Boston Herald

America needs to get some perspectiv­e on problems

- By JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg’s latest book is “Suicide of the West.”

I don’t think I’m going too far out on a limb when I say that a lot of people are losing perspectiv­e. I won’t be too specific, because if you’re on one ideologica­l team, you probably think I’m referring to the other team.

One common practice to avoid flying off the handle is to count to 10 before saying anything you might regret. Another good piece of advice is to imagine that the person or people you’re angry at are working from good intentions.

Here’s another thought exercise that might be useful: Consider the possibilit­y that the things we worry about the most might be the least of our problems. National security expert Stewart Baker once noted that “if you’d asked Queen Victoria about the threats her society faced, she’d probably have worried aloud about a breakdown in sexual and other morality. … Every age seems to warn itself most sternly about the risks that are least likely to do it harm.”

It’s not an iron law. It’s merely a useful item on a mental checklist.

That said, one way to explain what I mean is to consider the law of diminishin­g returns. This is a phenomenon commonly associated with economics, but it also exists in psychology and virtually every sphere of life.

If you’ve ever dieted, you know the first 20 pounds are wildly easier than the last five. In psychology, we get a lot more satisfacti­on from an activity in the beginning, but as time goes by it becomes harder and harder to squeeze out the joy.

Now consider politics. For understand­able reasons, America is in a kind of panic about bigotry here. But if you look at America from outside the distorting fishbowl of the current moment, an impartial observer might think we’re way into the last 10%. Slavery was banned more than 150 years ago. Women got the vote almost exactly 99 years ago. Jim Crow was outlawed more than 50 years ago.

By any measure America has become astounding­ly less racist since then. In 1958, according to the Brookings Institutio­n, 44% of whites said they’d leave if a black family moved in next door. In 1998, only 1% did. In 1990, according to the Pew Research Center, 63% of nonblacks expressed dismay at the prospect of a close relative marrying a black person. By 2016, that number had dropped to 14%. In 1967, only 3% of Americans married outside their race or ethnicity. Today, nearly onefifth do.

There has been, according to some measures, a modest uptick in hate crimes since 2015, but there’s also been a huge increase in sensitivit­y to hate crimes and thus much more reporting of it.

This dynamic applies to so many of our raging controvers­ies. There are real threats to free speech out there, but those threats need to be understood in the context of the fact that speech has never been freer, at least legally. Abortion rights might seem to be in peril, but that’s against a backdrop of some of the most liberal abortion laws in the world.

And then, of course, there are guns — a major source of the current political frenzy, and for understand­able reasons. As with abortion, gun rights have expanded over the last 40 years, but supporters of a robust Second Amendment (including me) might take a moment to appreciate that. Opponents of gun rights, meanwhile, could pause to consider that gun homicides and other crimes have plummeted since the early ’90s.

Of course, mass shootings of the type we saw in El Paso and Dayton last weekend have been on the rise. My point isn’t to offer a solution to that very real problem, it’s merely to note that maybe we’re wrongly defining the problem itself.

The fact that the country is so concerned about bigotry and violence is good, because it’s a sign that our tolerance of such things has shrunk. All I’m doing is asking that people take a breath, count to 10 and put it all in some perspectiv­e.

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