Music to read by:
I
am the son
and the heir
of a shyness that is criminally vulgar
I am the son and heir
of nothing in particular
and the heir
of a shyness that is criminally vulgar
I am the son and heir
of nothing in particular
You
shut your mouth
how can you say
I go about things the wrong way
I am Human and I need to be loved
Just like everybody else does
how can you say
I go about things the wrong way
I am Human and I need to be loved
Just like everybody else does
Noonan: America's Crisis of Character
The nation seems to be on the wrong track, and not just economically.
By Peggy Noonan
People
in politics talk about the right track/wrong track numbers as an
indicator of public mood. This week Gallup had a poll showing only 24%
of Americans feel we're on the right track as a nation. That's a
historic low. Political professionals tend, understandably, to think
it's all about the economy—unemployment, foreclosures, we're going in
the wrong direction. I've long thought that public dissatisfaction is
about more than the economy, that it's also about our culture, or rather
the flat, brute, highly sexualized thing we call our culture.
Now I'd go a step beyond that. I think more and more people are worried about the American character—who we are and what kind of adults we are raising.
Every story that has broken through the past few weeks has been about who we are as a people. And they are all disturbing.
A tourist is beaten in Baltimore. Young people surround him and
laugh. He's pummeled, stripped and robbed. No one helps. They're too
busy taping it on their smartphones. That's how we heard their laughter.
The video is on YouTube along with the latest McDonald's beat-down and
the latest store surveillance tapes of flash mobs. Groups of teenagers
swarm into stores, rob everything they can, and run out. The phenomenon
is on the rise across the country. Police now have a nickname for it:
"flash robs."
That's just the young, you say. Juvenile delinquency is as old as history.
Let's turn to adults.
Also starring on YouTube this week was
the sobbing woman. She's the poor traveler who began to cry great
heaving sobs when a Transportation Security Administration agent at the
Madison, Wis., airport either patted her down or felt her up, depending
on your viewpoint and experience. Jim Hoft of TheGatewayPundit.com
recorded it, and like all the rest of the videos it hurts to watch. When
the TSA agent—an adult, a middle aged woman—was done, she just walked
away, leaving the passenger alone and uncomforted, like a tourist in
Baltimore.
There is the General Services Administration scandal. An agency
devoted to efficiency is outed as an agency of mindless
bread-and-circuses indulgence. They had a four-day regional conference
in Las Vegas, with clowns and mind readers.
The reason the story is news, and actually upsetting, is not that a
government agency wasted money. That is not news. The reason it's news
is that the people involved thought what they were doing was funny, and
appropriate. In the past, bureaucratic misuse of taxpayer money was
quiet. You needed investigators to find it, trace it, expose it. Now
it's a big public joke. They held an awards show. They sang songs about
the perks of a government job: "Brand new computer and underground
parking and a corner office. . . . Love to the taxpayer. . . . I'll
never be under OIG investigation." At the show, the singer was made
Commissioner for a Day. "The hotel would like to talk to you about
paying for the party that was held in the commissioner's suite last
night" the emcee said. It got a big laugh.
On the "red carpet" leading into the event, GSA chief Jeffrey Neely
said: "I am wearing an Armani." One worker said, "I have a talent for
drinking Margarita. . . . It all began with the introduction of
performance measures." That got a big laugh too.
All the workers looked affluent, satisfied. Only a generation ago,
earnest, tidy government bureaucrats were spoofed as drudges and drones.
Not anymore. Now they're way cool. Immature, selfish and vain, but way
cool.
Their leaders didn't even pretend to have a sense of mission and
responsibility. They reminded me of the story a year ago of the dizzy
captain of a U.S. Navy ship who made off-color videos and played them
for his crew. He wasn't interested in the burdens of leadership—the need
to be the adult, the uncool one, the one who maintains standards. No
one at GSA seemed interested in playing the part of the grown-up,
either.
Why? Why did they think this is OK? They seemed mildly decadent. Or
proudly decadent. In contrast to you, low, toiling taxpayer that you
are, poor drudges and drones.
There is the Secret Service scandal. That one broke through too, and
you know the facts: overseas to guard the president, sent home for
drinking, partying, picking up prostitutes.
What's terrible about this story is that for anyone who's ever seen
the Secret Service up close it's impossible to believe. The Secret
Service are the best of the best. That has been their reputation because
that has been their reality. They have always been tough, disciplined
and mature. They are men, and they have the most extraordinary job: take
the bullet.
Remember when Reagan was shot? That was Secret Service agent Tim
McCarthy who stood there like a stone wall, and took one right in the
gut. Jerry Parr pushed Reagan into the car, and Mr. Parr was one
steely-eyed agent. Reagan coughed up a little blood, and Mr. Parr
immediately saw its color was a little too dark. He barked the order to
change direction and get to the hospital, not the White House, and saved
Reagan's life. From Robert Caro's "Passage of Power," on Secret Service
agent Rufus Youngblood, Nov. 22, 1963: "there was a sharp, cracking
sound," and Youngblood, "whirling in his seat," grabbed Vice President
Lyndon Johnson and threw him to the floor of the car, "shielding his
body with his own."
In any presidential party, the Secret Service guys are the ones who
are mature, who you can count on, who'll keep their heads. They have
judgment, they're by the book unless they have to rewrite it on a
second's notice. And they wore suits, like adults.
This week I saw a picture of agents in Colombia. They were in
T-shirts, wrinkled khakis and sneakers. They looked like a bunch of
mooks, like slobs, like children with muscles.
Special thanks to the person who invented casual Friday. Now it's
casual everyday in America. But when you lower standards people don't
decide to give you more, they give you less.
In New York the past week a big story has
been about 16 public school teachers who can't be fired even though
they've acted unprofessionally. What does "unprofessionally" mean in New
York? Sex with students, stalking students, and, in one case, standing
behind a kid, simulating sex, and saying, "I'll show you what gay is."
The kids in the flash mobs: These are their teachers.
Finally, as this column goes to press, the journalistic story of the
week, the Los Angeles Times's decision to publish pictures of U.S.
troops in Afghanistan who smilingly posed with the bloody body parts of
suicide bombers. The soldier who brought the pictures to the Times told
their veteran war correspondent, David Zucchino, that he was, in
Zucchino's words, "very concerned about what he said was a breakdown in
. . . discipline and professionalism" among the troops.
In isolation, these stories may sound like the usual sins and
scandals, but in the aggregate they seem like something more disturbing,
more laden with implication, don't they? And again, these are only from
the past week.
The leveling or deterioration of public behavior has got to be
worrying people who have enough years on them to judge with some
perspective.
Something seems to be going terribly wrong.
Maybe we have to stop and think about this.
Related Reading:
2 comments:
Great article...
It speaks loudly of our times...
Luke 10:18 "And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven."
BTW, "The smiths, how soon is now" never heard of them before....
It reminds me of David Bowie from the older times... thanks
Come to think of it...
An apologetic write up by Noonan and a great telling of her own character...
I'm surprise she didn't see these coming. These "Character Flaws" of her urban "modern America"...
She was one of those shameless Republicans who voiced opposition and ridicule those with more stringent, more stern, honorable character of America... the mom and pop, the family, God, Country, Christianity, Life, Duty...
Peggy Noonan was one of those liberated republicans who was NOT just happy with tolerating things like abortion, perversion, homosexuality, promiscuity, hedonism or lgbt world. Remember Noonan was the enlightened republican who wanted acceptance and celebration of these ills of "Americas urban Character" and their evil flaws..."
Perhaps it is too late for Noonan to question the urban character of America...
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