• In total there are 5 users online :: 0 registered, 0 hidden and 5 guests (based on users active over the past 60 minutes)
    Most users ever online was 813 on Mon Apr 15, 2024 11:52 pm

1. The Crisis of Profligacy

#56: Oct. - Nov. 2008 (Non-Fiction)
User avatar
DWill

1H - GOLD CONTRIBUTOR
BookTalk.org Hall of Fame
Posts: 6966
Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2008 8:05 am
16
Location: Luray, Virginia
Has thanked: 2262 times
Been thanked: 2470 times

1. The Crisis of Profligacy

Unread post

I was glad to see someone give Jimmy Carter his due (34-39). He really tried in 1979 to take the country in a more rational directiion with regard to energy; he wasn't afraid to tell Amercians used to no limits that there had to be some, though he must have sensed this could be political death for him. People like Carter, warning about our mania for consumption, are accused of being Puritanical and pessimistic; they are always shouted down, in his case especially by so-called conservatives. Bacevich is known for being fairly conservative, but his is a much different, truer, kind of conservativism than was Reagan's.
User avatar
Dissident Heart

1F - BRONZE CONTRIBUTOR
I dumpster dive for books!
Posts: 1790
Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 11:01 am
20
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 18 times

Unread post

Reagan won his Presidency (in some ways) on the terribly irresponsible delusion that Americans deserved infinite reserves of whatever they desired: which was precisely what Carter was arguing against. Reagan, as Bacevich distinguishes, represented the America of quantitative freedoms: the more stuff to satisfy narrow self interests and self-indulgences the better; whereas Carter represents the America of qualitative freedom: freedom requires self-discipline, sacrifice, consideration of the public good and reverence for lasting, permanent ideals.

Reagan could also thank the long-held fantasies of American innocence, moral superiority and American exceptionalism...dangerous attitudes unable to sustain critical examination of our collective history of violence, subjugation and empire...as well as our personal indulgences of irrational consumerism and the "cult of more" where we have sacrificed generations past, present and future.
User avatar
DWill

1H - GOLD CONTRIBUTOR
BookTalk.org Hall of Fame
Posts: 6966
Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2008 8:05 am
16
Location: Luray, Virginia
Has thanked: 2262 times
Been thanked: 2470 times

Unread post

With regard to Jimmy Carter, one hand giveth and.... Bacevich tags him with establishing the policy of ensuring our energy supplies by military power if necessary in the Persian Gulf (Carter Doctrine). Bacevich contends that the policy exists to keep Americn consumerism going at full steam.
User avatar
geo

2C - MOD & GOLD
pets endangered by possible book avalanche
Posts: 4781
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2008 4:24 am
15
Location: NC
Has thanked: 2198 times
Been thanked: 2200 times
United States of America

Unread post

This is only peripherally related to this chapter, but I thought it was apropros to post it here.

It seems to me that we've increasingly become indentured servants to our own economy. After the 9/11 attacks, our president encouraged us to keep doing what we've always done, travel, shop, etc. More recently we've been given cold hard cash with the economic stimulus package, which is supposed to keep the engine of our economy running smoothly. Above all, feed the beast.

Anyway, last night I was listening to an old episode of Suspense from 1942. And at the end, Orson Welles came on and gave this appeal for Americans to buy war bonds. What an interesting contrast. I especially like the last line about Axis bonds . . .
Help wanted: men, women and children. Nature of work: hard, monotonous, back-breaking labor. Hours: 75 a week minimum. Pay: a few cents an hour. Added inducement: two meals a day, including several ounces of bad bread and a cup of thin soup. Don't delay, apply at once.

How would you respond to a want ad like that, Mr. and Mrs. American Working Man and Woman? You'd laugh, wouldn't you, throw the paper in the trash basket. Dismiss the whole advertisement as some kind of joke, but believe me it's no joke. It's a simple statement of the working conditions that exist today in Nazi Germany and the conquered countries under Nazi rule. It's also an exact statement of the working conditions that will be imposed on you and every member of your family if the Nazis win this war. You yourself personally can stop them from winning as you know. You don't have to give up your well-paying job to do it, you needn't have to be a soldier or a sailor or an airman or a nurse or a war worker to ensure American victory. Uncle Sam doesn't ask plain, ordinary, hard-working citizens like you to give him anything. All he asks, very seriously and very urgently, is that you loan him 10 cents out of every dollar you make, that's all it is. Lend Uncle Sam a dime to win this war and he'll pay you back with interest when he's won it. The easiest, most convenient way to lend him these dimes is to enroll in the Payroll Savings Plan. Just tell your boss to deduct 10 cents from every dollar he pays you and lend it to Uncle Sam in your name. Sign up for this simple savings plan today and when victory comes you'll have war bonds in your pocket instead of Axis bonds on your wrists.
-Geo
Question everything
ginof
Sophomore
Posts: 259
Joined: Sun Feb 01, 2004 11:06 am
20
Location: San Francisco, CA
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 15 times

