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With banks failing and the
economy falling apart everywhere you look, short term we are
obviously in a mess. But, I thought I'd present you with an
optimistic way to look at the world today. ~editor
A Thorn With Every Rose-
The Economy isn't
as Bad as it Looks
By Alexander Green
September 15,
2008
“Let us be of good cheer, however, remembering that the misfortunes
hardest to bear are those which never come.”
James Russell Lowell
I recently attended an Oxford Club chapter meeting at the
Grove Park Inn, a historic hotel on the western slope of Sunset
Mountain near Asheville, NC.
Passing the enormous stone hearth in the lobby one morning, I
noticed an engraving on one of the stones. It was a quatrain by
Frank L. Stanton, a columnist for The Atlanta Constitution in
the 1890s: “This world that we’re a- livin’ in / Is mighty hard
to beat; / You git a thorn with every rose / But ain’t the roses
sweet!”
This was once the most quoted poem in the country. But the mood has
changed.
According to a recent CBS News/New York Times poll,
Americans’ views on the general state of the country have hit an
all-time low, with 81 percent saying the prospects for the United
States are declining… the worst-ever number for this barometer.
Some will argue that this just reflects the current economic
slowdown or the monumental unpopularity of President Bush. But
pollsters report that, for decades now, large percentages have said
the country is going downhill, life is getting tougher, our children
face a declining future, and the world, in general, is going to hell
in a handbasket.
Clearly, we have serious problems. There is the threat of nuclear
proliferation, the specter of terrorism, and the unpleasant fact
that our troops are bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan.
From an economic perspective, the federal deficit keeps growing,
home prices are falling, the currency is weak, food and fuel prices
have jumped, credit is tight, and the stock market recently entered
bear market territory.
No wonder Americans are in a foul mood. Especially if this
perspective - one that is repeated endlessly by the national media -
accurately represents the big picture.
But it doesn’t.
The media delivers the world through a highly distorted lens. It
doesn’t report buildings that don’t burn, planes that don’t crash,
or companies that are hiring instead of laying off.
You wouldn’t know it by listening to the pundits, but our general
lot is getting better, not worse.
As Greg Easterbrook of the Brookings Institution recently wrote in
The Wall Street Journal, “Living standards are the highest
they have ever been, including the living standards for the middle
class and the poor. All forms of pollution other than greenhouse
gases are in decline; cancer, heart disease, and stroke incidence
are declining; crime is in a long-term cycle of significant decline,
and education levels are at all-time highs.”
Despite the gloomy headlines, most of us have it pretty darn good.
Consider that in the first half of the twentieth century, most
people earned a subsistence living through long hours of
backbreaking work on farms or in factories. On the whole, Americans
now work less, have more purchasing power, enjoy goods and services
in almost unlimited supply, and have much more leisure.
In the first half of our nation’s history, most Americans lived and
died within a few miles of where they were born. Nothing traveled
faster than a horse and, as far as they knew, nothing ever would.
Today, we have instantaneous global communication, 24-hour broadband
Internet access, and same-day travel to distant cities.
Formal discrimination against women and minorities has ended. There
is mass home ownership, with central heat and air-conditioning and
endless labor-saving devices: stoves, ovens, refrigerators,
dishwashers, microwaves, and computers.
Medicine was almost non-existent 80 years ago. In 1927, for example,
President Calvin Coolidge’s 16-year-old son Calvin Jr. developed a
blister by playing tennis without wearing socks. It became infected.
Five days later, he died. Before the advent of antibiotics,
tragedies like these were routine.
Advances in medicine and technology have eliminated most of
history’s plagues. There has been a stunning reduction in infectious
disease.
We complain about the rising cost of health care. But that’s only
because we routinely live long enough to depend on it. The average
American lifespan has almost doubled over the past century.
In short, we enjoy economic and political freedoms denied to
billions throughout history. We live long lives, in good health and
in comfortable circumstances. By almost any measure, we are living
better than 99.9 percent of those who have inhabited this planet.
Yet we routinely tell pollsters that life is hard and things are
getting steadily worse.
I think it’s time to take the larger view.
In
The Progress Paradox
, Easterbrook writes:
“Perhaps Western society has lost its way, producing material
goods in impressive superfluity but also generating so much stress
and pressure that people cannot enjoy what they attain. Perhaps men
and women must reexamine their priorities, demanding less, caring
more about each other, appreciating what they have rather than
grousing about what they do not have, giving more than lip service
to the wisdom that money cannot buy happiness.”
How do we do this? We can re-order our lives so that they are less
hectic, less stressful.
We all have problems. But as
Robert Ringer
says,
whatever your troubles, the odds are small that anyone is going to
throw you up against the wall and pull out a machine gun.
We can start improving the quality of our lives simply by changing
our perspective. And we can accept that if something is missing in
our lives, it is probably a sense of gratitude, not material
possessions.
It’s worth taking a moment to appreciate your incredible good
fortune just to be alive.
In
Unweaving the Rainbow,
Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins writes: “We are going to die,
and that makes us the lucky ones. Most people are never going to die
because they are never going to be born. The potential people who
could have been here in my place but who will in fact never see the
light of day outnumber the sand grains of the Sahara. Certainly
those unborn ghosts include greater poets than Keats, scientists
greater than Newton. We know this because the set of possible people
allowed by our DNA so massively outnumbers the set of actual people.
In the teeth of these stupefying odds it is you and I, in our
ordinariness, that are here.”
True, it’s not a perfect world. But it’s the only one we’ve got. And
we’re only here once.
Still, as my Dad used to say, “If you work it right, once is
enough.”
This article appears courtesy of Early To
Rise, the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine.
For a complimentary subscription, visit
http://www.earlytorise.com
.
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