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Tom Brokaw's mega best seller, The Greatest Generation, struck a powerful chord throughout our
nation. The reason why is because we as Americans today sense that we
have lost something very profound, something elemental and essential
that shaped the grit of our forefathers in earlier times, something that
we have let slip away through indolence and intellectual treason to the
Founders' vision for our country.
Our
instincts are quite correct. What we have lost, and what the early
generations of the 20th century possessed, is that heroic sense of life
born of a golden age forged from 19th century values that were handed
down from stoic parents to stalwart sons and daughters throughout the
20's and 30's. What the members of the World War II generation possessed
was that steel-willed belief in America as earth's Eldorado with a
divine destiny. This is something that today's country club
conservatives and Brat Pack liberals know absolutely nothing about.
The
World War II generation grew up without the plethora of government
crutches and psychological excuses that so enamor Keynesian welfare
statists. It was raised on hard-scrabble dreams shaped from the staunch
rectitude of a freedom we no longer revere. It produced the last of the
intrepid Americans who marched off to war with undaunted elan and came
home still willing to chase the rainbows of better days ahead, assured
with nothing more than their own conviction and sturdied with nothing to
fall back upon but their own resoluteness.
Our
younger generations of Americans are no doubt more than willing to fight
heroically for their country when the war is just, but it is
depressingly clear that they are no longer willing to live on the
strengths of their own merits in peacetime. What the WW II generation
had was old fashioned "sovereignty of being," a concept
totally alien to baby boomers who came of age in the mass hippie
paroxysm of the 60's and its subsequent evolution into Nanny State
liberalism.
In
light of society's harrowing addiction to government dependency these
days, it's hard to believe that we used to be a nation in which a man
was expected to take responsibility for himself. Back in the good ol'
days, we were certainly supposed to be concerned with our neighbor, but
espousing all this "welfare rights" malarkey would have gotten
one nothing but raucous contempt. I realize that such a way of life was
a while back, and the young enthusiasts of today's computer cool world
don't much truck with the logic of rugged individualism anymore. But
nevertheless, there was a time in America when men were stalwart and
disciplined instead of whiney and slothful. This fact is not
inconsequential when trying to decipher the roots of society's present
plight.
The
youth of today could find no finer model of values and mores to emulate
than the era in which the last of the intrepid Americans came of age --
the years from 1930 to 1950. I was but a small child in the forties and
fifties, so I can only portray the era's virtues second hand, culling
them from the memories of family and neighbors who preceded me. But
there were enough glistening residues from the pre-war and post-war
years that lingered through the fifties to give one both an emotional
and cerebral feel for the age.
What
kind of time was it? Though hobbled in the 30's by the government
induced Great Depression, which produced the seeds of today's Leviathan
via the economic moonshine of FDR and the abandonment of gold as money.
America was still basically a free and robust land that, at least in
spirit and philosophical vision, was healthy. The values of her citizens
were still of the Old Republic up through the 40's. Men and women
respected each other's uniqueness and right to exclusive assembly.
People left their doors unlocked at night and strangers often warmly
spoke to each other as they passed on the street. Doctors made house
calls at all hours, while bankers made home loans at 3 percent. A
night's diversion was Gable at the Bijou and a few beers afterwards,
rather than mud wrestling at the Flamingo and feverish snorts of
cocaine. Taxes were paltry irritants that pricked at people's salaries
instead of the despotic extortions that now lay waste to their futures.
Baseball
players loved the game more than the money, while fans in turn loved the
players more than the exposes. Teenagers went to scout meetings without
fear of drive-by shootings. Schools
revered the lessons of history instead of the latest in political
correctness.
Yes,
Americans of this era had a racial problem that sneered contemptuously
at their founding principles. But there were pundits on the scene that
spoke with sagacity and sanity about
how to rectify this problem without unleashing the political furies of
hell that we grapple with now. They spoke largely to deaf ears,
but the country's soundness of soul provided such spokesmen if her
intellectuals and politicians had wanted to listen.
Yes,
Americans of the 30's and 40's were a bit uptight and awkward about the
big sexual questions. But they still managed to point their lives in a
straight line without the fatuities of psycho-therapy and today's
unseemly openess concerning genitalia. They just discreetly picked up
their sexual proprieties as they did their social duties -- from those
elders for whom they felt a special sense of admiration. They didn't
need Oprah, and Hefner, and psycho-babble, and getting in touch with
their feelings. They led fine, full lives and got along very nicely
without such humbug "enlightenment."
If
you, the reader, were alive and cognizant in that era from 1930 to 1950,
then you've got to be wondering where we're headed with this runaway
lunacy train that the modern "experts" in Washington have
fashioned for us with their fiat money and confiscatory taxes. True,
politicians are not solely to blame for the out-of-control nature of our
society. Nihilistic professors and writers and movie producers, along
with craven businessmen and bankers, have certainly chucked their
2-cents worth into creating the social dissipation that permeates our
country today.