geo: I don't think you are at all off topic

Unread post

I think you have pointed out a main theme of the author's point in that things have changed. Before, the government asked you to sacrifice. Perhaps buying war bonds with 10% of your salary is a big or small sacrifice, I'm not sure. But today, the government does NOT ask you to sacrifice. Not at all.

In listening to the concession/victory speech of McCain/Obama, I heard the same themes. 'Anything can happen', 'This is America'. Obama did hint at possible sacrifice when he said we have tough times ahead, but he did not come out and ask for sacrifice. These are two different things: acknowledging there is difficulty and asking people to do something about it. Today we don't need war bonds. Instead we just print the money. But the need for sacrifice is probably greatest on the consumer. How many are going to be willing to go back to smaller cars with less horsepower? Our need for oil is pushing us to send a lot of money to a lot of people who only marginally like us, if at all. Today, we have an additional $1/gallon gas tax in the US. Only it has not been passed as a tax. Instead, it's off budget spending for the Iraq war. This is on top of $4/gallon gas.

But the price is back down under $3 (in San Francisco Bay Area), and consumers will forget the high prices. We always seem to do so. People have stopped buying bigger trucks, but that's because they aren't buying ANY cars or trucks. A little turnaround in the economy and the Chevy Suburban will by flying off the assembly line again. No geo, I don't think you are off topic. We treat driving gas guzzlers, consuming everything in sight, going into hoc with credit card debt and second mortgages like it's a part of the Bill of Rights instead of a privilege. If the US Dollar wasn't the defacto currency for global transactions, we would already be done for (Can you imagine the US forced to buy oil in Euro's?). Just like during the internet bubble, the laws of finance were not repealed, just temporarily ignored. Obama would burn through a lot of political capital trying to get people to sacrifice, and the result would probably be like Carter. There are too many other fish to fry (balance of power between President/Congress, undoing Iraq, etc) to have him focus on this, with it's low probability of success.
just thinking (I hope)
ginof
Sophomore
Posts: 259
Joined: Sun Feb 01, 2004 11:06 am
20
Location: San Francisco, CA
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 15 times

I was glad to see Carter get his due, too

Unread post

If I recall correctly, I was one of those laughing at him at the time. My conservative suburbia upbringing did not want to hear what he had said. I was in high school and my civics classes only told me how great America was. I wasn't ready to listen to a 'prophet' telling me that we needed to change. So I ended up voting for Anderson in 1980.

As I've gotten older, I've gotten more liberal in my thinking. Unfortunately, I think Carter was the last president to call a spade a spade. He continues to do this, for example, his thoughts on the middle east seem to ring spot on.

But the sales guy in me tells me he might have picked a better way to 'sell' the message. It's too hard to get a high speed train to turn 180 degrees. He should have tried to get us to 'wake up' before hitting us all in the head with a stick. Even if you have the right message, you still need to sell it the right way. We should all know that just by watching political campaigns!
just thinking (I hope)
User avatar
DWill

1H - GOLD CONTRIBUTOR
BookTalk.org Hall of Fame
Posts: 6966
Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2008 8:05 am
16
Location: Luray, Virginia
Has thanked: 2262 times
Been thanked: 2470 times

Re: I was glad to see Carter get his due, too

Unread post

ginof wrote: So I ended up voting for Anderson in 1980...
But the sales guy in me tells me he might have picked a better way to 'sell' the message. It's too hard to get a high speed train to turn 180 degrees. He should have tried to get us to 'wake up' before hitting us all in the head with a stick. Even if you have the right message, you still need to sell it the right way. We should all know that just by watching political campaigns!
So you're the other one who voted for Anderson! I like your two posts. Do you think that Obama could be the salesman needed? If he could be, I agree, he'd justify all the hopes being placed in him. The hardest thing for him will be to realize that to take us in the direction of sensible consumption, he's going to have to avoid over-compromising, and that will be hard for a guy like him. Right now, he has no focus at all, just fairly gauzy campaign promises that are all over the place. He's going to need to get a focus pretty quickly or he'll be swamped.
User avatar
geo

