FoxNews...
Were
the First Ten Years of the 21st
Century Really the Worst In American History?
By Martin Sieff
Published July 17, 2011
The
first decade of the 21st century
was the worst in American history: Did you know that?
That’s
what Thomas Friedman of the New
York Times told a packed, applauding worshipful audience at the annual
Aspen
Festival of Ideas in Colorado in late June.
Well
– the past decade was certainly
no great shakes – ongoing low level wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, 3,000
innocent Americans killed on 9/11 and a very bad but least not terminal
Wall
Street meltdown in September 2008, which some of us, myself included –
but not
Friedman – were predicting on the basis of George W. Bush’s zero
interest rates
policies as early as 2001.
But
the WORST decade in American
history? Really?
Was
it worse than the 1860s which saw
650,000 Americans killed on both sides in the Civil War – the
proportional
equivalent of 6.5 million dying in war in five years?
Was
it worse than the 1950s when
millions of terrified American children were drilled in hiding under
their
school desks as a supposed protection against thermonuclear war? And
when the
Soviet Union beat us to developing the intercontinental ballistic
missile and
repeatedly beat us in the Space Race, while its leader Nikita
Khrushchev
repeatedly boasted how communism was going to bury us?
The
death tolls in Iraq and
Afghanistan are heartbreaking and ongoing, but 10 times that number of
Americans died in Vietnam alone.
Did
America’s cities explode in race
riots as they did under liberal Democrats Woodrow Wilson in 1919 and
Lyndon
Johnson in 1968? Did anyone try and turn the clock back on the
admirable Civil
Rights achievements of the 1960s? Must have missed that one.
Were
mass graves dug in New York
City’s Central Park over the past decade for the thousands of victims
of
cholera or other epidemics as had to be done in the 1850s? Guess not.
But then,
I wasn’t at Aspen so I didn’t drink the Kool-Aid.
Friedman,
smooth, sleek and defeatist
as ever was certainly right that America’s leadership is slipping in
the world.
But did he advocate any of the policies that could still dramatically
reverse
that trend?
He
didn’t say a word about the
pressing need to revive and expand Ballistic Missile Defense, even
though the
Obama administration -- to not a whimper of criticism from him --
scrapped the
plans it inherited to build an ABM interceptor base in Poland with its
guiding
radars located next door in the Czech Republic. As a result, the
inhabitants of
New York City, the most avid consumers of Friedman’s empty
pontifications, are
at any time within 33 minutes of carbonized incineration by any ICBMs
that
Iran, or other potential attackers might fire at it across the Atlantic.
He
didn’t say a word about the fact
that Vice President Al Gore exposed the pulsing heart of American
innovation to
the world back in the 1990s by forcing the US Patent Office to put so
much of
the submission details it receives online and publicly accessible.
Since then,
China above all, but other nations too, have been free to plunder all
our
innovation at will and steal it from us. (Did you really think cap and
trade
was the only ruinous stupidity Gore inflicted on this country?)
Friedman
in fact has never addressed
this most crucial issue of National Defense of U.S. Intellectual
Property
Rights. Is that because the Chinese are paying him off? Of course not.
He’s
simply too ignorant and lazy to ever have realized it was going on.
And,
of course, he didn’t say a word
about the need to revive and protect the value-added manufacturing
industries
of the United States that have been gutted by China’s genuinely wise
and
longsighted protectionist policies.
I
believe – far more than Friedman
there is a lot the United States can and should learn from China – but
scrapping our obsolescent ( (according to him) two party system is not
part of
it. And all the things we should learn from China are things he doesn’t
know
and never advocates anyway.
Instead,
Friedman called for a new,
thoughtful, moderate and sensible (round up the usual clichés) centrist
party
to be led in the 2012 elections by Michael Bloomberg, the Mayor of New
York
City.
Republicans
at least should applaud
this particular eruption of Freidman’s Follies: If such a candidacy was
launched, it would gut the Obama Democrats and do to them what H. Ross
Perot’
candidacy in 1992 did to then-incumbent President George Herbert Walker
Bush.
Republicans of every strike should eagerly applaud this Friedman Big
Idea and
start practicing in playing “Hail to the Chief” to President Mitt
Romney and
Vice President Michelle Bachmann.
In
fact, the signs of American Revival
and the resources and potential for recovery are all over the place –
Though
neither President Obama nor Friedman had anything to do with any of
them.
The
New York Times has sneered at the
Fracking Revolution which allows the cost-effective extraction of
enough
methane natural gas reserves from the clay shale formations of North
America to
power the electrical generating capacities of this nation and Canada
for the
next couple of centuries.
Neither
the NYT nor Friedman, it’s
pampered star, has drawn any significant conclusions from the fact that
the US
balance of payments annual trade deficit with the rest of the world has
fallen
by 33 percent -- a quarter of a trillion dollars – in the last five
years –
Coincidentally this happened when the dollar weakened, but not too
much,
thereby cushioning American manufacturing and other business from
China’s
artificially fixed undervalued exchange rates.
Thomas
Friedman teaches that the rise
of the rest of the world is “flat” and benign, and that American
decline is
inevitable, unless we follow the autocratic model of China – a nation
that lost
more than 150 million people murdered in endless internal conflicts
over the
past century and whose future political stability remains highly
problematical.
Bu
the threat of American decline,
while real, is no at all inevitable. The potential for American revival
exists:
But if you went to Aspen to listen to gaze at Friedman with starry eyes
and
drink his usual Kool Aid, you’d never know that.
Read
it at Foxnews
|