(This Editorial in today's NY Times really hits the nail on the head.)
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: May 4, 2008
Traveling the country these past five months while writing a book, I’ve had my own opportunity to take the pulse, far from the campaign crowds. My own totally unscientific polling has left me feeling that if there is one overwhelming hunger in our country today it’s this: People want to do nation-building. They really do. But they want to do nation-building in America.
They are not only tired of nation-building in Iraq and in Afghanistan, with so little to show for it. They sense something deeper — that we’re just not that strong anymore. We’re borrowing money to shore up our banks from city-states called Dubai and Singapore. Our generals regularly tell us that Iran is subverting our efforts in Iraq, but they do nothing about it because we have no leverage — as long as our forces are pinned down in Baghdad and our economy is pinned to Middle East oil.
Our president’s latest energy initiative was to go to Saudi Arabia and beg King Abdullah to give us a little relief on gasoline prices. I guess there was some justice in that. When you, the president, after 9/11, tell the country to go shopping instead of buckling down to break our addiction to oil, it ends with you, the president, shopping the world for discount gasoline.
We are not as powerful as we used to be because over the past three decades, the Asian values of our parents’ generation — work hard, study, save, invest, live within your means — have given way to subprime values: “You can have the American dream — a house — with no money down and no payments for two years.”
That’s why Donald Rumsfeld’s infamous defense of why he did not originally send more troops to Iraq is the mantra of our times: “You go to war with the army you have.” Hey, you march into the future with the country you have — not the one that you need, not the one you want, not the best you could have.
A few weeks ago, my wife and I flew from New York’s Kennedy Airport to Singapore. In J.F.K.’s waiting lounge we could barely find a place to sit. Eighteen hours later, we landed at Singapore’s ultramodern airport, with free Internet portals and children’s play zones throughout. We felt, as we have before, like we had just flown from the Flintstones to the Jetsons. If all Americans could compare Berlin’s luxurious central train station today with the grimy, decrepit Penn Station in New York City, they would swear we were the ones who lost World War II.
How could this be? We are a great power. How could we be borrowing money from Singapore? Maybe it’s because Singapore is investing billions of dollars, from its own savings, into infrastructure and scientific research to attract the world’s best talent — including Americans.
And us? Harvard’s president, Drew Faust, just told a Senate hearing that cutbacks in government research funds were resulting in “downsized labs, layoffs of post docs, slipping morale and more conservative science that shies away from the big research questions.” Today, she added, “China, India, Singapore ... have adopted biomedical research and the building of biotechnology clusters as national goals. Suddenly, those who train in America have significant options elsewhere.”
Much nonsense has been written about how Hillary Clinton is “toughening up” Barack Obama so he’ll be tough enough to withstand Republican attacks. Sorry, we don’t need a president who is tough enough to withstand the lies of his opponents. We need a president who is tough enough to tell the truth to the American people. Any one of the candidates can answer the Red Phone at 3 a.m. in the White House bedroom. I’m voting for the one who can talk straight to the American people on national TV — at 8 p.m. — from the White House East Room.
Who will tell the people? We are not who we think we are. We are living on borrowed time and borrowed dimes. We still have all the potential for greatness, but only if we get back to work on our country.
I don’t know if Barack Obama can lead that, but the notion that the idealism he has inspired in so many young people doesn’t matter is dead wrong. “Of course, hope alone is not enough,” says Tim Shriver, chairman of Special Olympics, “but it’s not trivial. It’s not trivial to inspire people to want to get up and do something with someone else.”
It is especially not trivial now, because millions of Americans are dying to be enlisted — enlisted to fix education, enlisted to research renewable energy, enlisted to repair our infrastructure, enlisted to help others. Look at the kids lining up to join Teach for America. They want our country to matter again. They want it to be about building wealth and dignity — big profits and big purposes. When we just do one, we are less than the sum of our parts. When we do both, said Shriver, “no one can touch us.”
Sunday, May 4, 2008
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4 comments:
Wow.
Nailed it.
Yes...well said...nail on head...but have we reached the point of no return?
Many of my peers are hopeless and cynical. And the current situation with the two Democratic candidates beating each other up only further tires, not inspires.
Being an American, is truly one of the weirdest and most complicated things anyone can be.
Hopefully Barak will bring back the notion that JFK spoke so well about not asking what the country will do for you...
It seems that one of the derailing factors in infrastructure, in healthcare, in ecologically sound policy making, is that no one wants to be the person who has to sacrifice. Health care is totally out of control...yet the insurance companies are making record profits. Gas...same. food...what's ADM stock and profit look like these days?
the article quoted the president of Harvard. What is he doing going before congress? Harvard has a multi-trillion dollar slush fund, yet he is saying government cut backs are limiting their ability to be viable??????
What I liked about Barak's speech on race was that he did not avoid the painful truth. I think he has the guts to also do this wiht economic issues...but here is my prediction..he is waiting, Kennedy-esque, to deliver that truth speech at his inauguration, because he will not get elected if he goes too truthful on the economy...the sacred cow of heathen America..
PS...I am so happy to see Rush Limbaugh go after Obama. Didn't he say he was going to make McCain go away in the primaries? HIs Kiss of death was the CPR for McCain's campaign...so bring it on, clown!
The worst part is to troubleshoot the system, find the underlying problem, then not be ablt to get anybody on board to fix it.
I am a litigation support assistant. If you are going to fix anything at all, you need written evidence, like a paper trail. People who scheme for a global agenda, love to leave their legacy. So I set out to find out where they wrote it down.
I found everything. I was in law libraries, and the Congressional records indexes, on obscure university library stacks. It wasn't that hard to find.
So then armed with the information, I set out to convince members of Congress to have a look.
Unfortunately, for the entire world, members of Congress are petty individuals who promote their own self interest above the people, and assign interns to man their offices. The interns have absolutely no interest in seeing, or hearing, or doing anything at all, especially, passing on the information.
Case in point: My ex husband, is a senior staff executive at the NSA, the National Security Agency. The same guys everybody complains about tapping your phone and hacking your computer. He sits there all day long erasing databases with his name on them, altering electronic records, and making sure he can still get his paycheck at the end of the week.
So I exposed him, I proved in writing that he erased his records. Retrieved all the records he erased.
Do you think for one minute the attorney general, or the Senate intelligence committee, was the least interested?
I also retraced the Congressional index working backwards from 9/11, looking for entries on Arab terrorists. I found the first entries in 1963. Congress held huge hearings about the threat from Arab terrorists. They had 50 years. Look, these people you elect, most of them are hairbrains. But every 4 years, you line up and go vote for the same bunch of hairbrains.
So, essentially, all this voting has to stop and we need to call a national referendum, and clean up the place. Or vote for Obama and keep your fingers crossed.
Hillary's famous quote when asked how she maintains her health, was "I use hand sanitizer". The media hasn't replayed that a lot.
Stupid people are incapable of government. That's one thing you have to get past. Stupid people have voted you into a corner with their stupid selections. Then they empower these stupid selections with money.
This is a stupid government. May as well rip up the Constitution cause they can't read it or understand it. They make it up as they go along based on their own petty prejudices and failure to rationalize.
And as they say whenever I leave some Congressional office, "Good Luck and have a nice day."
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