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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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A Nation of Whiners? Perhaps

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You won't hear me straining to defend Phil Gramm, the Texas Republican whose penchant for grating commentary sunk his 1996 bid for the presidency before the New Hampshire primary. It was really just a matter of time before the former senator, serving as John McCain's economic advisor, put his foot in it: Gramm opined that Americans complaining about the economy were "whiners."

It's not good politics to call any voter a whiner, and Gramm had to leave the campaign. But honesty impels one to grant him this: The point about America being "a nation of whiners" is not without merit.

Yes, losing one's job or home is traumatic, and having both taken away more so. But the average citizens facing $4-a-gallon gas and learning that their hacienda isn't the money factory they thought it was haven't exactly been thrown into the Dust Bowl. Some Europeans pay twice as much for gas and live in half the space, and no one is passing around the hat for them.

I spent last week replaying Ken Burns' searing series on World War II. "The War" follows several American families ranging from working class to upper-middle class. None of them, not even the fancy folks in Mobile, Ala., lived as large as today's typical McMansion family.

These people also had to endure the war's horrific sacrifice, made more unbearable by the youth of the dead. Nearly 7,000 Americans perished on the tiny island of Iwo Jima alone, with several times that number injured, many grievously. It was a hideous battle in a long parade of gruesome campaigns. Over 400,000 Americans died in that war.

One of the documentary's running themes was that of servicemen pining for their loved ones back home. And their homes were modest triple-deckers in Connecticut, farmhouses in Minnesota or bungalows in California.

When the war ended, Americans soon resumed their historic quest for bigger and better.

But even then, the returning soldier's idea of palatial living was a 750-square-foot house in Levittown, one-third the average size of a new home in 2006. The accommodations in Americans, by the way, were the envy of ruined Europe.

So the recent economic downturn hasn't made Americans poor by any sane measurement. No one enjoys downward mobility, but let's ask whether telling kids to share a bedroom or downsizing to a sedan represents anything worthy of the word "sacrifice."

Middle-class Americans fell into this predicament because they started acting like people who are richer than they are. They had built extravagant lifestyles with borrowed money. And they ignored the many warnings that the growth of China and India would push energy prices skyward.

Now is a time to recognize reality and adjust to it in an adult fashion. Though I consider myself an environmentalist, I did put off taking certain steps to cut fuel consumption in my house. It took natural gas prices shooting through the roof to move me to replace my leaky old windows. Believe me, paying for new double-panes was low on my Fun List. Did I whine about the cost? More than I care to admit.

But then one reads about the food lines in the Great Depression. You look at the destitute norm in the Third World. And you focus on any war, including Iraq, and try to fathom the tragedy of an 18-year-old dying in a foreign desert.

Sure, we can shake our heads at Phil Gramm's impolitic remark. And we can condemn the role his philosophy of deregulation played in the current housing mess. But, you know, there's something to what the man said.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
My God, Froma. You really are that stupid.
First of all, the ranks of the esteemed "whiners" in this country have found far more to complain about than rising oil prices, as the current shortage of jobs affords more than enough levereage in this area. (And don't confuse yourself with the official unemployment "statistics" which merely pertain to individuals receiving unemployment benefits and offers no indication of the vast amounts of those whose benefits have elapsed due to chronic unemployment). Alas, go figure that the entire essence of your pathetic argument hinders upon irrelevant comparisons of worldwide and historical miseries, culminating in age old "starving kids in Africa" diversion. I suppose if unemployment peaks 57 percent and the transportationa and economic units of the entire country collapse, one could just as easily find cause to reprimand the less enthusiastic remnants of 'society' as a conglomerate of 'whiners" on account of the fact that that people during the 'dark ages" had to contend with far more dire circumstances.
And furthermore, utilizing your status as a syndicated columnist to voice more than a few or yuor greivances, pandering numerous examples indicating dissatisfaction with personal, national, political, or global circumstanecs, indicates that you're hardly immune to the art of 'whining" yourself. If I remember correctly, it was your persistent whining about the lack of fairness pertinent to Hillary Clinton's inability to secure the democratic nomination that pushed you into the pro-McCain crowd.
Try loosing your job, and contending with a prospective shortage of elgigible positionins for political commentators (particularly for ones as incompetent as yourself), and you'll quickly find yourself "degenerating" into the ranks of us so-called "whiners", and furthermore find yourself scoffing at the apathetic onlooker who encourages you to "lighten up" over your economic prospects, consdering that "people in Haiti have it a lot worse."
in any case, you know where you can stick your theories about "whining".
Comment: #1
Posted by: jhamm1
Fri Aug 8, 2008 5:03 AM
You got it right, Froma!
The polar opposite of whining is grit-and-determination. Whining prospers in an environment of entitlement, "excess prosperity" and ease while G-&-D thrives in hardship and adversity. Has anyone ever become smarter, faster, more able, more fit, a better competitor, a person of higher moral calibre in a culture where entertainment magazines are more popular than publications that challenge intellect and expand outlook? I think not.
Every generation faces major challenges; every generation's challenges are different, at least on the surface. The challenge of the challenge is to overcome with the result being a person or culture with strength of body, mind and character. This present culture's response is to whine about having to extend oneself, to have to stretch, to not have it handed to you on a plate.
Indian and Chinese parents are on their kids' cases to study math and science, the hard stuff. The USA isn't graduating enough engineers to replace those who are about to retire during the next 5-10 years. Indian and Chinese parents demand excellence from their kids. American parents are happy when their kids attend classes, don't get in trouble and participate in activities where "everyone wins!". Has the USA sown the seeds to become a Third World country without knowing it? A definite "Maybe."
My reaction? Grow UP- quit your complaining and get to real work!
Comment: #2
Posted by: Bill J
Mon Aug 11, 2008 8:24 AM
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