Author and social critic Morris Berman says the fact that
we're a nation of hustlers lies at the root of our decline.
March 7, 2012
Several years after the Wall
Street-ignited crisis began, the nation’s top bank CEOs (who far
out-accumulated their European and other international counterparts)
continue to hobnob with the president at campaign dinners where each
plate costs more than one out of four US households make in a year.
Financial bigwigs lead their affluent lives, unaffected, unremorseful,
and unindicted for wreaking havoc on the nation. Why? Because they won.
They hustled better. They are living the American Dream.
This
is not the American Dream that says if you work hard you can be more
comfortable than your parents; but rather, if you connive well, game the
rules, and rule the game, your take from others is unlimited. In this
paradigm, human empathy, caring, compassion, and connection have been
devalued from the get-go. This is the flaw in the entire premise of the
American Dream: if we can have it all, it must by definition be at
someone else’s expense.
In Why America Failed,
noted historian and cultural critic Morris Berman’s brilliant, raw and
unflinchingly accurate postmortem of America, he concludes that this
hustling model, literally woven into the American DNA, doomed the
country from the start, and led us inevitably to this dysfunctional
point. It is not just the American Dream that has failed, but America
itself, because the dream was a mistake in the first place. We are at
our core a nation of hustlers; not recently, not sometimes, but always.
Conventional wisdom has it that America was predicated on the republican
desire to break free from monarchical tyranny, and that was certainly a
factor in the War of Independence; but in practical terms, it came
down to a drive for "more" -- for individual accumulation of wealth.
So where does that leave us as a country? I caught up with Berman to find out. READ MORE
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