America’s Advantage
Victor Davis Hanson | 24.03.2013 00:07 | Culture | Indymedia | London | World
For all the Obama-era talk of decline, there is at least one reason why America probably won’t, at least not quite yet.
“Peak oil” and our “oil addiction” were supposed to have ensured that we ran out of either gas or the money to buy it. Now, suddenly, we have more gas and oil than ever before. But the key question is: Why do we?
The oil-and-gas renaissance was brought on by horizontal drilling and fracking that opened up vast new reserves that were previously either unknown or considered unrecoverable. Both technological breakthroughs were American discoveries, largely brought on by entrepreneurial mavericks and engineers exploring on mostly private lands. Couldn’t the Saudi, Venezuelan, or Nigerian oil industry have discovered these new methods of resource recovery, given their nations’ reliance on petroleum exportation?
The world now wakes up to iPhone communication, Amazon online buying, social networking on Facebook, Google Internet searches, and writing and computing with Microsoft software. Why weren’t these innovations first developed in Japan, China, or Germany — all wealthy industrial countries with large, well-educated, and hard-working populations? Because in such nations, young oddballs like Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, or Steve Jobs more likely would have needed the proper parentage, age, family connections, or government-insider sanction to be given a fair shake.
Even in its third century, America is still the most meritocratic nation in the world. Unlike under the caste system of India; the class considerations of Europe; the racial homogeneity of China, Japan, or Korea; the tribalism of Africa; or the religious orthodoxy of the Middle East, in America one can offer a new idea, invention, or protocol and have it be judged on its merits, rather than on the background, accent, race, age, gender, or religion of the person who offers it.
Businesses evaluate proposals on the basis of what makes them lots of money. Publishers want writing that a lot of people will read. Popular culture is simply a reflection of what the majority seems to want. In the long run, that bottom line leads to national wealth and power.
If history is a guide, the most savvy Chinese citizen of Japanese descent would not make it as a high official in Beijing’s Communist Party — no more so than a brilliant Japanese citizen of Chinese descent would run Toyota or Honda. A white Croatian of enormous talent could not end up as president of Sudan.
Mexico has a word, Raza, that conflates race and nationality, in the way that the German word Volk used to suggest not just being German, but looking German, as well. I doubt that either country would ever elect a black head of state.
It would be virtually impossible for the most talented Christian or Jew to be allowed to head contemporary Egypt, or for a brilliant four-star Buddhist general to run the Iranian military. For the immediate future, don’t expect a female business-school valedictorian to manage Saudi Arabia’s national oil company. Note that in all these cases, such exclusions derive from criteria other than innate talent, character, and industriousness, and can result in the lesser qualified being considered the only qualified.
The mixture of consumer capitalism and constitutionally protected free speech — and all sorts of races, religions, and ethnicities — sometimes means that America can be a wild place with a popular culture that appears crass and uncouth to those abroad. Our generation’s $17 trillion national debt, unfunded entitlements, and nearly 50 million people on food stamps might convince the Founding Fathers that they had spawned license rather than guaranteed liberty.
Yet the upside to the wild arena of America is that almost anyone is free to enter it. Oprah Winfrey, an African-American woman, reinvents the genre of daytime talk shows and builds a media empire. Warren Buffet outpaces New York’s Wall Street — from Nebraska. A one-time five-and-dime owner from Arkansas, Sam Walton, refashions the way an entire planet buys its stuff. A Russian émigré, Sergey Brin, co-founds Google, perhaps the most indispensible site on the Internet.
Just when we read obituaries about an unruly nation of excess, unlikely nobodies pop up to pioneer fracking, the Napa wine industry, or Silicon Valley. Why? No other nation has a Constitution whose natural evolution would lead to a free, merit-based society that did not necessarily look like the privileged — and brilliant — landed white-male aristocracy that invented it.
The end of American exceptionalism will come not when we run out of gas, wheat, or computers, but when we end the freedom of the individual, and, whether for evil or supposedly noble reasons, judge people not on their achievement but on their name, class, race, sex, or religion — in other words, when we become like most places the world over.
Victor Davis Hanson
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America's disadvantage.
24.03.2013 01:26
Fracking is a scavengers economy. You cannot gain nearly as much gas from fracking as you can by just drilling for oil and syphoning off the gas from a large field. Fracking is just picking up the tiny little bits that can be found here and there and would not make any sense to extract, except in the most special of circumstances. To claim that fracking is a rennaisance is simply to believe the hype of a few corporates trying to convince governments to invest in a business model which isn't comparable to straight out drilling. This is something Americans like to do...going along with the hype even where there is no substance to an argument.
The computer sciences are always used by Americans to try to convince the rest of the world that the US model economy is sound and has a future. IBM has long since passed into Chinese hands, Google just doesn't make the money even though it has large reach throughout Europe and the US, elesewhere in the world it has no presence at all. Facebook is not operable as a business model and that fact will become clear sooner rather than later. Amazon makes very little due to the fact it is busy driving down retail prices in the markets in which it is operating and most of its limited profits go toward the regional stores and businessess that actually provide its goods. IPhone is a toy that has very little actual market share which is being driven into the dirt by the likes of Samsung.
Microsoft's reach is slipping quite badly now. Most of the junk emails I get usually point to Microsoft's site. When you see a large scale corporate coming to depend on spamming people just to get site traffic you know the business is in decline.
"Even in its third century, America is still the most meritocratic nation in the world."
This statement really is a terrible misrepresentation. If the United States is such a meritocracy, then why are two of its biggest surveillance operations (Twitter and Facebook) funded from capital provided by the government? In a true meritocracy, the government should have no role in the private sector. The US is not and has never been a meritocracy.
As far as the rest of this nonsense of an apologia is concerned, the United States is simply an opportunistic cabal where anything goes and nothing stands in the way of those who can engineer its economic dominance over the rest of the world. I would like to say this is Capitalism but its not...its just doing whatever it takes to win at all costs.
The US has very litttle going for it, apart from the worlds largest debt burden, the worlds largest military spending doctrine and being by far the worlds largest polluter. Economy, defence and environment are for America, its greatest burden.
You can only make a case for the United States, by simply ignoring reality and hurling yourself into a make-believe world of artificial spangle and plastic glitter, what the Americans call the American dream.
For the rest of the world, American exceptionalism is now an exclusively American dogma. The rest of the world is a freer and better prospect.
That's why so many of the rest of the worlds largest corporates have been quietly shifting away from the US and leveraging engagement with the up-and-coming economies.
America, is largely a victim of its own success. While you are sitting there lauding the freedom of the American people, other nations around the world have taken their controlled economies and stitched them together with Anglo-Saxon Capitalism and shot ahead. All America really did in its history, was to standardise Capitalism and make it controllable by the larger and more powerful Communist and Socialist elite states. The thing that America needed to do more than anything else to safeguard its future, was to develop a Capitalist model that could not be exported. It never did that because it was convinced that its world-view was superior to the rest of the worlds. So it went ahead with its version of Capitalism and gave it all away or simply forced it onto any state it could. The US never quite understood that its war against Communism has never been forgotten. So the Communists and Socialists have carefully studied the US, have learned from its errors, and have now taken Capitalism as a dogma in house where it can be controlled by the state.
Now America is heavily in debt to the Communists. The Communists now effectively own the US.
This is not a rennaisance...America is in decline.
anonymous