![]() by Ted Rall |
COMMENTARY
This week, decline is on my brain. Specifically, the decline of America.
“There’s not a country on Earth that wouldn’t gladly trade places with the United States of America,” President Obama said, denying Republican assertions that the country is in decline.
However, the country believes America is in decline. Polls show that Americans believe that the next generation will live worse than we do. Pessimism about the future is reflected in a 2011 survey in which 57% of the public identify the United States as the world’s most powerful nation, but just 19% believe that will still be true 20 years from now.
On top of this comes a new report that showed the life expectancy for whites without a high-school degree fell precipitously between 1990 and 2007. “The five-year decline for white women rivals the catastrophic seven-year drop for Russian men in the years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Michael Marmot, director of the Institute of Health Equity in London, told The New York Times. Bear in mind, the study includes the Clinton boom of the 1990s. And it doesn’t include the period after 2007, when the global fiscal crisis set off the current economic crisis.
Even the two major presidential candidates seem to believe that the United States doesn’t have much of a future.
During his 60 Minutes interview on Sunday, President Obama was asked what his big idea was for his next term. Interviewer Steve Kroft mentioned the Marshall Plan and sending a man to the moon as examples of big ideas.
Obama ducked.
“I think there’s no bigger purpose right now than making sure that if people work hard in this country, they can get ahead,” replied Obama. “That’s the central American idea. That’s how we sent a man to the moon. Because there was an economy that worked for everybody and that allowed us to do that.”
So all the president has to offer is a vague desire to restore the American Dream? Sorry, but getting back something we used to take for granted is the opposite of a big idea.
Obama’s pessimism is dwarfed by that of Republican nominee for president, Mitt Romney.









