Human
Events...
After
America, the World Gets
Expensive, Deadly, and Hilarious
Mark Steyn tours the edge of ruin, and
has a few laughs along the way.
by John Hayward
08/16/2011
Mark
Steyn’s new book, After
America: Get Ready for Armageddon, is
both spiritually and chronologically a direct sequel to his landmark
America
Alone. If you liked
the earlier work,
you’ll love this one. It’s
bigger,
stronger, scarier, and funnier. If
America Alone was Steyn’s Star Wars, this is the rare sequel that
improves on
the original: The Empire Strikes Out.
Steyn’s
unique gift is a combination
of topical mastery and biting humor.
He
has gazed overlong into the abyss, but he’s laughing too hard for it to
gaze
back into him. Here
he provides a snapshot
of the collapse of Greece:
When
you binge-spend at the Greek
level in a democratic state, there aren’t many easy roads back. The government introduced
an austerity
package to rein in spending. In
response,
Greek tax collectors walked off the job.
Read that again slowly: to protest government
cuts, striking tax
collectors refuse to collect taxes.
In a
sane world, this would be a hilarious comedy sketch.
But most of the western world is no longer
sane.
After relating the story of
how California
micro-regulation forced a hardware store owner to stop offering coffee
and
donuts to his customers, Steyn sums up the lesson learned:
When
the law says that it’s illegal
for a storekeeper to offer his customer a cup of coffee, you should be
proud to
be in non-compliance. Otherwise,
what
the hell did you guys bother holding a revolution for?
Say what you like about George III, but he
didn’t prosecute the Boston Tea Party for unlicensed handling of
beverage
ingredients in a public place.
Every
page is loaded with both
extensively footnoted factual references and hilarious zingers, in
roughly
equal measure. Not
a single passage in
the book is either hollow or dry.
One
of the themes running through
Steyn’s work is that events in socialist-Armageddon Europe provide a
glimpse
into America’s near future. From
Greek
riots to British… er, riots, the collapse of the dependency state is
ugly, and
Steyn fears that it will be worse for America, given our size and the
lack of a
“new America” to make our decline as genteel and comfortable as late
20th-century Europe’s was. We’ll
get to
the burning banks faster.
As
a well-traveled immigrant, Steyn
has seen Obama-style unsustainable maternal government fail around the
globe. After
dissecting the childlike
liberal strategy of defending ObamaCare by insisting all opposition to
the
program is grounded in racism, he remarks:
“I can’t speak for the rest of you racists,
sexists, and homophobes, but
I’ve opposed government health care in Canada, the United Kingdom,
Bulgaria,
and anywhere else I’ve been on the receiving end of it.”
Steyn
is fascinated by the way truly
world-changing progress was stalled in the latter half of the Twentieth
Century. He lays
much of the blame for
this technological quagmire at the feet of Big Government, which spends
much of
its time strangling innovation with knotted cords of red tape. He uses H.G. Wells’ The
Time Machine as an
extended metaphor throughout the book, noting that a time traveler
leaping forward
fifty years from Wells’ day would be astonished by the changes to
everyday life
brought about by technological progress, but a second jump of fifty
years would
leave him saddened by how little real change there has been since then. We’ve got access to highly
advanced means of
frivolity, and everything happens faster in the 21st Century, but where
are the
great engineering feats and miraculous cures?
Why is there still a hole in the ground where
the World Trade Center
used to be?
From
The Time Machine, Steyn also
appropriates the concept of the Eloi and Morlocks, the bifurcated
humanity
Wells envisioned 800,000 years in the future.
It’s happening far ahead of schedule, with a
useless and effete coastal
Eloi ruling over the increasingly restless Morlocks of “flownover
country.” Unlike
the delicate creatures
of the Wells fantasy, today’s Eloi don’t provide food for the Morlocks. They don’t even provide
jobs.
The
Eloi wear bumper stickers as
blindfolds, and Steyn has great fun tearing apart their hollow
slogan-based
mindset. If you’re
a friend of the
author’s, I would advise against getting him a “COEXIST” bumper sticker
for
Christmas, as I think he’s had just about enough of that one.
As
with America Alone, the most potent
idea humming through the high-tension wires of After America is
demography as
destiny. As Steyn
puts it, “the future
belongs to those who show up for it.”
Death-spiral birth rates have sealed the doom
of stagnant Japan and
unsustainable Europe, while guaranteeing the ascendancy of a rapidly
growing
Muslim population. Steyn
took a lot of
heat for suggesting, in America Alone, that demographics would settle
the clash
of civilizations, and not in a good way for Western liberal culture. In After America, he notes
that collapsing
birth rates will also bring an abrupt end to the Ponzi schemes of
deficit
spending, as the inter-generational theft of entitlement spending runs
into a
shrunken future population with moths in their wallets.
In
the early days of Western
socialism, entitlements were promoted as individual property,
professionally
managed by the honest and capable State.
Your Social Security plan was funded with your
money, gathering interest
in a “lockbox.” By
the end of the 20th
Century, entitlements had become a matter of taxing current workers to
provide
the benefits of retirees. In
the new age
of trillion-dollar deficits and $200 trillion liability mountains, the
game has
become taxing people who aren’t even born yet to fund benefits paid
today. Steyn
explains how this mad system will
crash, and crash hard.
Despite
the title, very little of
After America is a straightforward prediction of how things will be
going in
the post-American world of 2020 or 2050.
Steyn plays a better game than that.
Time and again, he relates the history of
rapacious government
over-reaching and collapsing, allowing readers to write the dystopian
science
fiction of our probable future in their own imaginations. We eventually do get a
letter from the
future, written by the guy who finds the Time Machine after H.G. Wells’
epoch-jumping
hero gets mugged, and the news from 2050 is not pretty.
It
would be difficult to write this
book with so much wacky humor if Steyn didn’t retain a core of optimism
about
America’s ability to escape the destiny written by her Eloi. He’s got some suggestions,
and offers a tip
of the hat to the growing movement of industrious and articulate
Morlocks
lugging crates of tea to the nearest harbor.
It is the great central insight of After
America that the United States
is different than every other country.
That doesn’t mean we are immune to history –
Steyn repeatedly warns
against such dangerous delusions.
It
means that both the good and bad endings to the saga of the New Deal
will be
epic, and both will shape the world.
For
a few last, precious moments, we
still have something that is dying in the empty shadows of the broke,
exhausted, self-loathing Western world around us: a choice. If we choose badly, we
will not be spared by
the forces racing through the world that comes after America. There is no better way to
look ahead than by
reading Mark Steyn’s sobering, hilarious, maddening, uplifting, coldly
rational, deliriously insane book.
Read
it at Human Events
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