Las Vegas Review-Journal

Not all of the news in the world is tragedy and despair

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Last weekend’s mass shootings exacerbate the widespread mispercept­ion — along with worsening political divisions and issues such as global warming — that we live in dark times which are getting worse. Perhaps we could use some good news.

By virtually any standard, those living today have it exponentia­lly better than those living just decades ago. This is borne out by myriad statistics involving wealth, literacy, life expectancy and education. As University of Oxford economist Max Roser noted in a 2017 paper, understand­ing these achievemen­ts is key to humanity’s continued progress.

“A positive lookout on the efforts of ourselves and our fellow humans is a vital condition to the fruitfulne­ss of our endeavors,” Mr. Roser argued. “Knowing that we have

come a long way in improving living conditions and the notion that our work is worthwhile is to us all what self-respect is to individual­s. It is a necessary condition for self-improvemen­t.”

Consider these advances:

Poverty. The number of people living in extreme poverty has fallen drasticall­y in the past two centuries. In 1820, 84 percent of those alive were destitute, Ronald Bailey of Reason magazine reports. That number dropped to 55 percent by 1950 — and has since fallen below 10 percent. “This is an extraordin­ary achievemen­t,” Steve Danning of Forbes noted, “because the world population has increased seven-fold over the past two centuries.”

War. Despite a number of ongoing conflicts in various corners of the globe, we live in a time of relative peace, from a historical perspectiv­e. “Your chances of being killed by your fellow human beings have also dropped significan­tly,”

Mr. Bailey reveals.

Literacy and education. Literacy rates are way up and the world populace is significan­tly better educated as a whole than it was 50 or 100 years ago. By 2100, Mr. Roser predicts, “there will be almost no one without formal education and there will be more than 7 billion minds who will have received at least a secondary education.”

Longevity. “During the past 200 years, Mr. Bailey reports, “global life expectancy more than doubled, now reaching 72.” By next year, “for the first time in human history, there will be more people over the age of 64 than under the age of 5.”

Virtually all of these advances have been drowned out by a drumbeat of eye-catching events that naturally gets emphasized online and in news reports. “Positive developmen­ts, on the other hand,” Mr. Roser writes, “often happen very slowly and never make the headlines.”

The history of human progress suggests the challenges that loom can be successful­ly addressed. “If inclusive liberal institutio­ns can continue to be strengthen­ed and if they further spread across the globe,” Mr. Bailey predicts, “the auspicious trends … will extend their advance.” A ray of hope during trying times.

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