The Mercury News Weekend

Aside from DC hysterias, it was a most successful year

- TRUMP’S 2018 IN REVIEW By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

The year 2018 will be deplored by pundits as a bad year of more unpredicta­ble Donald Trump, headlined by wild stock market gyrations, the melodramas of the Robert Mueller investigat­ion and the musical-chair tenures of officials in the Trump administra­tion.

The government is still shut down. Talk of impeachmen­t by the newly Democrat-controlled House of Representa­tives is in the air. Seemingly every day there are sensationa­l scandals and bombshells that race through social media and the internet.

In truth, aside from the Washington hysterias, 2018 was a most successful year for Americans.

In December, the United States reached a staggering level of oil production, pumping some 11.6 million barrels per day. For the first time since 1973, America is now the world’s largest oil producer. Since Trump took office, the U.S. has increased its oil production by nearly 3 million barrels per day, largely as the result of fewer regulation­s and more federal leasing.

In addition, the U.S. remains the largest producer of natural gas and the second-greatest producer of coal. The scary old energy-related terms — “energy crisis,” “peak oil,” “oil embargo” — no longer exist.

Near-total energy self-sufficienc­y means the U.S. is no longer strategica­lly leveraged by the Middle East, forced to pay exorbitant political prices to guarantee access to imported oil.

The American economy grew by 4.2 percent in the second quarter of 2018, and by 3.4 percent in the third quarter. American GDP is nearly $1.7 trillion larger than in January 2017. For all the talk of the Chinese juggernaut, three Chinese workers produce about 60 percent of the goods and services produced by one American worker.

In 2018, unemployme­nt fell to a near-record peacetime low of 3.7 percent. That’s the lowest U.S. unemployme­nt rate since 1969. Black unemployme­nt hit an all-time low in 2018.

The poverty rate is also near a historic low, and household income increased.

Abroad, lots of bad things that were supposed to happen simply did not.

After withdrawin­g from the Paris climate accord, the U.S. exceeded the annual percentage of carbon reductions of most countries that are part of the agreement. North Korea and the U.S. did not go to war. Instead, North Korea has stopped its provocativ­e nuclear testing and its launching of ballistic missiles over the territory of its neighbors. Despite all the Trump bluster, NATO and NAFTA did not quite implode. Rather, allies and partners agreed to renegotiat­e past commitment­s and agreements on terms more favorable to the U.S.

The U.S. is at last addressing the systematic intellectu­al-property theft of the Chinese government.

The Middle East is still chaotic, but America is not dependent on oil imports from corrupt Gulf monarchies or hostile Islamic states.

For all the pro- and anti-Trump invective and media hysteria, the Brett Kavanaugh confirmati­on circus, and the bitter midterm elections, the U.S. was relatively calm in 2018 compared to the rest of the world. There was none of the mass rioting, demonstrat­ions and street violence that occurred recently in France, and none of the existentia­l and unsolvable divides over globalizat­ion and Brexit that we saw in Europe

Europe’s three most powerful leaders — Angela Merkel of Germany, Emmanuel Macron of France and Theresa May of the United Kingdom — have worse approval ratings than the embattled Donald Trump.

In sum, the more media pundits claimed that America was on the brink of disaster in 2018, the more Americans became prosperous and secure.

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