Albuquerque Journal

Another sign of our moral decay

- CAL THOMAS Syndicated Columnist E-mail: tmseditors@tribune.com; copyright, Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

When future historians analyze the decline of America they need look no further than the trivialiti­es increasing­ly occupying our time and concerns instead of substantiv­e matters seriously threatenin­g our existence.

The latest in a long list of examples is the two-hour ABC special last Friday devoted to former Olympic athlete Bruce Jenner and his coming out as a transgende­r person.

Two hours! Neither ABC, nor any other media giant, has paid that much attention to internatio­nal threats from Russia, China and the rapid rise of Islamic fanaticism, not to mention the Bill and Hillary Clinton financial empire.

What is wrong with us? This constant feeding of our lower nature and fixation on what not long ago was regarded as bizarre, even perverted, is contributi­ng to a warped culture and the devaluing of the qualities necessary to stabilize society.

It is as if a lid has been lifted from the sewer and all the waste is now flooding the streets, posing a threat to our national well-being.

In his forthcomin­g book “1920: The Year That Made the Decade Roar,” Eric Burns writes that the mass media, birthed in that year by the spread of radio, is largely responsibl­e for diverting our attention from things that matter to things that don’t.

This passage from the introducti­on fixes the blame: “It began with radio, whose allies quickly became the newspapers with their tabloid value systems — and, in massing, the two media would form the most persuasive and pervasive of all American industries, as they went about making far too much of matters ever less consequent­ial, the private lives of actors and singers, musicians and authors, comedians and athletes, heirs and heiresses, perpetrato­rs and victims, millionair­es and billionair­es, and, later, disgraced public officials, pitchmen and anchormen, radio and TV talkers, sitcom stars, drama stars, game show hosts, chefs, bloggers, Internet jesters, and even carefully chosen nonentitie­s, some of whom would headline their own sublimely unrealisti­c ‘reality’ shows.” Interest in the lower things is nothing new. As Burns wrote in an earlier book, “Infamous Scribblers,” Colonial journalism spread rumors and falsehoods that today might bring libel suits. The difference is that those rags were largely limited to the areas in which they were published. Mass media changed all that.

From Burns’ “1920” book: “Further (the mass media) would report murders, robberies, fires, automobile accidents — these and more aberration­s as if they were common occurrence­s. The mass media would make so much of them all that eventually a tidal wave of irrelevanc­e would wash over the United State, and by late in the twentieth century the entire American lifestyle, the entire code of behavior and range of ambitions, would be unrecogniz­able from what it had been in the nineteenth.”

The result has been: “The country would have achieved the unachievab­le — the dumbing-down of its audiences as they sank into vapidity with gleeful abandon, as delighted with their plight as if they were riding the newest attraction in an amusement park.”

All of this, followed by today’s social media, writes Burns, “would transform the most powerful country on earth in its military and manufactur­ing might to a thirdworld nation in its tastes and values. So it is today; so it gives every sign of remaining.” Need more evidence? FYI, a digital cable and satellite television network owned by A-and-E Networks, is producing a program called “Seven Year Switch” on which married couples change partners in order to “save” their marriages.

Focusing on our lower nature instead of higher things gets you more expression­s of the former and less of the latter.

Failed nations usually rot morally from within before they are conquered by invading armies, or collapse under the weight of their immoraliti­es.

America is rapidly rotting from within and too many of us are fine with that.

Blame it on 1920 if you like, but subsequent generation­s, including this one, have renewed the lease on the banal and bizarre to our national shame, if we were capable of shame in an age where anything goes.

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