Values in danger
Our Endangered Values: America’s Moral Crisis, Jimmy Carter
I admire Jimmy Carter. For all the criticism he’s gotten for being «America’s least effective president» I think we could do with more presidents just as ineffective. I admire his commitment to his Christian values and his ability to unite people and negotiate between adversaries. While the inflation in the late 70s may be attributed to his administration’s mismanagement, the other of our nation’s ills commonly blamed on Jimmy Carter is the Iran hostage crisis, and I don’t for a moment believe that anyone else in the White House at that time could have brought the hostages home alive.
Reagan claimed to have a plan for getting the hostages out, but it’s doubtful that he could have used military force to free them without getting many of them killed in the process. Carter refused to consider plans that predicted heavy losses to the people that were supposed to be saved. That was the right thing. My best conspiry-theorist thinking leads me to the conclusion that Reagan bribed the people who hated us the most on the planet with high-tech military weapons to get the hostages freed upon his inauguration. Or did you think that the sale of arms to Iran revealed in the Iran-Contra affair was just a coincidence? Way to go «not negotiating with terrorists,» Ron. But even if I’m wrong about that aspect, I liked the guy who actually tried pointing the guns at our enemies better than the guy who gave them deadly weapons. Call me silly.
So, I enjoyed reading Our Endangered Values, but I’m afraid there wasn’t a lot in it that surprised me. Some juicy stuff about the corruption of the Southern Baptist Convention into a fundamentalist juggernaut is in there, but I’m one of the people who already agrees with many of Carter’s values.
Human rights? I’m on board. Being a superpower means setting an example instead of following the examples of our enemies? Amen, brother. Protect our natural resources from those that profit off of their destruction? Hell yeah.
So while this book was a gratifying critique of the current administration’s policies, refreshing as it is rooted in a profound Christian faith (a perspective that has lately been monopolized by the right wing) it did not teach me much new.
I’ve said before that I prefer to read books that argue against my beliefs, and this was a reminder.
There’s also a disappointment in Carter’s seeming limitation of blame on the current administration. The subtitle America’s Moral Crisis suggests that there is more at play than a renegade administration thwarting the will of the people. In fact, almost everything the administration has done has been with the consent and approval of vast numbers of Americans. While I appreciate Carter’s statement of his own values, I see it as a failure of leadership that he did nothing to address the disparity between the values of Americans and the outward opinions and tolerance of evil that we seem to display. It’s hypocritical to blame the man making a mockery of American ideals when we had the chance to dump him out of office and failed to act. For Carter to point the finger only at the top of the pyramid and call that «America’s Moral Crisis» seems facile and shallow.
And now a word from the
And now a word from the Right: I lived through Carter. I believe he is a fine moral man, but he was a totally ineffective President. I don’t see that as necessarily contradictory. 🙂 His handling of Iran and the economy were just the most glaring examples. Nothing of positive import was accomplished during his term unless you feel the Camp David Accords ended the war in the Mideast. He also gave away the Panama Canal. The one thing he did well while in office was his handling of the Three Mile Island problem. The fact that he immediately went there and was filmed inspecting the facility reassured the rest of us that it really wasn’t as dangerous there as the media’s blather was portraying. His ineffectiveness was in spite of the Democrats controlling both Houses. As I said before: a good man, but a crappy President.
Dad
Even granting every bit of
Even granting every bit of that, he still did more good than Reagan.
Who, you will recall, not only gave rockets to the Iranian islamists, but sold WMDs to Saddam. And he and Bush-one pretty much created the Taliban while they were at it, with their policy of “We’ll fight the Soviets to the last Afghan”. In other words, it turns out the entire War on Terror is pretty much Reagan’s fault. Up against that, the Carter record of leaving things no better or worse than he found them looks pretty admirable.
Little known fun fact: the seventies, when everybody felt like the economy was perpetually in the toilet, produced more total job growth than the eighties, which everybody likes to describe as this time of vibrant economic revival.
I’m not sure that it is
I’m not sure that it is worth debating with someone who claims that any single person is responsible for the current war on terror. The US has not been on good terms with fundamentalist Muslims since before the Crusades. Well, maybe since Muhammad.
Everyone has heard that Carter produced 8 million jobs while in office. I haven’t researched that claim, but the fact that the unemployment rate jumped to around 8% and stayed there until Reagan cut taxes would cause me to wonder where the jobs were. I suspect they must have been short term government jobs. Your implication that the Carter years were not, in fact, economically woeful flies in the face of the facts. 20% interest rates, 8% unemployment and 12% inflation got Reagan elected, campaigning almost solely on the “misery index”. Economists had to invent a new term to describe the economy while Carter was in office: stagflation. This described the unprecedented combination of slow economic growth and rising prices.
