March 29, 2017

NO ONE HAS IT HARDER THAN THEIR FATHER DID:

Civilization & Discontents: Modern Life Has Its Pitfalls (Kevin D. Williamson, 3/28/17, National Review)

We spend our days surrounded by great miracles and minor irritations. My friend Jay Nordlinger recently recounted how Joseph Stalin allowed the film The Grapes of Wrath to be shown in the Soviet Union, believing that to see an indictment of capitalism from within the beast itself would be salutary for the proletariat. The proletariat took another lesson from the film: The Joads, apparently the poorest people in America, had a Ford, a luxury no working man in the workers' paradise could dream of. A similar story is told about the television series Dallas: The Soviets thought their subjects would recoil from the mischief of J. R. Ewing and his Texas oil cronies, but all the poor Russians could see was that American servants lived better than Soviet doctors and professors. If we could share our daily tales of woe with our great-grandparents -- e.g., my complaints about the Wi-Fi on airplanes -- they would not take from that the conclusion we intended.

Now imagine explaining to all of them that the greatest problem we face is that we are headed towards a point where no longer require labor to produce that wealth...

Posted by at March 29, 2017 8:38 AM

  

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