The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Progress is not always as positive as it seems

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As we begin a new year, it’s worth reflecting on the paradoxica­l and frustratin­g nature of progress.

Progress is often disappoint­ing, because even when it indisputab­ly occurs (as it often does), it spawns new problems or reveals that old problems were underestim­ated in their complexity or inertia.

Gains are forgotten and taken for granted. They become part of society’s norms, no longer celebrated because their existence is assumed to be permanent. Meanwhile, younger generation­s focus attention and discontent on new disputes and conflicts, as if the earlier advances had never occurred.

Progress resembles a parabola: first, spurting ahead; then, slipping back. In 2017, the uproar over “sexual harassment” exemplifie­d this cycle.

A root cause, of course, was the massive entry of women, beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, into the paid labor market.

Then as now, this was widely regarded as a major advance in social progress, because it afforded women more personal choices.

But there was a perverse, messy and unfortunat­e side effect: With more women in the workforce, there was more sexual harassment; men had more opportunit­ies to exploit positions of power. In 1960, women represente­d less than a third of all workers; by 2010, they were nearly half.

Or take the shooting of young black men by police. Compared to the 1960s, most urban police forces are now far more integrated.

In 2013, according to Department of Justice statistics, racial and ethnic minorities — mostly African-Americans and Hispanics — constitute­d 27 percent of local police officers, up from 15 percent in 1987.

These are clear advances, but they haven’t fully repaired the strained relations between many local police forces and the communitie­s they patrol.

The task of controllin­g crime and forging constructi­ve connection­s with urban neighborho­ods is tougher than just integratin­g the police.

A final example: the internet. In its early years, it was lauded as a technologi­cal marvel that would propel us into a brave new era of democratic openness, intellectu­al collaborat­ion and economic efficiency.

With time, the promise has faded or, at the least, become more qualified, as the internet has evolved into a vehicle for many not-so-wonderful activities: invasions of privacy; cyberbully­ing by adolescent­s and others; the hacking of business, government­al and personal computers (including the interferin­g with the 2016 U.S. election); the creation of “fake news”; identity theft; and the theft of trade secrets.

None of this should be taken as an argument to do nothing about the nation’s social ills, just because the reality is likely to prove more complicate­d and less malleable than the rhetoric of “reform” suggests.

We obviously should not (and won’t) remove most women from the workforce; or re-segregate local police forces; or dismantle the internet.

The more modest goal here is to keep things in perspectiv­e — to remember constructi­ve change when it occurs and to recognize that some of our goals are utopian.

We need to match our expectatio­ns with practicali­ties.

One of the reasons for our disillusio­n with politics, though certainly not the only one, is that we set out unrealisti­c objectives and then feel betrayed when we discover they’re unobtainab­le.

 ??  ?? Robert Samuelson Columnist
Robert Samuelson Columnist

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