Dad
Of course, I misspoke. The
Of course, I misspoke. The US wasn’t even around before 1776. The US didn’t have trouble with Muslim terrorists until after the Revolutionary War. That’s when it all started: the Barbary pirates in the late 1700’s and very early 1800’s were the first Muslim terrorists we had to deal with, and they, too, were supported and sponsored by Arab nations. This took place well before colonialism in the lands of Islam, before oil interests, and long before the founding of the state of Israel.
Anyway, it goes back before Reagan. At least to Jefferson.
Dad
My point is not that the
My point is not that the seventies were paradise, it’s that Reagan’s answer to it was in many ways a cure worse than the disease. Especially given that in hindsight, we can now see pretty clearly how it was possible to have rising prices in a slowing ecomony: just have a cartel temporarily triple the price of oil. So the stagflation was probably by its nature a fairly transitory event — something that wasn’t realized at the time. In this light, Reagan’s one real economy-fixing accomplishment was to flood the petroleum market. Aside from that… in exchange for being freed from stagflation, we’ve pretty much hosed our entire middle class. Remember when an uneducated factory worker could buy a house and his wife didn’t even need a job? Remember when you could actually get a good education at a public school? Those were still possible in the seventies.
Reagan’s tax cut did the
Reagan’s tax cut did the very same thing as JFK’s did: it jumpstarted the economy. Always has. I suspect it always will. That was what pulled us out of the economic doldrums of the Carter era. We didn’t (and still don’t) have enough oil reserves to make a significant impact on the economy.
There are many reasons we have so many dual income families. One is that the average house has more than doubled in size since the late 60’s, and we have to fill all that space with expensive “labor-saving” devices. Most people today would refuse to live in theie equivalent 1960’s household. So the wife works to support these luxuries. They are supporting their higher standard of living. Also, in the 60’s women were not encouraged to work outside the home. That was “their place” in most minds. That said, I know quite a few families who have gone back to a single income, and they say that the loss of spousal income is significantly offset by the savings derived from not working.
As for education, that has been on a downward trend for at least a hundred years. Who among us can quote from the classics in their original languages? That was common among educated folk in the 19th century. Today most college grads don’t even have a clue who Chaucer was. But I digress. Yes, you could still get a good education in the 70’s if you wanted to. Yes, it is much harder now. But the SAT tests were softened in 1974 as well as in 1980 and 1995. Methinks that indicates the education system was in trouble before Carter, let alone Reagan. I was pleased to see that this year school test scores went up, thanks in no little part to the NCLB act. But I agree: our educational system is perilously inadequate. The National Endowment for the Humanities has done nationwide testing of high school juniors, and their lack of knowledge is abysmal. (No, they don’t know what that word means, so it doesn’t insult them.) Here are a few examples from their multiple choice tests:
1. When was the First World War? 43% couldn’t pick “between 1900 – 1950”
2. 70% had no idea what the Magna Carta was.
3. When was the Civil War? Only 32% picked “1850−1900”
4. When did Columbus discover America? Only 68% picked “before 1750”
5. A quarter couldn’t pick “Nixon” as the President forced to resign because of Watergate. (The other choices were Truman, Eisenhower, and Johnson.)
6. Half picked Patrick Henry as saying “Give me liberty or give me death.”
7. Only 36% could identify Chaucer as the author of Canterbury Tales.
This test was not a “tricky” test, as you can see by the half century choices for when events occurred. One more example that shows this:
8. President Abraham Lincoln wrote:
a. the Bill of Rights 13.6%
b. the Emancipation Proclamation 68.0%
c. the Missouri Compromise 9.9%
d. Uncle Tom’s Cabin 8.5%
At least the majority got this right. This study only covered History and Literature, but every study shows our students falling further and further behind the rest of the world in every area, particularly math and science, yet the American students, when asked to assess themselves, place themselves at the top. I think education is by far the most serious problem facing the nation, far outstripping the media-hyped issues of war, climate change, or resource depletion. Intelligence and education coupled with logic and reason can solve any problem. Rational thought is not very common, however. Certainly not in politics or education.
Dad
” it jumpstarted the
” it jumpstarted the economy.”
Well, a little bit of a hop. It certainly jumpstarted the stock market, but the overall economy? Net job creation was weak, wages in proportion to cost of living lost ground… if you add Reagan and Bush‑1 together, even total household income went down after inflation, for those below median income — and median income itself fell relative to mean income, due to increasing concentration of wealth.
“Always has. I suspect it always will.”
Then how do you explain how it is that the really big leap in the economy, with dramatic job and income growth — even a brief reversal of the thirty year decline of wage buying power — only happened after Clinton passed a tax increase? And how now that we have a tax cut again, the economy can’t seem to restart from what looked at the time like a minor hiccup recession?
