╌>

America: Is a Hellhole of Niceness and Optimism

  
Via:  John Russell  •  9 months ago  •  23 comments


America: Is a Hellhole of Niceness and Optimism
Abraham Lincoln’s money quote is worth citing in full, so poetic is it in a time of true national calamity:  With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. Donald Trump...

Leave a comment to auto-join group NEWSMucks

NEWSMucks


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


A recent visit to the States reminded me what I love about America: its friendliness, its optimism, its individuality.

Seen from abroad, the country takes on something of a gargoyle appearance, seeming angry, intolerant, and full of guns. Its politically charged cultural battles are so toxic they get easily exported, like a virus that’s boarded a quick flight to Heathrow. In the UK, we’ve been stunned to have demonstrations about drag shows on our streets (that’s where the protests are, not the shows). Drag has not traditionally been a problem here, where men dressing up as women has been a mainstay of the culture (just check out a Christmas panto).


But as the saying goes, when America sneezes, the world catches a cold. And there’s been a lot of sneezing lately.

The US looks bitterly divided, majorly aggrieved, self-censorious, agitated, and unsure of itself.

But at ground level, it struck me as utterly charming. A two-week visit to New England had me at hello — and there were a lot of hellos.

It occurred to me that even in the midst of a national cultural breach, Americans are natural idealists, and their politicians have traditionally followed suit.

Bill Clinton was an easy smiler who did retail politicking like nobody’s business, who famously hailed from a town called Hope. That noun informed Barack Obama’s campaign, whose election manual was called “The Audacity of Hope,” with that buoyant word emblazoned on his posters.

I never agreed with Ronald Reagan’s politics, but I admired his cheerful disposition and self-deprecating sense of humor. In 1984, he was reelected (in a landslide) by declaring it was “morning in America.”


Even George W. Bush predicated his popularity on his likeability; he was the one you supposedly would want to “have a beer with.” This assumed that you wouldn’t have wanted to have a beer with Al Gore, who looked as if he’d go more for a chardonnay and didn’t know anything about baseball.

All of this contrasts with Donald Trump’s grim appraisal of his native country, describing “mothers and children trapped in poverty” and “rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation.” Instead of Reagan’s “shining city on a hill,” Trump sees “carnage.”

Like  Mussolini, Trump declared, “And the crime and gangs and drugs that have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential. This American carnage stops right here and stops right now.”

That was his  inauguration speech .

800



Newly elected President Donald J. Trump delivered his American Carnage speech at his inauguration. Photo credit:   US Marines / Wikimedia

=================================================================


Compare that to Franklin Roosevelt’s reassuring “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” or John F. Kennedy’s “the torch has been passed to a new generation.” Kennedy called for a collective spirit of volunteerism: “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.”


Abraham Lincoln’s money quote is worth citing in full, so poetic is it in a time of true national calamity: 

With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.

Donald Trump sees a mendacious America, cast in his own image. He even disparaged the war dead as “losers” and “suckers.”

Commenting on Putin’s murdering of critics and journalists, he remarked, “You think we’re so innocent?” It was a novel approach, convincing his fellow citizens that their country is just as bad as one of the worst of other countries. No “American exceptionalism” for him.


In 2016, Michelle Obama famously said, “When they go low, we go high.”

It was an edifying line, but eight years later, we’ve seen almost an entire party go low, followed by (or is it following?) almost half the country.

In an age of false news, viral conspiracy theories, misinformation constantly fed by a right-wing ecosystem, deep fakes, and progressively more workable AI, it’s easier than ever to “go low,” and increasingly difficult to “go high.”


President Biden is still managing it. He’s of the old-school sunny-side politicians, his smile as easy as President Clinton’s. Whether he runs for reelection or not (whether he wins or not), his demeanor is the opposite of Trump’s and harkens back to the age of the political idealist.

“Given a fair shot, given a fair chance, Americans have never, ever, ever, ever let their country down. Never. Never. Ordinary people like us, who do extraordinary things.”

That’s Biden. It’s not exactly poetry, but it’s a good example of his upbeat rhetoric.

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) has declared that “Florida is where woke goes to die.” It’s astonishing to hear a politician say that anything goes to their state to die, as if the Angel of Death were running for the White House.


It’s doom talk, negative nellyism.

And here’s Trump speaking in Waco, TX, last week: “If we don’t win this election in 2024, I truly believe our country is doomed. … Either the Deep State destroys America or we destroy the Deep State. … They’re flooding your towns with deadly drugs, selling your jobs to China, mutilating your children … setting fire to your life savings, releasing violent criminals to prey on innocent people.”

You could argue that his rally in Waco was also America “at ground level,” but I don’t buy it.

