009  

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“During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act” _George Orwell

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