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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Mon Nov 12, 2012, 11:06 AM Nov 2012

Notes on the Decline of a Great Nation

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/divided-states-of-america-notes-on-the-decline-of-a-great-nation-a-865295.html


The Statue of Liberty in New York: After a brilliant century and a terrible decade, the United States, in this important election year, has reached a point in its history when the obvious can no longer be denied: The reality of life in America so greatly contradicts the claim -- albeit one that has always been exaggerated -- to be the "greatest nation on earth," that even the most ardent patriots must be overcome with doubt.

The monumental National Mall in Washington, DC, 1.9 miles (3 kilometers) long and around 1,586 feet wide at its broadest point, is a place that showcases the United States of America is in its full glory as a world power. A walk along the magnificent swath of green space, between the white dome of the Capitol to the east and the Lincoln Memorial, a temple erected to honor former president Abraham Lincoln, at its western end, leads past men in bronze and stone, memorials for soldiers and conquerors, and the nearby White House. It's a walk that still creates an imperial impression today.

The Mall is lined with museums and landscaped gardens, in which America is on display as the kind of civil empire that promotes the arts and sciences. There are historic sites, and there are the famous steps of the Lincoln Memorial where Martin Luther King, Jr. once spoke of his dream, and of the dreams of a country to be a historic force, one that would serve the wellbeing of all of mankind. Put differently, the National Mall is an open-air museum for an America that, in 2012, is mostly a pleasant memory.
After a brilliant century and a terrible decade, the United States, in this important election year, has reached a point in its history when the obvious can no longer be denied: The reality of life in America so greatly contradicts the claim -- albeit one that has always been exaggerated -- to be the "greatest nation on earth," that even the most ardent patriots must be overcome with doubt.

This realization became only too apparent during and after Hurricane Sandy, the monster storm that ravaged America's East Coast last week, its effects made all the more devastating by the fact that its winds were whipping across an already weakened country. The infrastructure in New York, New Jersey and New England was already in trouble long before the storm made landfall near Atlantic City. The power lines in Brooklyn and Queens, on Long Island and in New Jersey, in one of the world's largest metropolitan areas, are not underground, but are still installed along a fragile and confusing above-ground network supported by utility poles, the way they are in developing countries.
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Notes on the Decline of a Great Nation (Original Post) xchrom Nov 2012 OP
A little too much doom and gloom. WDIM Nov 2012 #1
It's not just business as usual bongbong Nov 2012 #2

WDIM

(1,662 posts)
1. A little too much doom and gloom.
Mon Nov 12, 2012, 11:24 AM
Nov 2012

We have a real opportunity now to turn it all around.

Unfortunately our environment will continue to produce big storms. Its part of life and always has been.

I'll admit our nation has declined under 12 years of Bush and republican trickle down policies. Those same policies are still going on. Our country has declined from over a decade of endless war. But now is our chance. Now is the time to rebuild and rebuild better. Bring our troops home put them to work for us! Rebuild America.

 

bongbong

(5,436 posts)
2. It's not just business as usual
Mon Nov 12, 2012, 01:03 PM
Nov 2012

> Its part of life and always has been.

Two "once-in-a-century" storms in two years means a lot more than that.

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