07 June 2017
Ameritecture has moved
Steding's blog, Ameritecture, has moved to a new site: www.ameritecture.com. If you wish to follow via email, you can sign up there at the "Follow Ameritecture" tab at the top of the home page. Unfortunately, current subscribers to the old site must renew their subscription by signing up again. Sorry about that, but apparently the competitive dispositions of Wordpress and Google don't allow better cooperation between platforms.
13 May 2017
The Great Regression
The Trump presidency has cast a disorienting pall over
America and the world. His daily dishing of stupefactions—each seemingly more stunning
than the last—manage to exceed the most brazen expectations of presidential
misbehavior while his Republican cohorts in Washington, who have yet to realize
he is sinking their ship with the ham-fisted skills of the captain of the
Titanic, stand grinning like toddlers who have just filled their diapers. Meanwhile,
foreign leaders look on with growing dismay, as the world’s lone superpower
appears hell-bent on self-destruction like a heroin-addict with a full spoon
and a loaded .45. As Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone political writer tasked
with explaining this clown show to rocker Millennials and graying Boomers wrote:
“Welcome to the Trump era, the
flushing-toilet-bowl stage of America’s history, where every move any of us
makes is part of a great swirling synergy sucking us with ever-greater alacrity
down the hole of failure and destruction.
Good news, bad news, it all heads in the same direction soon enough,
after a spin or two around the bowl.”[1]
Taibbi’s fecal flushing metaphor
aside, America is nowhere near the collapse so many citizens and allies fear,
or that fertilizes the flowerbeds of President Putin’s fantasies. Collapse is no more certain than Trump
growing a conscience, or a pair of manly stones suddenly appearing nestled in
the Worsted groins of Congressman Ryan and Senator McConnell.
To
be clear, there does exist an epic arm-wrestle over the future identity of
America and, as president, Trump does occupy the best seat to affect the
outcome, but with each forthcoming blunder—each boisterously larger than the
last—Americans are awakening to the reality first suggested in 1811 by French
philosopher, Joseph de Maistre, that we “get the government we deserve.” Trump’s “America First” theme that aims to
codify his “taking America back” to highly romanticized bygone days of
greatness—when bobby-socks, Brylcreem, and Budweiser were markers of a much
whiter and more Christian portrait of power—will (hopefully) be characterized
by historians someday as the last gasp of a Waspy and clumsy America that fell
victim to the intoxicating arrogance that plagues all aging empires. This crisis, which follows in a timely
eighty-year cadence after the first three crises: the American Revolution,
Civil War & Reconstruction, Great Depression & World War II, will be
labeled, in Trump’s (dis)honor: the Great Regression.
The
accomplishments the Trump administration claims in its first one-hundred days
will likely be re-classified by
historians under the more appropriate header of “damage report.”[2] There is virtually no corner of American
progress that Trump has left unscathed, to the glee of those who feel 1968 was
a better year than 2018 could ever be. The cornerstones of his regressive
movement attempt to kickstart dirty industries, dumb-down American education, embolden
white-male supremacy, and hoodwink Americans into thinking the world is flat
and profoundly dangerous, all while his family shoves millions of dollars in
their pockets. He will definitely leave
his mark, which will either fix the beginning of the end of the American
empire, or demarcate the call to action that propelled America forward to rid itself
of Trump’s dystopic dimwittedness and re-claim its destiny as a steward of
global progress.
This
alternative American identity—the narrative of global stewardship—contemplates
an America whose power is gained not coercively, but referentially by empowering people throughout both America and the world. This is not a fearful America, nor is it
bounded by bigger walls and bigger guns.
It is an America that believes in itself and its traditions of inclusion
and empathy, and of its passion for
education, innovation, and leadership.
It views dynamism and creative destruction as prerequisites to continued
greatness, rather than a “great” that can only be found in a Rockwellian past.
Purging and healing this
boil on the back of American history will not be easy, nor will it be
painless. Everyone who wants a better tomorrow for their children and grandchildren must join up, stand up, speak
up, and act up. It means those who sit on the sidelines hoping that their
fellow Americans will defeat Trump’s regressive fantasies—who don’t do their
part—are contributing to the risk that Trump will succeed in relegating the
United States of America to the ash heap of failed world powers. As painfully amusing as Trump can be, he and
his sycophant congressional n’er-do-wells must be thrown out before their
damage report metastasizes from sea to shining sea. The threat is clear. Do not sit this one out; Trump and his cadre
of truthbenders, slurping from their cups of magical thinking, will fight hard
to prevail. The question is: is it their America, or ours?
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