Townhall
Why
Do Societies Give Up?
by Victor Davis Hanson
Feb 14, 2013
Why
do once-successful societies
ossify and decline?
Hundreds
of reasons have been
adduced for the fall of Rome and the end of the Old Regime in
18th-century
France. Reasons run from inflation and excessive spending to resource
depletion
and enemy invasion, as historians attempt to understand the sudden
collapse of
the Mycenaeans, the Aztecs and, apparently, the modern Greeks. In
literature
from Catullus to Edward Gibbon, wealth and leisure -- and who gets the
most of
both -- more often than poverty and exhaustion implode civilization.
One
recurring theme seems
consistent in Athenian literature on the eve of the city's takeover by
Macedon:
social squabbling over slicing up a shrinking pie. Athenian speeches
from that
era make frequent reference to lawsuits over property and inheritance,
evading
taxes, and fudging eligibility for the dole. After the end of the Roman
Republic, reactionary Latin literature -- from the likes of Juvenal,
Petronius,
Suetonius, Tacitus -- pointed to "bread and circuses," as well as
excessive wealth, corruption and top-heavy government.
For
Gibbon and later French
scholars, "Byzantine" became a pejorative description of a top-heavy
Greek bureaucracy that could not tax enough vanishing producers to
sustain a
growing number of bureaucrats. In antiquity, inflating the currency by
turning
out cheap bronze coins was often the favored way to pay off public
debts, while
the law became fluid to address popular demands rather than to protect
time-honored justice.
After
the end of World War II, most
of today's powerhouses were either in ruins or still preindustrial --
China,
France, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Russia and Taiwan. Only the United
States
and Great Britain had sophisticated economies that survived the
destruction of
the war. Both were poised to resupply a devastated world with new
ships, cars,
machinery and communications.
In
comparison to Frankfurt, the
factories of 1945 Liverpool had survived mostly intact. Yet Britain
missed out
on the postwar German economic miracles, in part because after the
deprivations
of the war, the war-weary British turned to class warfare and
nationalized
their main industries, which soon became uncompetitive.
The
gradual decline of a society is
often a self-induced process of trying to meet ever-expanding
appetites, rather
than a physical inability to produce past levels of food and fuel, or
to
maintain adequate defense. Americans have never had safer workplaces or
more
sophisticated medical care -- and never have so many been on disability…
Read
the rest of the article at
Townhall
http://townhall.com/columnists/victordavishanson/2013/02/14/why-do-societies-give-up-n1511517/page/full/
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