This from Robert Reich. Please follow link to original.
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http://robertreich.org/
We are witnessing a reversion to tribalism
around the world, away from nation states. The the same pattern can be
seen even in America – especially in American politics.
Before the rise of the nation-state, between the eighteenth and
twentieth centuries, the world was mostly tribal. Tribes were united by
language, religion, blood, and belief. They feared other tribes and
often warred against them. Kings and emperors imposed temporary truces,
at most.But in the past three hundred years the
idea of nationhood took root in most of the world. Members of tribes
started to become citizens, viewing themselves as a single people with
patriotic sentiments and duties toward their homeland. Although
nationalism never fully supplanted tribalism in some former colonial
territories, the transition from tribe to nation was mostly completed by
the mid twentieth century.Over the last several decades, though, technology has whittled away the underpinnings of the nation state. National
economies have become so intertwined that economic security depends
less on national armies than on financial transactions around the world.
Global corporations play nations off against each other to get the best
deals on taxes and regulations.
News and images move so easily across borders that attitudes and
aspirations are no longer especially national. Cyber-weapons, no longer
the exclusive province of national governments, can originate in a
hacker’s garage.
Nations are becoming less relevant in a world
where everyone and everything is interconnected. The connections that
matter most are again becoming more personal. Religious beliefs and
affiliations, the nuances of one’s own language and culture, the daily
realities of class, and the extensions of one’s family and its values –
all are providing people with ever greater senses of identity.
The
nation state, meanwhile, is coming apart. A single Europe – which
seemed within reach a few years ago – is now succumbing to the
centrifugal forces of its different languages and cultures. The Soviet
Union is gone, replaced by nations split along tribal lines. Vladimir
Putin can’t easily annex the whole of Ukraine, only the Russian-speaking
part. The Balkans have been Balkanized.
Separatist movements
have broken out all over — Czechs separating from Slovaks; Kurds wanting
to separate from Iraq, Syria, and Turkey; even the Scots seeking
separation from England.
The turmoil now consuming much of the
Middle East stems less from democratic movements trying to topple
dictatorships than from ancient tribal conflicts between the two major
denominations of Isam – Sunni and Shia.
And what about America?
The world’s “melting pot” is changing color. Between the 2000 and 2010
census the share of the U.S. population calling itself white
dropped from 69 to 64 percent, and more than half of the nation’s population growth came from Hispanics.
It’s also becoming more divided by economic class. Increasingly, the rich seem to inhabit a different country than the rest.
But
America’s new tribalism can be seen most distinctly in its politics.
Nowadays the members of one tribe (calling themselves liberals,
progressives, and Democrats) hold sharply different views and values
than the members of the other (conservatives, Tea Partiers, and
Republicans).
Each tribe has contrasting ideas about rights and
freedoms (for liberals, reproductive rights and equal marriage rights;
for conservatives, the right to own a gun and do what you want with your
property).
Each has its own totems (social insurance versus smaller government)
and taboos (cutting entitlements or raising taxes). Each, its own demons
(the Tea Party and Ted Cruz; the Affordable Care Act and Barack Obama);
its own version of truth (one believes in climate change and evolution;
the other doesn’t); and its own media that confirm its beliefs.
The tribes even look different. One is becoming blacker, browner, and more feminine. The other, whiter and more male. (Only
2 percent of Mitt Romney’s voters were African-American, for example.)
Each
tribe is headed by rival warlords whose fighting has almost brought the
national government in Washington to a halt. Increasingly, the two
tribes live separately in their own regions – blue or red state, coastal
or mid-section, urban or rural – with state or local governments
reflecting their contrasting values.
I’m not making a claim of moral equivalence. Personally, I think the Republican right has gone off the deep end, and if
polls are to be believed a majority of Americans agree with me.
But
the fact is, the two tribes are pulling America apart, often putting
tribal goals over the national interest – which is not that different
from what’s happening in the rest of the world.
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