29 December 2021

The Fragmentation of the Social Order

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/leonard-pitts-jr-the-social-covenant-has-shattered/ar-AARkgok

I occasionally glance at syndicated editorials. Pitts is sometimes interesting and thoughtful and other times less so. This one struck me because it's something I've been talking about for years. Pitts barely scratches the surface but it was still refreshing to read. At least someone is thinking about these issues.


Pitts is correct when he says the social covenant has been shattered. It's an important development and even a milestone and history also tells us this is a warning. Rome went through a similar phase during the late Republic, resulting in civil war, and dictatorship. Other nations and empires don't survive this phase. Those that do emerge, do so as different entities. Some of the lessons from WWI's fallout and The Great Depression also come to mind.

Pitts cites the breakdown of authority and he's right to do so. When law enforcement and government officials dispense with the law and disregard it, when they openly break it – this sends a signal to the population at large. Trust is broken, and cynicism takes on a life of its own. The fabric is torn and society begins to break. And as it turns out, that fabric is usually far more delicate and fragile than people imagined.

New Testament Christians are called to be on the outside, on the fringes of society as it were. As strangers and pilgrims we're removed from the social currents, the fads, and manias which grip the populace – or we're supposed to be. Unbiblical theology and the wolves in sheep's clothing that promote it have led the Church to a very different place and now it would seem the Church is probably one of the more culturally susceptible and malleable groups out there.

Trump (and perhaps just as important, the context for his rise to power) played a large role in creating these conditions. While this author will be the first to admit the electoral system and the political system in general is highly corrupt – its wanton shattering by the likes of Trump is nevertheless dangerous. Why? Because there's nothing to replace it. It's one thing if a small group on the edge of society dismisses the order but if the order begins to collapse it will send a shockwave across the whole of society. And like it or not we live in this society and will have to deal with the fallout of its collapse.

Trump's attitude and disregard for not only convention but basic decency has produced a palpable effect on society at large. There has certainly been a decline in basic manners and crude speech and conduct have become more normalised. Trump set the tone that has produced a mass proliferation of reckless narcissism, and consequently death in the age of Covid. The defiance, selfishness, and abandonment of norms necessary for society to function are rooted in the ethos he projected. At one time people would have been ashamed and called out for blatantly disregarding rules or signs posted on a business. Now, this is done with defiance, impunity, and without remorse. And increasingly large numbers cannot even seem to understand why anyone would take issue with them or dare to even question them.*

American society saw a similar collapse in the 1920's and 1930's. Wealth produced decadence and ostentatious display and behaviour. The First World War produced a cynicism which changed how people lived and treated one another – and then the stock market crashed. People lost faith in the system altogether and in basic decency as they saw how paper-thin the walls of the order really were. Bandits and outlaws became heroes. Law was flaunted throughout the 1920's and early 1930's – the era of Prohibition. Even authority figures participated in the subversion of the law (Prohibition was a stupid and misguided law, we must admit) but the fact that law-breaking and disregard for norms and limits proved cancerous to society. Crime flourished and the rise of the mafia would play out in American life for decades to come.

We are once again living in such a time.

Not only has Trump made a mockery of the law and the foundations of society, he has many collaborators. Some view themselves as patriots but the ethics of previous generations would view them as opportunistic and self-serving and in not a few cases as treasonous. But thus far they suffer no consequence. This is even though some of them were involved in the riotous coup-attempt on January 6th.

This feeds the defiance found within certain classes of society as evidenced by the 'F--- Biden' flags I drive past every day and we find in Church circles the same attitude restrained only slightly. 'Let's Go Brandon' has appeared on many Christian Facebook pages and the like and while childish, it's no less an obscene and sinful thing. The leaders of the Christian Right are blind guides and their capitulations over the past decade have demonstrated their short-sightedness, shallow foundations, and utter lack of discernment. They have led the sheep to the wolves and they are being devoured – won over to the camp of Satan and increasingly they pursue Satan's agenda and embrace his deeds.