2C - MOD & GOLD
pets endangered by possible book avalanche
Posts: 4781
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2008 4:24 am
15
Location: NC
Has thanked: 2198 times
Been thanked: 2200 times
United States of America

Re: geo: I don't think you are at all off topic

Unread post

ginof wrote:I think you have pointed out a main theme of the author's point in that things have changed. Before, the government asked you to sacrifice. Perhaps buying war bonds with 10% of your salary is a big or small sacrifice, I'm not sure. But today, the government does NOT ask you to sacrifice. Not at all.

In listening to the concession/victory speech of McCain/Obama, I heard the same themes. 'Anything can happen', 'This is America'. Obama did hint at possible sacrifice when he said we have tough times ahead, but he did not come out and ask for sacrifice. These are two different things: acknowledging there is difficulty and asking people to do something about it. Today we don't need war bonds. Instead we just print the money. But the need for sacrifice is probably greatest on the consumer. How many are going to be willing to go back to smaller cars with less horsepower? Our need for oil is pushing us to send a lot of money to a lot of people who only marginally like us, if at all. Today, we have an additional $1/gallon gas tax in the US. Only it has not been passed as a tax. Instead, it's off budget spending for the Iraq war. This is on top of $4/gallon gas.
We don't just print more money. We borrow it.

I know nothing about economics, but I think deficit spending is the most serious issue facing America today. We simply have to stop living beyond our means. And while one can expect to have to borrow money during wartime, I submit that the Iraq War is not really a war. Remember, there was no direct threat on American soil, despite the Bush Administration's insistence of weapons of mass destruction that didn't really exist, and the occasional insinuation of an Al Qaeda presence in Iraq, which is spurious at best. Our military presence in Iraq is more accurately an occupation that has so far cost 568 billion dollars, though who knows what the final tally will be, including what interest gets doled out to Chinese investors.

If the U.S. needs to put on a good military show every once in a while, fine. But I think if they have to borrow money to do this, something is seriously wrong. And to pretend that Americans don't have to sacrifice anything is just pure folly.
-Geo
Question everything
User avatar
geo

2C - MOD & GOLD
pets endangered by possible book avalanche
Posts: 4781
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2008 4:24 am
15
Location: NC
Has thanked: 2198 times
Been thanked: 2200 times
United States of America

Re: geo: I don't think you are at all off topic

Unread post

ginof wrote: But the price is back down under $3 (in San Francisco Bay Area), and consumers will forget the high prices. We always seem to do so. People have stopped buying bigger trucks, but that's because they aren't buying ANY cars or trucks. A little turnaround in the economy and the Chevy Suburban will by flying off the assembly line again. No geo, I don't think you are off topic. We treat driving gas guzzlers, consuming everything in sight, going into hoc with credit card debt and second mortgages like it's a part of the Bill of Rights instead of a privilege.
Very well said.

Again, I know nothing about economics, and I know this is not the time to do it, but what this country needs is a hefty tax on gasoline. Yes, you heard me right. Knock that price up to $6 or $7/gallon and you'll see a remarkable transformation in America's driving habits and in advancement of fuel-efficient technology. Unfortunately, any politician who gets behind it is committing political hari kari.
-Geo
Question everything
ginof
Sophomore
Posts: 259
Joined: Sun Feb 01, 2004 11:06 am
20
Location: San Francisco, CA
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 15 times

Re: geo: I don't think you are at all off topic

Unread post

geo wrote:
ginof wrote: Again, I know nothing about economics, and I know this is not the time to do it, but what this country needs is a hefty tax on gasoline. Yes, you heard me right. Knock that price up to $6 or $7/gallon and you'll see a remarkable transformation in America's driving habits and in advancement of fuel-efficient technology. Unfortunately, any politician who gets behind it is committing political hari kari.
I used to work for an oil company in the early 90's. I was saying that then, and I agree with you now. Imagine the revenue to pay off the debt! Alas, I can see Rush Limbauh exploding at the idea (If he really did explode, that alone might make it worth it :bananadance: ) and the hate mongers having a field day.
just thinking (I hope)
Post Reply

Return to “The Limits of Power - by Andrew Bacevich”