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Home/World/The optimist club – Christians have an unshakable reason to hope even as anxieties about America grow

The optimist club – Christians have an unshakable reason to hope even as anxieties about America grow

Written by Janie B. Cheaney | Tuesday, November 29, 2011

I believe people are waking up—but they’re waking up on opposite sides of the bed and there may not be enough of them on our side. The political whipsawing that encourages John Podhoretz confounds me. Are we principled and determined, or muddled and confused? As long as there’s an American center, a historical sense of who we are and what we stand for, I think we can recover

I hear it everywhere: Is it over? Do we still have time? When prospective candidates are parading their virtues and inadvertently showing their faults, when every big city has its incoherent “occupy” crowd, when incomes are falling and budgets rising, what kind of future does the USA have?

This month’s Commentary magazine features a symposium of 41 “thinkers and writers,” mostly right-of-center, who were asked, “Are you optimistic or pessimistic about America?” Writing the anchor piece for optimism is John Podhoretz, a grandson of socialists, whose father Norman gravitated from left to right. In the pessimist corner is Mark Steyn, transplanted Canadian, who kept our own Marvin Olasky up too late one night with his latest book, After America (see WORLD, Oct. 8). It took a whole book to get Marvin depressed; I managed in a 10-minute article.

We’ve been through worse years. “Remember the Seventies,” I tell myself: college kids wrecking campuses, an ignominious end to a bitter war, gasoline shortages, double-digit inflation and interest loans, a scandal-ridden president, an ineffective president, a general collapse of self-confidence. But actually, I don’t remember the Seventies that well, as most of it happened when I was distracted by babies and toddlers.

I suspect a lot of Americans are like that now: Beyond a vague sense of “the system is broken,” their attention is swamped with family demands or unemployment anxieties or stacks of unpaid bills they don’t know who to blame for.

Steyn’s argument for pessimism is the sense of unreality infecting modern culture. Catchphrases spouted by the leader of the free world neither inspire nor convict—they only get him to the next campaign stop. Last summer’s epochal debt-ceiling battle eventually coughed up savings of possibly $1 billion—just before President Obama’s jobs bill proposed to shove almost $500 billion back in.

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