By Alan Caruba
We mark
the days of our lives with birthdays, annual events that have a beginning and
an end known only to God. As of October 9th I have 76 of them and
that’s a lot, but history has a long perspective.
Two
hundred and twenty-five years ago, the Constitution became effective in 1788,
but barely 73 years later the Civil War began in 1861. A single man or woman’s
life could have spanned the years from George Washington to Abraham Lincoln.
A
person born at the end of the Civil War in 1863 who lived 76 years would
have seen the Second World War begin in 1939, though the U.S. would not join
the war until 1941. I was born in 1937. That seems a long time ago, but in
terms of the nation’s history, it isn’t.
America is
still a very young nation, but it is also one of the most extraordinary
experiments in individual freedom and liberty that, unless its history is
taught to contrast the control that other governments exercise over their
citizens, there is the risk of not understanding or valuing the precious gift
the Founding Fathers gave us and the millions who fought and died to protect
and preserve it.
We are at
risk of losing our freedom as our government expands in size and in the
capability of tracking every aspect of our life from birth to death. As citizens,
we are losing our privacy; something the Founders thought was very important
and built into the Constitution.
Previous
generations lived through periods in which relatively little change occurred,
but my parents, both born shortly after the turn of the 20th century
in 1901 and 1903, lived through an era of such rapid technological change that
they could recall when there was no nationwide electrification, no airplanes, no
radio, no television, no air conditioning, no fast food restaurant chains, and
few cars or the highways to accommodate them. The first flight of the Wright
brothers’ airplane was in 1903. It lasted a few seconds. The first Ford Model T
automobile rolled off the line in 1908.
I have
been reading a book, “1948: The Crossroads Year”, by James F. Nagle. At one
point he noted that Americans who had been through the Great Depression put a
lot more money into their savings accounts, $12 billion in 1948 as compared to
$2.7 billion in 1939.
“To put
that amount in perspective, a postage stamp cost $.03; a loaf of bread was
$.14; a quart of milk $.21; a six-pack of Budweiser $.56; a gallon of gas
ranged from $.16 to $.28; the average car cost $2,055 with a Cadillac at $3,657
and a Chevrolet cost $1,587. The minimum wage was $.40 per hour and the median
family income was $3,187.”
Change in
America was so rapid after the end of World War Two in 1945 that it must have
seemed extraordinary even in those times. Over a million young men came back
from the war, got married, and produced a “baby boom.” The GI Bill enabled
veterans to attend college and become professionals, engineers, and scientists
in ways previous generations could not have dreamed. Others went into business
and some were content to be blue collar workers. All, however, prospered in
ways that led to better lives with all manner of household conveniences as
suburbia blossomed.
Automobiles
gave Americans mobility and television gave them a front seat to events from
sports to politics. I measure my writer’s life as one that went from a manual
typewriter to an electric one to a personal computer. If you had asked me in
high school or even college what the Internet was, you would have gotten a
blank stare. No one else knew either. It didn’t exist.
What I do
know is that America has allowed itself to fall into the hands of a man who was
virtually a complete cipher when he was elected. What information existed came
from his two “memoirs” written before he became a junior Senator from Illinois.
His election was a triumph of theatrics over substance, of vague rhetoric over
serious policy, and one in which, as many voters admitted, they voted for him
because he was black and wanted to show the world a black man could be elected
President.
The world
is now fully aware of that and, having taken his measure, has found him weak
and untrustworthy. That makes the world a more dangerous place in many ways,
but it threatens America with the huge debt he and his party literally doubled
since he took office in 2009. The Democratic Party’s politicians are like drug
addicts who cannot stop spending even in the face of the collapse of the
programs they fought for so many years to enact. Social Security, Medicare, and
Medicaid are on the verge of bankruptcy.
The
Democrats treasured universal health insurance program—Obamacare—is a disaster
filled with taxes and fines, a job killer, and one that kills the relationship
between a physician and his patient by interposing a government of bureaucrats
between them. And, yes, it includes death panels.
So, as I
move into my 76th year I know it will be filled with considerable
drama. 2014 will offer Americans midterm elections in which they will either
surrender to socialist servitude or reverse the errors of the elections from
2008 to 2012.
It’s nice
to look back, but better and more essential to look forward. History is seen in
retrospect, but the future can only be seen through a fog of events, personalities,
and propaganda. It demands close attention.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
Celebrate Alan’s birthday with a
donation to “Warning Signs”
Happy Birthday Alan. I will be 75 on the 12th.
ReplyDeleteThank you. Your birthday was my late father's birthday too. Here's a wish for yours.
ReplyDeleteExcellent article!
ReplyDeleteHappy Birthday, Alan!
...and many more!
Psss... There's a Communist psychopath in the White House.
Napoleon wasn't a Frenchman and destroyed France.
Stalin wasn't a Russian and destroyed Russia.
Hitler wasn't a German and destroyed Germany.
Obama isn't an American ...and?
You see where this is going?
Have a very blessed and HAPPY BIRTHDAY! TY for all you do, and pls keep up your great work!
ReplyDeleteThank you Ron and Ulli.
ReplyDeleteAnd a most wonderful birthday I hope it was, sir. 'May you find yourself in interesting times' barely BEGINS to cover it, eh? Thank you for your superb essays each week and may you continue your work in robust health and good spirits. I especially liked this one, as I also remember gas at 25 cents/gallon and manual typewriters, among other things, what a 'ride'... Salut!
ReplyDelete"Americans … will either surrender to socialist servitude or reverse the errors of the elections from '08 to '12."
ReplyDeleteAs long as there are people in our midst who point out the complete news that our mainstream media refuses to report, we will never cave in to socialist servitude. It's just an extra burden when we otherwise have better things to do, but if our effort awakens an ever-increasing number of folks to the manner in which the 'new' Democrat party and the mainstream media is committing political suicide, then we will be rewarded with the exact election reversal you speak of.
Happy belated birthday!
Thank you, Russell. I hope and think you're right.
ReplyDelete