The decline of the US and the rise of the East
By Daniel Kovalik Published:
Jul 09, 2022
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202207/1270123.shtml
We are now witnessing a great realignment and
transformation. The so-called "American Century" has given way to a
new century in which other countries are asserting themselves and taking the
lead in the world. This new world order seemed quite unlikely several decades
ago when the USSR collapsed and it appeared, and the US certainly declared,
that the United States would be the dominant power for many decades to
come. Ironically, it was the US' very attempt to maintain this status that has
inexorably led to its losing it, and to its decline as a nation.
While ironic, this was all quite predictable. Indeed, the Democratic Party, in
its 1900 party platform, warned of this very outcome when it stated, "[w]e
assert that no nation can long endure half republic and half empire, and we
warn the American people that imperialism abroad will lead quickly and
inevitably to despotism at home." But no sooner were these words uttered
than that the US embarked upon unprecedented empire-building beyond its already-giant
mainland which itself was the product of a brutal settler-colonial project
which displaced, subdued, and killed millions of people already living from the
Atlantic to the Pacific.
The US, of course, settled upon the instruments of war and violence to achieve
its imperial aims. After all, the reasoning went, these had worked so well for
it in building the nation, to begin with. This addiction to unending expansion
through costly wars, however, was not and is not sustainable. Indeed, in his
farewell address in 1961, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, himself a former
General, warned that the US republic was under threat, not from abroad, but
from a growing "military-industrial complex" that was threatening to
usurp the democratic and civilian rule of the country.
More recently, in what sounded like a postmortem of the United States, Jimmy
Carter told President Trump when discussing China in 2019 that the US is
"the most warlike nation in the history of the world," and that this
has cost the US dearly.
As Carter explained, "We have wasted, I think, $3 trillion [on military
spending since 1979]. … China has not wasted a single penny on war, and that's
why they're ahead of us. In almost every way.
"And I think the difference is if you take $3 trillion and put it in American
infrastructure, you'd probably have $2 trillion left over. We'd have a high-speed
railroad. We'd have bridges that aren't collapsing. We'd have roads that are
maintained properly. Our education system would be as good as that of, say,
South Korea or Hong Kong."
The results of all this have been disastrous. As just one example, Forbes
magazine reported in 2020 that "54% of US adults 16-74 years old - about
130 million people - lack proficiency in literacy, reading below the equivalent
of a sixth-grade level." Forbes estimated that this functional illiteracy
- on par with what we used to call Third World nations - was costing the US
$2.2 trillion a year. It is also costing the US in terms of its ability to
maintain an informed electorate that can meaningfully participate in an
ostensibly democratic system.
The other factor leading to the decline of the United States has been the
increasing usurpation of power by the monied interests which now control every
facet of life in the country, including the very system of
"democracy," if one can still call it that. This was made possible by
a decision of the least democratic branch of the US government, the Supreme
Court, in its 2010 ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Electoral
Commission which, in the words of the well-respected Brennan Center
for Justice, "reversed century-old campaign finance restrictions and
enabled corporations and other outside groups to spend unlimited funds on
elections."
The result is that US electoral positions now go to the highest bidders which
in turn act on behalf of themselves and their super-rich friends, and against
the interests of the vast majority of the population who are forced to languish
in poverty, ill-health, and ignorance. Nowhere was this phenomenon better
demonstrated than during the recent pandemic in which the US suffered the
highest number of cases and deaths in the world while the measures imposed by
the US government to ostensibly combat the pandemic ensured that the very rich
became $4.5 trillion dollars richer at the expense of everyone else. This is
the mark of a country that is not working as it should. The US is, indeed, a
failed state, and it is failed by design so that the few oligarchs can rule in
the breach created by the chaos.
While the US suffers this sad decline, countries in the East like China and
Vietnam are rising. With their economies focused on meeting human needs, rather
than on fueling war and the gross enrichment of the few, these countries are
lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty and building sustainable
infrastructure in their own countries and around the world. The US, rather than
viewing these countries as adversaries or even enemies, should have the
humility to learn from them and indeed work with them in creating a more just and
prosperous world. This would require the US to radically change course and to
focus on adopting peaceful means in its dealings with the world; on creating
rather than destroying. It is my hope that the US can make this course
correction before it is too late for all of us.
The author is an American lawyer who currently teaches International Human
Rights at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.
opinion@globaltimes.com.cn
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