“So the wife works to support these luxuries. They are supporting their higher standard of living. Also, in the 60’s women were not encouraged to work outside the home.”
That is the broadly accepted conventional view. It’s wrong. It would be more on the money to say that it worked in the reverse direction: it became accepted for wives to work outside the home after it became common practice, in order to compensate for a lower standard of living.
We don’t live in bigger houses today, we live with more people having no house at all. If the average house is bigger, that probably has more to do with house ownership becoming a mark of class privilege than it has to do with ever-increasing luxury for average citizens.
Around here, there are still plenty of tiny houses. I know somebody who owns a free standing house of only about 400 square feet! In fact, I don’t think I know a single acquaintence today who owns a house as big as the one I lived in as a kid (5 bedrooms). Which my parents bought for like two years’ worth of my dad’s salary, and later sold for like four years’ worth. Nowadays it would probably go for like eight or ten years of what I now earn, which is at a comparable career level.
“As for education, that has been on a downward trend for at least a hundred years.”
Only the last 25 or so, I think. The amount of stuff that people know has mostly gone up over the last century. Psychologists who measure IQs have never yet come up with a test that separates native intelligence from education, and the result of this is that they keep having to move the baseline, because people keep scoring higher than the people of a decade ago did on general intelligence tests. Somebody just came out with a book making a strong case that the average American has come to be far more able to deal with complexity than they were 50 years ago — I can’t remember the name, unfortunately.
As for a traditional education in the classics, that’s great if it’s in addition to, rather than instead of, knowing modern stuff… but from what I’ve heard, the kind of education that the elite private schools gave 120 years ago was, like, Greek and Latin are the only required subjects, history and geography are recommended, mathematics and science are strictly optional. We’re doing a good deal better than that. 100 years ago a large portion of the population were farmers who got, by modern standars, hardly any education at all. The long term trend is positive — the recent declines mostly come down to the efforts of certain factions to attack and undermine public education, leaving us all too often with ghetto-caliber schools even in the suburbs, and disturbingly, a ghetto-like attitude toward school taking hold in reasonably well-off young people. Especially here in California, where the cutbacks over the last thirty years have been more dramatic than in most states.
It is an interesting
It is an interesting coincidence that yesterday the Wall Street Journal printed their analysis of the 25 years since Reagan was inaugurated. Their conclusion contradicts yours completely. Basically, they say that Reaganomics worked, and it worked exceptionally well. If you are interested in their analysis and the data, here is the link: http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110007843
Dad
the Wall Street Journal
[quote]the Wall Street Journal printed their analysis of the 25 years since Reagan was inaugurated. .…. Basically, they say that Reaganomics worked, and it worked exceptionally well.[/quote]
They did work well for the kind of nose-up-Ayn Rand’s-dead-asshole pricks who write for The Wall Street Journal.
Up to now this has been a
Up to now this has been a fairly reasonable discussion. Your type of vitriol seems to be common to people who have no facts to debate with.…
Consider yourself spanked and your mouthed washed out with soap.
Dad
No amount of soap will wash
No amount of soap will wash away the truth!!
woops, that was me. So was
woops, that was me. So was the remark about the credibility of the WSJ opinion department, which has been hiring 100% pure partisan hacks with zero integrity for twenty years or more.
“Consider yourself spanked
“Consider yourself spanked and your mouthed washed out with soap.”
Yeah, fine, “Dad.”
While we’re spanking and washing, your statement regarding the Wall Street Journal is known in the land of rhetorical fallacy is “ad verecundiam,” an “appeal to authority.” Useless if you don’t say WHY their study came to those conclusions.
Let’s take a closer look at my inflammatory (ad hominem) statement:
“They did work well for the kind of nose-up-Ayn Rand’s-dead-asshole pricks who write for The Wall Street Journal.”
I still feel a ton of residual anger from Reagan’s time in office. I was broke and disenfranchised. In my young life, I’d never experienced the depths of that attitude of “we don’t give a shit about anyone but the people who are directly responsible for us being in power.” Not with Johnson, Nixon, Ford, or Carter.
For 12 years of my life I felt like an outsider in my own country. I’m still seething with anger about it. If you’re writing me off as a pissed-off Democrat who didn’t get what he wanted, well, in 1980, I voted for Anderson, for whom I would have voted had he stayed with the Republican party. I was pretty much a Republican until 1980, when that party sent a big “fuck you” to people like me.
That is Reagan’s legacy with me: legitimizing selfishness. From what I’ve read of Ayn Rand, that’s her big trip as well: being only concerned with one’s own interests is good for the world. I don’t claim to be any kind of authority on her, because I’ve found her books pretty unreadable.
Yes, Reagan’s policies did work well for some, and those people were mostly those who already had access to economic power. The people who now write for the Wall Street Journal are such people. We cannot expect them to be free of bias when doing their study or drawing conclusions from it.
