By Alan Caruba
Most of us know whether we are living in 
good times or bad. Some of us warn of decline when we see it coming. Some choose 
to ignore it by distracting themselves. The latter assume they cannot change 
events, but in a democracy where you get to vote for who represents you, we are 
all participants in one fashion or other, whether we vote or 
not.
If Hillary Clinton is elected 
President in 2016, historians and those who have lived through the first twenty 
years of this new century will see this score of years as one that began with 
much hope and descended rapidly into an expanding Islamic war on the world, seen 
most dramatically on 9/11 and followed by a financial disaster in 2008 that was 
widely predicted as the government pressured banks to make bad mortgage loans. 
It is doing that again. 
Dramatically, too, in 2008 
Americans—constantly told how racist we are—voted for the nation’s first black 
President, Barack Hussein Obama, even though little was known of him. 
Significantly, too, the voters rejected Hillary Clinton, thought to be the 
“inevitable” choice as the first woman President. Neither race, nor sex, is a 
predicate for being the leader of the free world. Experience, knowledge, and 
moral integrity is.
There is something tragic when a 
political party is able to offer only the past as their idea of the future. 
President Obama is already widely seen to have been a failure, presiding for six 
years while the nation’s debt soared to $18 trillion and millions remain 
unemployed. His foreign policies were administered by Hillary Clinton in his 
first term and her idea of what to do with nations that are our enemies is to 
“emphasize” with them and even “respect” our differences with them. 
The most recent examples have been the 
negotiations with an Iran determined to have nuclear weapons and opening the 
door to diplomatic recognition of Cuba, a Communist dictatorship ninety miles 
from Florida.
What has been cited is a definition of 
national decline. As we close in on the 2016 elections, we are also at risk of 
having begun the new century from a position of leadership and strength we may 
not be able to achieve again due to our debt and the failure of a vision for a 
better future. While we have been living through these years, we have also 
understandably been paying greater attention to our own individual 
lives.
As a member of the senior generation, 
I and my cohorts have watched America decline from the most powerful nation on 
Earth, a leader for freedom, a stalwart opponent of the Soviet Union and 
Communism, to one led by a pathetic apologist who never passes on an opportunity 
to criticize America and emphasize its failure to live up to its ideals. We’re 
not perfect, but we still provide justice and opportunity as no other nation on 
Earth.
The generations behind us such as the 
“boomers” who arrived after World War II, enjoyed much of the best America has 
had to offer, but in the 1960s tended toward the growth of the drug culture and 
unwittingly experienced the decline in education standards that has left later 
generations devoid of knowledge about our founding principles and early 
struggles. More than twice their parents and grandparents engaged in wars far 
from home to thwart totalitarian regimes. 
In the 1970s America saw the growth of 
the environmental movement which, by the late 1980s, was regaling everyone with 
doomsday predictions about a “global warming” that never occurred. What did 
occur was a government agency, the Environmental Protection Agency, that is 
threatening to cause a massive loss of the electrical and other sources of 
energy on which the nation—you and I—depend. Electricity may seem magical, but 
it requires years and years of planning and construction to ensure it is 
available when we flip the light switch. The EPA is quite literally an enemy 
comparable to one with an invading army.
So all of us, young and old, have 
arrived at the tail end of the first twenty years of the new century in a very 
different America than took on the challenge of the twentieth century and turned 
it into one of innovation and achievement. 
That is critical to the choices 
Americans must make because the 2016 elections can either take us backward to 
past times—the 1990s—or forward to face the great challenges of our present and 
future times. We had financial success along the way, but we also had a massive 
financial failure in 2008 that originated earlier thanks to progressive ideas 
about home ownership. In 2001 we responded to the worst homeland attack since 
Pearl Harbor in the 1940s, fighting wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but not 
grasping the full scope of the Islamic threat.
The progressive ideas of the current 
administration that the presumptive candidate of the Democratic Party will 
emphasize will allege inequities and inequalities between the Middle Class and 
those they call the “one percent” of the wealthy. Despite the fact that the 
wealthy are the source of millions in campaign funds, they will publicly scorn 
them as “Wall Street” and the “Big Banks.”  
This is very much in keeping with the Progressive demonization of “Big 
Oil”. “Big Coal” and other alleged enemies of the nation. 
These major elements of our economy 
are all in fact enemies of unemployment, providing thousands of jobs with good 
pay, and enemies of decline, providing the energy America needs to exist and 
grow.
The most disquieting aspect of the 
months ahead will be the role of the mainstream media that, with a few 
exceptions, will be the megaphone for failed progressive ideas, policies and 
programs. They will suffer a forgetfulness of the many scandals that have led to 
Hillary Clinton’s present bid to be the next President. 
We are living in an era of decline 
that must be rejected and turned around with the “old fashioned” virtues of a 
marketplace economy free of a tax code no one can comprehend, environmental 
policies that slow and kill development, a federal government grown too large to 
do anything well—remember the introduction of ObamaCare and the fact that it has 
driven up insurance costs, not reduced them?
All of us of voting age have a heavy 
responsibility to know and understand the times in which we live and to make 
wise choices or know we shall be living in an era of failure for the nation we 
love.
© Alan Caruba, 2015


ReplyDeleteBut Babs said she's a happy camper...
Barbara Streisand Thinks the Obama Economy Is Great
She needs to stick to singing I think...