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Saturday, March 14, 2020

Whither the West


For John, BLUFCivilization has been in decline since Eve's Sons were knee high to a grass hopper.  But, now it is serious.  Nothing to see here; just move along.




From Commonweal Magazine, by Professor Andrew J. Bacevich, 9 March 2020.

Here is the lede plus three:

I read The Decadent Society while on a weeklong cruise from Miami to Miami, stopping at various sun-bleached points in between.  Future historians may well classify such voyages back to the place where you first embarked as the very embodiment of early twenty-first-century bourgeois decadence, with food and drink, entertainment and diversions, all available in seemingly endless supply.  With chapter titles such as “Sclerosis,” “Sterility,” “Repetition,” “Comfortably Numb,” and “Kindly Despotism” (“No jeans in the dining room after 6:00 p.m., please.”), Ross Douthat’s new book, The Decadent Society, seemed particularly apt as I considered whether or not to make another pass through the buffet line before heading to the bar for the extended happy hour.

It is not my intention to have fun at Douthat’s expense, however.  He is, in my judgment, the only New York Times columnist regularly worth reading—this due in no small part to his sturdy refusal to succumb to Trump Derangement Syndrome.  Indeed, his new book pays refreshingly little attention to our forty-fifth president.  Donald R. Trump is “fundamentally more farcical than threatening,” he writes, a point with which I heartily agree.

The Decadent Society offers a fresh take on an old subject:  the decline of Western civilization, with the United States leading the pack.  Douthat writes from the perspective of a Catholic conservative Gen Xer at the top of his game.  To this semi-senescent Catholic conservative Boomer, the resulting critique is original, insightful, and largely persuasive.

Decadence, as Douthat uses the term, consists of “economic stagnation, institutional decay, and cultural and intellectual exhaustion” combined with “a high level of material prosperity and technological development”—not bad as a broad description of our current situation.  A vibrant society, Douthat believes, creates, discovers, and expands.  Until well past the midpoint of the twentieth century, the West generally and the United States specifically exhibited these qualities.  Around the time my fellow Boomers reached maturity, however, anomie and stasis set in, with the results now everywhere evident.  “Resignation haunts our present civilization,” Douthat writes, with “therapeutic philosophies and technologies of simulation” having displaced passion, conviction, and faith.  Overstated? Perhaps, but not wrong.

Yes, our society is drifting from where it was in the 1950s.  How do we go forward?  I guess I will have to read the book to learn the prescription.

Regards  —  Cliff

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