Globalization and the American Dream
June 10, 2016
Globalization and the American Dream
by Helena Norberg-Hodge - Steven Gorelick
America is a new kind of society that produces a new kind of human being. That human being confident, self-reliant, tolerant, generous, future-oriented is a vast improvement over the wretched, servile, fatalistic and intolerant human being that traditional societies have always produced.
Dinesh DSouza, Whats So Great About America
Implicit in all the rhetoric promoting globalization is the premise that the rest of the world can and should be brought up to the standard of living of the West, and America in particular. For much of the world the American Dream though a constantly moving target is globalizations ultimate endpoint.
But if this is the direction globalization is taking the world, it is worth examining where America itself is headed. A good way to do so is to take a hard look at Americas children, since so many features of the global monoculture have been in place their whole lives. If the American Dream isnt working for them, why should anyone, anywhere, believe it will work for their own children?
As it turns out, children in the US are far from confident, self-reliant, tolerant, generous, and future-oriented. One indication of this is that more than 8.3 million American children and adolescents require psychiatric drugs; over 2 million are on anti-depressants, and another 2 million are on anti-anxiety drugs. The age groups for which these drugs are prescribed is shockingly young: nearly half a million children 0-3 years old are taking drugs to combat anxiety.[1]
Most people in the less developed world will find it hard to imagine how a toddler could be so anxiety-ridden that they need psychiatric help. Equally difficult to fathom are many other symptoms of social breakdown among Americas children. Eating disorders, for example: the incidence of anorexia, bulimia and other eating disorders has doubled since the 1960s, and girls are developing these problems at younger and younger ages.[2]
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/06/10/globalization-and-the-american-dream/
99th_Monkey
(19,326 posts)I'm bookmarking stuff to read after the 16th.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)malthaussen
(17,187 posts)John D. MacDonald's fictional economist Meyer recognized this 50 years ago.
-- Mal
bemildred
(90,061 posts)We do like to pretend it's been repealed, but it has not.
MisterP
(23,730 posts)credit, they industrialized, they threw off foreign chains of ownership and built infrastructure when credit was loose
and, well ...
these aren't all "diseases of prosperity" but signs of a system that can't realize it's going wrong: it just keeps trying to get back on the horse, to reset the clock to 1914 or 1962 or 1972 or whenever we had a chance, and thus holding off from fighting in the present day
that D'Souza quote is the crux of the neoliberals and neocons: we're objectively better, so we can do what we like to uplift the barbarians