The social breakdown is further exacerbated by the economy. The US system nearly collapsed in 2008 and while some markets returned to normal, others have been propped up by the Federal Reserve and its aggressive purchasing programme – an attempt to get cash and credit flowing. This went into hyper-drive in the face of the economic seizure brought on by Covid. The results have been mixed. The wealthy stock-holding class has seen profits soar and we've entered a new age of Robber Barons and the super-rich. The upper middle class continues to ride the stock market wave into a degree of riches hitherto unknown.

But it's built on a foundation of sand as the Wall Street economy is getting further divorced from the economy on the street. The Fed doesn't know how to slow down its purchasing. Any hint of doing so leads to huge plunges in the markets. And so they keep purchasing – effectively printing money to do so.

Inflation has resulted. It was already under way and then Covid hit. Now with logistical snarls and other factors real inflation is starting to hit all sectors of American society. The super-rich have fared wonderfully as the millionaire and billionaire classes have grown their wealth exponentially. They don't even notice. The upper Middle Class is also able to absorb inflationary costs with little difficulty.

But the working class is suffering. They've been suffering since 2008. Their economy never recovered and wages and hours have continued to be squeezed. The results are plain enough to see in the hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths, a testimony to a societal class in meltdown – a generation and culture that has been destroyed. In their nihilism they turned to Trump, many with religious devotion. And yet the booming economy never affected them and it wasn't Trump's doing anyway. The Fed policy began under Obama and it has continued under Biden.

The still ascendant stock market is due to Trump and not Biden – so his apologists will argue. In actuality it has little to do with any of them. Trump rescinded regulations, many of which have simply led to harm – or damage that cancels out whatever job creation they produced. There was no industrial boom under Trump. Quite the contrary. He benefitted from a subsidized stock market – the costs of which are being extracted from the public and the labour pool.

The price of cars, retail goods, and real estate are skyrocketing. People making six-figure incomes can adjust, those making low wages cannot and their situation is increasingly desperate if not impossible. The Covid pandemic has led some to reconsider and restructure their lives. Many have realised the child-care in order for mom to work paradigm didn't work very well and now the numbers don't work either. Some have access to subsidies, others can rely on family. But others pay out of pocket and (ethics aside) when the additional vehicular costs and so forth are factored in – it isn't worth it. Sickness and death have also led many to re-evaluate their lifestyles. Many people of a certain age have chosen to quit and retire, no longer willing to deal with the danger of Covid exposure and the reckless endangering and incoherent policies of a state that seems first and foremost determined to get people back to work regardless of risk.

This has opened up new opportunities in the industrial sector along with the ever widening trickles of industry that are returning from overseas. The old paradigm of large industrial workplaces will not return, nor will the unions. But some jobs are returning that pay more than the low end of the retail and service sector. People are seizing the moment and making the move. These factors have left the low-end wage world destitute of workers and the reduced hours and bad service along with limited inventory have affected all of us.

Others have simply had it. They've reached their limit. With the present inflation, a person making $9 an hour and working 32 hours per week has little hope of affording rent, the costs of purchasing and maintaining a vehicle – which in much of the United States is a necessity not a luxury. Floating schedules make finding a second job (let alone child care) almost impossible. Some people will work seven days a week and barely break forty hours and others will have days that they work four hours and others in which (between two jobs) they're required to work sixteen or eighteen hours. That doesn't work with child care unless it's a family member.

People point to rising wages – these are only a corrective to long extant inflation (only recently aggravated). But other wages aren't rising. These people are getting more and more laid upon them and yet as wages are stagnant, their pay is effectively being cut on a regular basis.

