Baghdad, Australia on fire after U.S. sleepwalks through the 2010s. Wake up! It’s the 2020s | Will Bunch
This isn’t the column I planned to write when I woke up this morning --
The decade was ending, and the world was literally on fire.
In
The
This photo needs to be the front page of every paper in
-- Dan (@danbakes)
The last-day-of-the-decade crises in
We decided to pass.
If you’ve ever watched Hairspray -- and given all the remakes and high-school musical permutations, I assume everyone has -- then you know the bouncy opening number, “Welcome to the ’60s.” It’s perfect in every way, with both the music and lyric capturing the optimism that, building on 15 years of post-war affluence and a rising middle class, the next decade would be a time when any and all things were possible. The viewer has the hindsight to know that did prove true but in unpredictable ways that were both better and worse than what anyone expected at the start.
Now, welcome to the B-side of that 45-RPM disc, the crash of America’s great musical crescendo. The 2010s -- such as they were -- were a decade of decadence and denial, with a shrinking middle class and wealth that was hoarded by a kleptocratic One Percent. Many looked at America’s dark turn toward authoritarianism on
Were the 2010s even a decade? In many ways, America’s obsession with decades like “the Swingin’ 60s” or the ’70s “Me Decade” are a reflection of mass-culture consumerism that thrived with jukeboxes and only three channels on the TV and died with your Spotify playlist and must-see “hit” shows on streaming channels you’ve never heard of. What remains -- grown-up stuff like wars and elections -- never quite fits in our tidy box of calendars.
In an era that -- contrary to every intention of America’s Founders -- we obsess over and sometimes worship our imperial presidents,
Yet both, in the their own ways and styles, allowed America’s deeper problems to fester over those 10 years. Start with America’s penchant for tackling international problems with the most powerful military force the world has ever known. Yes, Obama brought troops home from
WATCH: Thousands of Iraqi protesters furious over deadly
--
Candidate Trump -- for all his quasi-fascistic foibles -- said all the right things on curbing
As I write this, the situation in
Why the fate of this tiny
As
--
These are the stories that got next to zero coverage on TV news while its producers thirsted for ratings victory by entertaining America to death with serials. They tried the mystery of a missing Malaysian flight and then switched to a series that proved even more popular, a honest-to-goodness reality-TV president who managed to both play on people’s legitimate anger over a decade when social and economic inequality grew even worse and yet also provide a circus of distraction with his tweets and his feuds and a golf-course
But when the wiring underneath the foundation of the house is rotten, you may not see the smoldering at first but eventually the blaze becomes too hot to ignore.
Hey, I know that sounds pretty bleak on a day that’s meant for party hats, ball drops and Champagne. But the truth is that decades don’t descend from the sky with pre-cast personalities. They are merely what we humans make of them. If we spend the next 10 years finally figuring out how to wage peace instead of war, if a spirit of shared sacrifice brings us together to seriously curb greenhouse-gas pollution, if we do the math and see that an economy for the 99 Percent is better than one for the 1 Percent, and if America’s brush with autocracy makes us fall in love with democracy all over again, then this is going to the best decade any of us has ever seen.
Welcome to the ’20s.
___
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