It is certainly possible to hope that the inauguration of Donald J. Trump will be greeted by a resurgence of the American spirit, from new inventions to a revival of entrepreneurial drive and the renewal of American industry and crafts. Trump may well be right that the mere threat of tariffs may reverse the flow of blue-collar jobs abroad while helping ensure the safety and integrity of vital supply chains that are essential to 21st-century industrial production.
He is certainly right that restoring competitive balance between America and its trade partners abroad, and between monopolistic corporations and small producers at home, is essential to growing and maintaining healthy communities where Americans can work and raise children, who in turn might better their communities. It is hard to argue with the idea that reforming the country’s disastrous attempts at trade and industrial policy while getting poisons out of its food, water and air are necessary steps towards a better American future.
Whether tariffs and better trade deals will heal the deeper fractures in the American spirit seems much harder to predict, though. Having grown used to self-determining with bureaucratically defined “identity groups” whose purpose is to legitimise unequal treatment under the law, it is no surprise that Americans have also grown suspicious of each other and of institutions that have schooled them in a vision of the country, its history, and its laws as all being varying shades of deplorable. Without a usable common past, or shared values, it is hard to imagine a shared future – which is why the rise of “woke” thought in schools and workplaces was accompanied by a sudden and startling decline in the American birthrate. Why have kids, if the country you live in is evil, and the future is bleak?
It is also no surprise that the number of watchable films and television shows created by incredibly wealthy techno-monopolies such as Amazon, Netflix and Apple over the past decade can be counted on the fingers of one hand. American publishers, meanwhile, print thousands of books that no one in the world reads, while routinely losing money on over 95% of their titles. Here, the villain isn’t necessarily wokeness: it’s the monopolistic, profit-free structure of the culture industries, which made paint-by-numbers ideology an easy substitute for appealing voices, characters and plots. In a moment where no one could agree on what Americans shared in common, it was also no wonder that an ever-expanding class of DEI bureaucrats, sensitivity readers, and the like appeared to be in danger of replacing actual writers and scholars and editors at movie studios and universities and publishing houses.
“Wokeness” was ultimately a symptom of the ills of America’s culture industries rather than its cause. The cause was the monopolistic structure of the culture business. By using tech cash to take-over the culture business, which they repurposed as a way of providing free content to keep users penned inside their gated monopolies, where they could drop more cash, Amazon, Netflix and Apple cut the connection between cultural products and the marketplace — substituting in its place the taste of layers of cubicle-dwellers with fancy resumes from Ivy League schools. In doing so, they are responsible for perhaps the single most vacant decade in American cultural history.
Name an American band, or an American director, or an American novelist, who has authentically captured the imaginations of even a small number of dedicated fans over the past decade. Instead, content producers of all races and genders, working under the censorious eyes of Ivy League race-class-and-gender twits, turned out indistinguishable widgets for zombie-like viewers who unsurprisingly seemed to have little idea of what they were watching or why they should care about it.
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SubscribePlease. This oft repeated twaddle equating criticism of the state of Israel and its actions with hatred of Jews is childish, and, funnily enough, from the very ‘woke’ playbook he otherwise correctly derides.
I don’t know that it’s fair to compare eras with minimal information and product distribution to the present moment. Was culture better in the 80s? I mean, looking back sure, it was far more coherent from an elite cultural production standpoint. People think hairbands and Cold War nostalgia. But at the time it was full of the same angst we feel today.
With just a few TV channels there was less elite competition. Hollywood and the mainstream press had little incentive to pander to niche demographics when they already commanded the entire public. People got the same news, watched the same shows and that made it easier to relate.
As Progressives have achieved institutional capture by tearing down norms and bullying everyone that resists the “turn of progress” they have become the Status Quo themselves. So you have a counterculture that actually won power and doesn’t know what to do with it. How could there possibly be good music and shows to support that legacy?
Still, even if the average band and show were better in 1987, there’s infinitely more good music and shows today. They’re just harder to find because of market saturation. The show Yellowstone and musician Chris Stapleton for instance are impressive in any era. People will be impressed in hundred years.
I agree we’re in a weird spot but “history” can’t be judged until its actually history. We can’t even fully grasp the magnitude of 9/11 yet because it was only 23 years ago. People that have to constantly claim they’re on the “right side of history” are doomed to be wrong because of the inherent Self-righteousness of the claim. Utopians attempt to “immanentize the eschaton” out of self-grandeur not collective outcomes. Idealists in power are a bad idea. You’ll get neither ideal outcomes or “sustainable progress.”
Trumpism is actually like a counterculture to the counterculture. Trump is not an idealist. He is a moderate deal maker at a time when everybody seems allergic to compromise.
“Having grown used to self-determining with bureaucratically defined “identity groups” whose purpose is to legitimise unequal treatment under the law…”
You know, it’s funny. I don’t know about whether I agree with this “identity groups’ complaint, but I do know that, over decades, a dominant identity group manipulated laws and regulations to guarantee unequal treatment for those not in the dominant group. So if it’s happening now, is the complaint rooted in happening to the authors group?
Where were the opponents of unequal treatment when the treatment being meted out was unequal for the other folks? Did anyone clear their throat and object when the first federal minimum wage laws, for example, were explicitly written to exclude black agricultural laborers? And that’s just one of thousands of examples.