But
if you're wondering why life used to churn at a decidedly slower and
healthier pace, it was because Americans had social and psychological restraints
in the 30's and 40's. They didn't worship at the altar of
"Immediacy" like the young-pup offspring of the dropout
generation do today. They knew that anything of real value could only be
gleaned from personal, gut-wrenching effort and ingenuity over long
drawn-out periods of time. They would
have been ashamed to petition Congress for "ameliorating
legislation" and "lavish entitlements" as the
electorate so proudly does today. A man's problems were his and his
family's. Americans of that era didn't spill their dirty laundry out
into the public square either; they extolled a sense of privacy. Shallow
know-nothings like Roseanne Barr and Jessica Simpson stayed
mired in backwater bergs punching time clocks, instead of
divulging the gaucheries of their daily lives via prime time media.
There
were so many things that were resplendent about those years and so many
things that are depressing about today. But more than anything else, I
think what defined the period so illuminatingly was that, even though
three-quarters of the era was mired in grim depression and war, there
was a deeply seated dignity and profoundness about the human condition.
Life had immense import, where now it is demonstrably base and
trivialized. We've relinquished the
Olympian standards of excellence -- in the home, in the
workplace, in our banks, even in the arena of sports.
Much
of the character and Olympian import of the era was surely tied up in
the fact that Americans of that generation were still largely a
religious people. They believed in a transcendent
power to whom they were answerable. It lent a strikingly different
dimension to one's daily life. Young people, raised in today's
facile secular environment, cannot begin to fathom the difference in
life that such a view played.
Pronouncements
such as this naturally send liberals into seizures of disputation, but
despite all their frothing at the mouth upon hearing encomiums to
religion, this was the source
of America's strength in days gone by. This was where the Olympian
standards were nourished.
This was why capitalism used to work without atomizing us as a people,
and why freedom was dignified instead of decadent. Our Judeo-Christian
ideals gave to society an objective
moral concept of right and wrong, which acted as both a spiritual
star upon which to hitch our ambitions and a theoretical fence with
which to contain our vices. The social pathologies of the past 40 years
are simply the result of the relativist
moral and philosophical chickens unleashed by liberalism at the turn of
the century overwhelming our spiritual ideals and plunging Western
societies into Nietzsche's abyss where right and wrong no longer exist.
The relativist chickens are
now coming home to roost in a wasteland of their own making.
It
is horrifying to speculate on what kind of country our academic and
political leaders of 2055 will be reigning over if we as a people do not
find it in our power to return to universal standards of behavior in the
next half-century. If we cannot muster the personal strength and
independence to stop the runaway lunacy train onto which we have loaded
ourselves and retrace our path to that time in which the legacies of our
Founders still reigned, if we cannot muster the collective will to make
such an ideological return, there is no chance for us to redeem our
destiny as a nation.
The
hope for the future lies always in a people's continual remembrance of
times gone by and their grasp of the Olympian standards that are seared
into humanity's conscience over the centuries through the painful trials
of governing man's corruptible nature. That our lives as a people are
now ever more frenzied, chaotic and nihilistic suggests that our
memories of the past have been discarded like so much cerebral litter
along a raunchy and shortsighted highway of illusion.
America's
traditional faith in democracy and her perennial "reinventions of
government" are naught but frail ramparts set against an
increasing tidal wave of statism born from the 20th century's turn to
alien philosophy. Such ramparts will afford us neither reprieve nor
restoration. Our restoration can come only with a return to the
higher-law doctrine that animated the last of the intrepid Americans
born before FDR and the Nanny State -- those men and women who forged
the fire of their aspirations from the long historical calls of freedom,
duty, and honor, refusing to shirk from the mandates of self-reliance
that Nature's God has handed to each and everyone of us.
Contrary
to the acolytes of liberalism, great reverence for days gone by is not a
wasteful game of nostalgia. It is an ever-needed public reinvigoration
of civilization's compass so that following generations can chart the
future congruously and heroically.
A
terrible day of reckoning now looms over the horizon that is going to
crash our society upon the economic rocks of a demanding and punishing
reality -- a reality that we as a people have flaunted in our hubris and
our greed for the unearned. In the aftermath of this looming crash,
there will be a dire need for guidance. We will need examples held up to
us of how men and women are supposed to conduct their lives.
The
WW II generation that came of age in the 30's and 40's was filled with a
courage and sublimity that could help to save us as a people and guide
us out of the coming maelstrom. We need only to open our minds to the
power of its truths, and we could acquire a newfound verve to propel
us into a rebirth of the America that we lost. The past is forever vital
prologue. Our future lies in never forgetting the verities that
lie in its mists.
[This
is a revised version of an article that appeared in Insight
magazine, November 11, 1996.]
© 2005 Nelson Hultberg
Americans for a Free Republic
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