Who am I? Some Bay Area hippie commie pal of Steve’s, perhaps?
I’m in my mid-40’s and have my own electronics business. Proud and happy capitalist.
The WSJ opinion page has not
The WSJ opinion page has not the slightest trace of the credibility that the WSJ’s news department has.
The same has been said for
The same has been said for ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, NY Times, et al, for decades. Gosh! Who can you trust? At least the WSJ hasn’t been caught making up partisan stories as all the above have.
Dad
There’s no comparison.
There’s no comparison. You’re talking about individual cases that are exceptions to the rule, in organizations which people continue to expect integrity of in general. The WSJ opinion page has no such credibility left to lose — it isn’t even comparable to Fox News.
So yeah, people have said that CBS et al were just hiring partisan hacks, but the WSJ opinion page is where the charge actually sticks.
I wasn’t saying Reagan
I wasn’t saying Reagan caused the general pattern of bloodshed in the mideast or Islamic anti-Americanism, I was saying he caused the particular war(s) we are now in: Iraq and Afghanistan. His Afghan policy even indirectly brought about 9/11, because it was bin Laden’s experiences in Afghanistan, fighting the Soviets as a catspaw of the CIA, that converted him to the cause of anti-Americanism.
That claim is totally
That claim is totally unsupported by fact. The CIA did support the Afghans through the Pakistani ISI, but bin Laden personally funded the MAK arm of foreign Arab fighters. Why would US aid in fighting the Russians turn him against us? That makes no sense. The truth is that, as he has publicly stated, he hates us for three reasons:
1. The existence of Israel.
2. The “crime of Andalusia” or prevalence of secular governments in the Middle East.
3. The presence of U.S. military bases in Saudi Arabia.
He has never said that he hates the US because we supported him in Afghanistan. Israel preceded Reagan by 30 years; we have supported secular governments in the area longer than that; and the bases in Saudi Arabia were there prior to 1980 as well.
You might as well blame 9/11 on Eisenhower for supporting the Shah of Iran or for Clinton freezing Osama’s assets and trying to assassinate him with cruise missiles. Every President we have had has contributed at least as much as Reagan to the present state of Osama’s anti-Americanism.
Dad
All those old existing
All those old existing middle-eastern issues don’t explain him switching from ally-of-convenience to bitter enemy in the early nineties (or earlier, I’m not sure). By all reports I’ve seen the change took place when he was in Afghanistan, not in any middle eastern country. Which probably has a lot to do with why he based his operation there later on.
I don’t know what went wrong in Afghanistan to provoke him, but one possible reason is the fact that, to get the Afghans to spill more blood, our diplomats promised them lots of reconstruction aid afterwards, which was never delivered.
(We seem to be doing the same thing again now.)
By the way, a former housemate of mine once toured Afghanistan in the middle of the long battle with the Soviets, just for the hell of it… he reported that soldiers on both sides would routinely sell their weapons and ammo to their enemies for cash. The degree of ideological fervor in the battle was apparently a lot lower than one might expect. Well, I guess it’s not unexpected on the Soviet side.
I suspect that the presence
I suspect that the presence of Russian infidels on Muslim land in Afghanistan reaffirmed his fundamentalist beliefs and caused him to carry his jihad to other “unclean” nations.
When asked why his government was so hostile to America, Ambassador Adja from Tripoli said âthat it was founded on the Laws of their Prophet, that it was written in their Koran, that all nations who should not have acknowledged their authority were sinners, that it was their right and duty to make war upon them wherever they could be found, and to make slaves of all they could take as Prisoners, and that every Musselman who should be slain in Battle was sure to go to Paradise.â That was in 1786 and nothing much has changed since.
Dad
Speculative.
Speculative.
Of course it is! But so is
Of course it is! But so is saying that Reagan created Osama’s anger. At least I prefaced mine with “I suspect”. I also suspect that probably Osama himself couldn’t tell you precisely what caused it. But I offered a plausible theory.…
Dad
But I wasn’t guessing, I was
But I wasn’t guessing, I was passing on what I’d seen reported by those who looked into the background.
Did I miss something or is
Did I miss something or is there finally some evidence, any evidence at all, linking Reagan with Iran/Contra? Nobody could produce any at the time of the hearings.
Just trying to keep you on your toes.…
Dad
The Iran-Contra affair
The Iran-Contra affair didn’t happen until 1985. Do you think Reagan got Iran to release the hostages with a promise that something might happen five years or so down the road? Reset your conspiracy theory. Occam’s Razor suggests that the simpler theory is correct: That Reagan would follow up on his campaign threats and destroy Iran if they didn’t release the hostages. Or that at best, the Ayatollah hated Carter so much that he wanted to make Carter look bad. It worked.
Dad