You see the despair in the dollar stores. Under-staffed (by design in some cases) the low-paid workers are overwhelmed and clearly don't care anymore. If they lost that 23-hour a week, $8.50 an hour job, they'll just go find another. It makes no difference. They'll never get caught up on their in-store work, and never get anywhere. It's an irritating experience for the store patron but on another level I understand their frustration. You'll find that many of them are more than happy to talk about it. Many also come from broken families and have done a great deal to destroy their own lives. Some of the responsibility is theirs to be sure – but the monied class, the system of empire is not off the hook when it comes to responsibility and moral culpability.

With no hope of ever digging their way out, no hope of a better life – yes, there are those who turn to drugs. And others are turning to crime or turn to petty crime as a result of drugs and desperation.

The Right casts this as the Democrat's fault. If it is, the Republicans are just as much to blame. Both are parties of Wall Street and the Empire. Is the recent spike in crime really because of an attempted curtailment of the archaic and exploitative bail-bond system – a devastating and costly travesty for the lower class? Is it because police departments have been defunded?

If these measures are playing a role, they are minor ones. These are convenient distractions utilised by the Right to obscure the profound systemic problems deeply ingrained in the capitalist order that is American society. Further, the Right-wing media has done its part to inaccurately portray the country as being in a state of utter chaos – of permanent riots and massive waves of crime. The country is indeed in trouble but this is a gross exaggeration and a politically motivated deception. The conditions were much worse in the 1960's and 1970's. Violent crime was worse, robbery was worse, arson was rampant as was domestic terrorism. Urban centres were imploding. We see the results today and while American society is certainly in trouble and is unsustainable if it continues on its present trajectory – the truth is the Right is being completely disingenuous when it comes to reporting on crime and civil unrest.

That said, we should look to the socio-economic lessons of the 1970's and the legal and moral lessons of the 1930's and learn something from them. The stakes are higher. The US population is much higher than it was in the 1960's and 1970's – in fact almost double what it was in 1960, and the contemporary economy is much different. Resources and housing are not as readily available and the entire order has reached a state of fragility. Additionally the US is heavily invested internationally and in its military. This was true in the 1970's but the geopolitics were different. And today, the dollar is under threat. The US is still the basis for the global economy but that may change soon and when that reality hits – American society may enter a new chapter of unprecedented turmoil.

The social consensus has been broken. Trust has evaporated and self-serving leaders are pouring fuel on the fire. Things are going to get a lot worse. We can put our trust in corrupt politicians and their lying ecclesiastical mouthpieces or we can open our eyes, prepare, and think in different terms about 'The American Dream', and our place as Christians in this social order.

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*I am continually amazed at the number of church leaders who say they hate these debates over Covid and wish everyone would just respect everyone else's rights and opinions. If you want to mask and get vaccinated that's fine but don't judge those who don't.

This isn't an ethical high ground or some kind of wise neutrality. This is to embrace the position of those rejecting the protocols. This is to make an ethical statement about our responsibility as individuals and more specifically as Christian individuals to not just fellow Church members but to society at large. It's a call to selfishness and self-affirmation and not respect. It's a rejection of New Testament teaching and the imperative to put the interests of others above ourselves – the simple but profound concept of love – which by the way is incompatible with self-oriented thinking. We all know what happens when two self-focused people are put into a marriage context. It doesn't last long and usually explodes once children enter the picture.

Instead of New Testament doctrines such as mortification and self-abasing other-oriented ethics, these church leaders are proffering the ethics of libertarian filth wrapped up in cheap Christian packaging and in reality, it's an attempt by these so-called shepherds to dodge the issue entirely. It's disgusting and a case of clear abdication.

And it does nothing to turn this into a teaching moment. This moment is one of those times where the proverbial rubber meets the road. Your true colours will show and what we've found is that most of the Church is unfamiliar with New Testament ethics and have instead replaced them with the flesh-indulgence of Enlightenment libertarianism and market capitalism. There are indeed extremes to be avoided in the response to Covid but very few people seem to even understand what the issues are. The necessary discussion never took place and was instead cast in terms of politics, legal quibblings, and ethical chaos.