After two weeks in beautiful New England, driving through its picturesque towns, talking to its effusive citizens (I love my adopted England, but jovial is not their natural state when sober), I was reminded of the natural openness, confidence, and enthusiasm of Americans. With the caveat that this was an affluent area in a moderate, usually bipartisan state, I don’t think the friendliness I encountered was unique to my native Massachusetts. But in my experience it is unique to the country.


The more its politicians can harness and encourage that confidence and optimism, the better the country — and the world — will be.

J.B. Miller is an American writer living in England, and is the author of  My Life in Action Painting  and  The Satanic Nurses and Other Literary Parodies.


Tags

jrGroupDiscuss - desc
[]
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    9 months ago

America is a degraded country.  If it were not 

 He even disparaged the war dead as “losers” and “suckers.”

would in itself be disqualifying. 

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2  Greg Jones    9 months ago

In my most humble opinion, the real losers and suckers are those saps that will vote for Biden

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3  Sean Treacy    9 months ago

President Biden is still managing it. He’s of the old-school sunny-side politicians,

pure gaslighting… Jim Crow 2.0 anyone? The guy who claimed mitt Romney, MITT ROMNEY!, was going to put black people back in chains…

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
3.1  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  Sean Treacy @3    9 months ago

Yep, in VA in 2012, VP Biden told a reason campaign audience that Republican economic policies would "put y'all back in chains”, using his best Southern accent imitation.

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
3.1.1  Right Down the Center  replied to  Drinker of the Wry @3.1    9 months ago

Anyone paying attention knows who the real racists are.  Like so often happens the ones complaining about others being what they actually are.

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Expert
3.1.2  MrFrost  replied to  Right Down the Center @3.1.1    9 months ago

The vast majority (80%) of racial and ethnic minority members in the new Congress are Democrats, while 20% are Republicans. This split is similar to the previous Congress, when 83% of non-White lawmakers were Democrats and 17% were Republicans.

OOPS.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.3  bugsy  replied to  Right Down the Center @3.1.1    9 months ago
Anyone paying attention knows who the real racists are.  Like so often happens the ones complaining about others being what they actually are.

One hundred percent true...

Case in point.

All one has to do is mention the name Clarence Thomas and the real racists (hint: not those on the right) will gladly and unapologetic show themselves.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.4  bugsy  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.2    9 months ago
The vast majority (80%) of racial and ethnic minority members in the new Congress are Democrats,

He mentioned racist, not unintelligent

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
3.1.5  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  bugsy @3.1.3    9 months ago

Seriously someone would have to be complete idiot to think that the Democrats are the "real" racists.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.6  bugsy  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1.5    9 months ago

Most racists will readily deny they are racist.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
3.1.7  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.2    9 months ago

Oops, Identity politics?  Only According to Dems, only Uncle Toms and Aunt Jemimas become Repub.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
3.1.8  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1.5    9 months ago

And yet there is a Black reverse migration underway  leaving the Northeast, upper Midwest and West Coast for the South.

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Expert
3.1.9  MrFrost  replied to  Drinker of the Wry @3.1.7    9 months ago
Oops, Identity politics?

Statistics, actually. 

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
3.1.10  Right Down the Center  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.2    9 months ago

Deflection noted

 
 
 
Gazoo
Junior Silent
3.1.11  Gazoo  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1.5    9 months ago

Seriously someone would have to be complete idiot to think that the Democrats are the "real" racists.”

I know, right? It’s not the dems that think minorities are so stupid and helpless they can’t obtain a government issued ID.

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
3.1.12  Right Down the Center  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1.5    9 months ago

When you can't argue the point resort to name calling

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
3.1.13  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.9    9 months ago

Yep, stats:

The reversal of the Great Migration began as a trickle in the 1970s, increased in the 1990s, and turned into a virtual evacuation from many northern areas in subsequent decades. The movement is largely driven by younger, college-educated Black Americans, from both northern and western places of origin. They have contributed to the growth of the “New South,” especially in Texas, Georgia, and North Carolina, as well as metropolitan regions such as Atlanta, Dallas, and Houston.
 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
3.1.16  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1.5    9 months ago

In the 2020-21 school year, the highest percentage of schools serving a predominantly single-race/ethnicity student population – whether mostly white, mostly Hispanic or mostly Black etc. – were in the Northeast and the Midwest.

A tactic causing increasing segregation is district secession, where schools break away from an existing district and form their own new district. The result, is that segregation gets worse.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
3.1.17  Greg Jones  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1.5    9 months ago

They are the original racists, and from founding the KKK to filibustering the Civil Rights Act of 1964, nothing has changed.  Robert "Exalted Cyclops" Byrd was Biden's friend and mentor. Biden gave the eulogy at Byrd's funeral. 

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.18  bugsy  replied to  Greg Jones @3.1.17    9 months ago
They are the original racists

And in most cases, the current ones

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
4  seeder  JohnRussell    9 months ago

As always almost no one addresses the seeded article.

 
 

Who is online





245 visitors