Townhall...
The
End of the World Is Not Nigh
By Tony Blankley
8/10/2011
Except
according to the Lord’s plans
-- which are not known to man -- the “end of the world” is not nigh,
although
to listen to politicians and pundits, we should be packed and ready to
go by
next Thursday.
Recently,
the headlines have read like
Woody Allen’s 1979 “My Speech to the Graduates”: “More than any other
time in
history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair and
utter
hopelessness. The other, to total extinction. Let us pray we have the
wisdom to
choose correctly. I speak, by the way, not with any sense of futility,
but with
a panicky conviction.”
Woody
Allen, please note, was writing
as a comedian.
Of
course, surely, with stock markets
plunging, cruelly high unemployment and uncertain government (not just
in the
United States, but around the world) this is not a funny moment.
But
then, throughout history few
generations have been spared unfunny moments, civilization-threatening
dangers
and appalling tragedies.
After
World War II, America had to
face and manage the planet-destroying potential of the atomic bomb --
the
handling of which grayed and thinned the hair, raised the blood
pressure and
haunted the nights of every American president (and Soviet leaders,
too).
The
rising Japanese economy,
double-digit inflation and high unemployment led 1970s Americans to
fear the
end of American prosperity and dominance. The Dow Jones had hit 1,000
in
November of 1972, then slid to almost half -- 577 -- and did not return
to
1,000 until 1982, a full decade later. For various reasons -- Nixon and
Watergate, of course -- but also including that decade-long,
middle-class
flatlining of economic hope implied by the Dow Jones average -- all
three 1970s
presidencies (Nixon, Ford and Carter) ended in failure.
The
generation before faced the
Depression and World War II, the Europeans faced civilizational despair
at the
near- massacre of a whole generation of their young men in the trenches
of
World War I.
It
is the plight of man constantly to
face appalling dangers. It is not necessarily our plight to face such
challenges with despair, foolishness and fatalism.
The
1980s and 1990s were decades of
prosperity for America. Not coincidentally we were led during those
years by
presidents (Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton) who were optimistic -- and
knew how
to share that optimism, convincingly, with the public.
And,
during both those decades, with
some heavy Newt Gingrich-led GOP policy wrestling with Clinton in
1993-97,
America benefited from sensible, traditional, more or less free-market
policies
coming out of Washington.
But
recently, America has not been
blessed with a reliable free market, fiscally sound policy, nor with
much
sincere, convincing optimism from our most senior Washington leaders --
conspicuously including our president, who seems in recent weeks to
have been
captured by a sense of exhaustion, futility and helplessness.
He
has cited the Japanese earthquake,
the “Arab Spring,” oil prices and instability in Europe as forces
beyond our
government’s control that are causing our economic troubles.
I
would suggest that the Republican
candidate for president might want to respond to that with,
“Respectfully, Mr.
President, if you don’t know what to do with the presidency to save our
economy, perhaps the office should be turned over to someone who does.”
The
Republican presidential aspirant
who can capture optimism in his or her tone -- while realistically
describing
how traditional American economic policies can regain prosperity for us
-- is
likely to win both the nomination and the presidency.
Notwithstanding
our current troubles,
the underlying strength of the American workforce and the unmatched
technological depth of our economy will be the basis for our resurgence
-- when
Washington policy once again permits our economy to perform at its full
strength.
Of
course, the unleashing of our vast,
relatively inexpensive carbon energy reserves (coal, oil, gas, shale
oil and
shale gas) must be the foundation of sustained prosperity because
throughout
history there is a direct correlation between abundant cheap energy and
prosperity.
But
beyond nature’s blessings
efficiently delivered by a once again unshackled, unsubsidized energy
industry,
Americans bring unprecedented and unmatched brainpower to economic
activity.
A
Rand study for the Pentagon in 2008,
as the Economist described it, found that “America is still the world’s
science
and technology powerhouse. It accounts for 40 percent of total world
spending
on research and development, and produces 63 percent of the most
frequently
cited publications. It is home to 30 of the world’s leading 40
universities,
and employs 70 percent of the world’s living Nobel laureates. America
produces
38 percent of patented new technologies in the Organization for
Economic
Cooperation Development, OECD, and employs 37 percent of the OECD’s
researchers...
“There
is little evidence that America
is resting on its laurels. Countries such as China and India may be
boosting
their science and technology muscle faster than America. But they are
starting
from a low base. America is outperforming Europe and Japan on many
performance
measures...America’s growth rate in patents averaged 6.6 percent a year
compared with 5.1 percent for the European Union and 4.1 percent for
Japan.”
But
this has not been a season of
looking to our strengths. Rather, we have been obsessing on any
perceived
weakness -- a season of Chinese gloating and Russian sharking at our
temporary
faltering. It is time to close our ears to those who have given up on
America
-- foreign and domestic -- rekindle our optimism, unshackle our
strength and
get about the business of conquering tomorrow for the U.S.
Read
it at Townhall
|