CardSharp
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I follow a couple of English China blogs, and this is a particular interesting perspective on the American elections by a American law professor living in Beijing.
I wasn’t planning on writing anything else about the U.S. midterm elections further than that post yesterday, but I changed my mind. Yesterday’s post was about the China angle to the election, which will be minimal. However, an excerpt from a reader email posted by Jim Fallows hit a nerve. Although the reader is not an expat, I think the comment touches on concerns held by a lot of us living overseas:
I for one am despairing. America will not come to grip with its problems and wants to double down on previous bad choices. It’s similar to when religious fundamentalists keep a society shackled and later come to the conclusion that the reason they’re failing is that they weren’t sufficiently orthodox.
I’m quickly losing faith in America. I am currently in Korea on a business trip and was discussing politics with some Korean and Japanese colleagues. The consensus position is that America is a dying empire and they need to start planning for the day (very shortly) when it all falls apart for us and we find ourselves in a position similar to Britain in the 60s/70s or Russia in the 90s (we’ve already got oligarchs and a deeply corrupt government fully dedicating to aiding them).
I moved to Washington, DC 10 years ago a young graduate student who deeply believed in this country and looked forward to a career serving her in government (at one point, I had even been offered a position as a foreign service officer with State, but after waiting 18 months for a security clearance, I took another job). Flash forward today and I’m so despondent and cynical, I’ve lost complete faith in the country and am preparing to disengage from politics and public service entirely because I know see serving the American people as Sisyphean task of epic proportions.
I am reminded of 2004. After the obvious, and outrageous, debacle of the Bush Administration, I remember being absolutely gob smacked that the guy was re-elected. When that happened, I felt more disconnected from other Americans than at any time since I began living overseas. I just couldn’t understand an electorate that thought another Bush term was good for the country. To this day, I’m amazed that so many people came to that conclusion, or allowed themselves to be led there by sophisticated spin doctoring.
Unfortunately, this election cycle has me thinking the same thoughts. I am neither surprised nor outraged that a whole lot of Republicans were elected to the House of Representatives. This happens with midterm elections. Is it surprising that this is happening just two years after Americans soundly rejected Republican policies in a general election? Sure it is, and it goes to show you how fickle the American electorate is.
More than that, though, I have a problem with the continued rise of unqualified, ignorant populists, the new “Know Nothing” crowd championed by the “Tea Party” groups. These are the morons who are cheerleading for budget cuts during a downturn in the business cycle, ignoramuses crying out for “constitutionalism” without understanding anything about that document or its history, and the retards (yes, I still use that term) moaning about the spending policies of the current administration, which either began during the Bush presidency or were necessitated by its handling of the economy. I won’t even bother mentioning the bigots, the Jesus Squad, the global warming deniers or the birthers.
So yeah, I understand the despair of that reader. It’s not so much a partisan thing as it is a disconnect with the average voter back home. These folks are led by anti-intellectuals, politicians who are not even qualified to hold office in a small town, much less a federal post in D.C. America is no longer being led by its best and brightest but by a group of glib opportunists that revel in mediocrity and disdain education and excellence. Why can’t America compete with the rest of the world? Some navel gazing is surely in order.
I keep getting this feeling that the rest of the world is either gleefully watching the U.S. collapse under its own weight or are sitting back with shocked expressions, wondering how all this happened in the span of a few short decades.
The emperor Caligula, whom some historians claim was stark raving mad, appointed his horse Incitatus to the Roman Senate. The American public is toying with the idea of putting Sarah Palin in the White House in 2012. Of the two, the horse had more political experience.
As I suggested yesterday, the next two years should, if nothing else, prove to be interesting.
http://www.chinahearsay.com/u-s-election-postscript-the-despairing-expat-view/