America’s unique ‘national character‘ — the common underlying values and patterns of thought that gives our nation its “flavor” — is under assault as we re-think what we, as a nation, think about the use of torture; the role of government (the ‘Good guys’) in our lives and the social security it provides; the nature of 21st-century capitalism, and how we now think about Wall Street and corporate executives (the ‘Bad guys’) who failed to place their patriotic duty to be good corporate citizens ahead of consumer protections, while shipping millions of good paying American jobs overseas in the name of corporate profits (or more likely, losses), then, adding insult to injury, paying themselves scores of millions in bonuses and compensation, while wrecking the Global economy. But it doesn’t end there. Corporate scandals that obliterate entire companies — and the suppliers, familes and lives that depend on them — all in the name of greed are legion and have grown from trickles, to torrents.
Similarly, we are contorting ourselves as a society as we consider the value of torture. Slate.com — a favorite of the Washington intelligencia — is currently running an article titled “We’re All Torturers Now” discussing the implications of the now-released Bybee Torture Memo (See PDF version here). Our hisorical collective thought and cultural values on ‘Torture’ (defenders call it, “enhanced interrogation techniques”) have been challenged and undermined by the previous administration’s so-called “war on Terror” and the resulting collapse of accountability in their efforts to circumvent the U.S. Constitution. This has opened the way for an ‘imperial presidency’ and the way forward for torture as a national security policy. Legal scholars argue convincingly that left unchecked this may be setting dangerous legal precedents that now makes possible the emergence of a future American dictator president. In addition, by embracing torture we send a cue to our enemies that gravely endangers the lives of our soldiers and CIA operatives around the world. In this context, I found this article by David Brooks, a conservative columnist for the New York Times, extremely interesting as Americans conceptually work through the implications of these complex questions, and how it might change the way Americans see themselves in the World. Demographics matter in re-thinking the American character. These values will change as we incorporate different approaches and different patterns of thought — particularly as we evolve as a culturally diverse nation — in, for example, nuances in the exercise of American power around the world, as the current president is exemplifying.
Further, in the context of the current global financial crisis, Americans now know that the crisis began on Wall Street, and that our brand of capitalism was the culprit, sending its reverberations around the world. And as I’ve written here before, despite the triumph of free-market systems the world over; and even though we like to think our form of capitalism – the Anglo-American, or Laissez Faire, model – as the only model of capitalism and otherwise synonymous with baseball & apple pie. The reality is. . . it isn’t. There are different varieties of capitalism around the world: some work better than others. No single form of capitalism has yet emerged world-wide as the global standard for a free-market economic system, but we know this much: it won’t be the Gringo brand of anything goes ‘cowboy capitalism.’
A final — but perhaps more prescient — example of how we are re-thinking
Even GOP Congressmen now question the future and nature of capitalism.