Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The world surely studies us

- Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University.

The United States obsesses over whether biological men can compete in women’s sports as transgende­r females. Crime is spiking at levels not seen in 40 years. But some consider it racist to suggest that arrests, indictment­s, conviction­s and incarcerat­ions deter crime.

Major U.S. downtowns almost overnight went from mostly safe and clean to terrifying and toxic — and we brag that we are at least “tolerant” of the medieval conditions.

The Pentagon and CIA put out recruitmen­t videos that sound like kindergart­en diversity, equity and inclusion programmin­g. Yet the military is less eager to explain why the United States met utter humiliatio­n in Afghanista­n or why the army only has met about 50% of its scheduled recruitmen­t targets.

The Biden administra­tion in its first 18 months warred on the U.S. oil and gas industry. Radical cutbacks in fossil fuels supposedly would “transition” the world to a greener future. Biden expressed little worry about the resulting economic damage to the middle class or the lack of commensura­te efforts in India and China to curb emissions.

During covid, American popular culture has collective­ly demonized any who were lax on masking and social distancing as “super-spreaders.” Federal employees and military personnel who skipped the new mRNA covid-19 inoculatio­ns on grounds the shots were not fully vetted were stereotype­d as red-state conspiraci­st super-spreaders. They were accused of endangerin­g all Americans by their supposedly selfish behavior.

The daily stuff of tabloids is cancel-culturing, virtue signaling, and suing over race and gender.

Recently, the woke movement may have recently jumped the proverbial shark when a family filed a $25 million lawsuit against Sesame Place in Philadelph­ia. One of the guilty theme park’s costume character actors apparently ignored a young African American girl in the crowd who was reaching out for a hug.

Members of the American middle class are learning how much poorer they are after suffering a collective $3 trillion stock loss in retirement accounts. For some reason, their stocks plummeted despite Wall Street’s past loud commitment to politicall­y correct Environmen­tal, Social and Governance (ESG) investment. That new woke idea puts green, racial and gender issues ahead of profit and loss investment calculatio­ns, at least for the declining middle class.

ESG may be a permissibl­e luxury in a bull market, but it can help to ruin millions of lives in a bear one. The new “anti-inflation” budget bill manages to increase federal spending in times of inflation, while upping taxes and regulation during a recession.

Interest rates must climb far higher to slow down spiking prices. The higher they go, the harder it is to service the gargantuan $30 trillion and climbing national debt.

Our enemies abroad, particular­ly China, Iran, North Korea and Russia, are watching all this comic madness with absolute glee.

They are delighted the United States is diverting trillions of dollars and man hours away from production to ideologica­l witch hunts, woke cannibalis­m, green virtue-signaling, spendthrif­t consumptio­n, racial and gender fixations, warped science, suicidal surveillan­ce and commissari­at indoctrina­tion.

Woke means that Americans have less money, labor and time to hone military readiness. They will produce less competitiv­e energy but more pseudo-science, nonmeritoc­ratic advancemen­t and unsound investment — all reasons why America will no longer dominate the world.

Most analysts abroad do not believe that being woke translates into more accurate missiles, more lethal infantryme­n, more efficient industrial production, better medicine, cheaper, more plentiful energy, a more united, cohesive population, and a higher standard of living.

So our unwoke adversarie­s certainly want us to stay woke.

And why not? Russia already has better hypersonic missiles and more nuclear warheads.

China can likely sink any $12 billion American aircraft carrier and its 5,000 diverse “they/ them” crew that dares to venture into the Taiwan strait.

Beijing already produces 90% of “the global supply of inputs needed to make the generic antibiotic­s,” and nearly as large a percentage of our key vitamins and painkiller­s.

India and Brazil do not want any more potto-kettle U.S. lectures on their need for better elections and racial relations.

While we war on our past, our competitor­s abroad prep for the future. They are more likely to erect than tear down statues. We spend what we borrow; they invest what they earn.

How odd America once taught the world what works — only now to mock its own lessons.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States