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American Dreaming

By James Moore

Americans are a confounding people. We are as optimistic as we are cynical. The sunny side comes from an enduring belief in our founding document, which has us convinced we will, eventually, get around to doing the right thing. Progress toward that end constantly falters and then gets occasionally revivified by social movements and inspirational leaders. Our cynicism is equally relevant to our character and is well earned. Americans partake in what often feels like an endless list of elections after listening to promises to reduce taxes, create jobs, improve health care and control its costs, and build lasting and modern infrastructure. Only pieces of those promises are ever kept. Tax cuts result in helping the rich and corporate America and rarely touch the working class. The electorate grows disaffected and does not believe in its government or its officeholders.

And then there is anger.

I was confronting these ideas yet again one sunny morning from the window seat of a British Airways 737 flying along the western coast of Norway. I ought to have been thinking of different and more comforting notions and the enchanting country whirling away beneath me. The aircraft was over the Norwegian Sea, making a turn toward London, and I stared down at the Scandinavian Mountains marking the country’s rugged coast. Fertile valleys and farms were visible to the leeward side of the ranges and were within view of ancient fjords and glaciated lakes. I did not want to leave and wondered about the urge to voyage afar from such a land and how it could have compelled Norway’s early explorers risk the seas to settle Iceland, Greenland, and what later became Newfoundland, reaching North America 500 years before Columbus.

 

Norwegian Coast

 

My trip had been made possible by the sponsors of a film festival in the city of Bergen, situated between great mountains and fjords that once made the community a center of European trade. I had been invited to show my documentary and talk about my book, both on the subject of George W. Bush, who had just launched an American invasion of Iraq based on lies about weapons of mass destruction. On my ride into town from the airport, I was as stunned by the scenery as I was by my host’s description of his country’s government and its social services. Education, from primary school to earning a PhD., is free, as is health care, which includes general practitioners, hospitals, specialists, and emergency services. Citizens who have lost their jobs can receive up to 104 weeks of unemployment benefits from the government at a livable percentage of their previous income, and at the conclusion of their work lives a public pension provides a basic livable income for all retirees.

 

Bergen, Norway, “Capital of the Fjords”

 

All these benefits, (advantages might be more correct), have a cost. The pertinent question is whether they are worth the tax burden paid by citizens and their productivity. Income taxes range from 25-30 percent, social security is 8.2 and there is a Value Added Tax of 25 percent on consumable goods and services. The effective tax rate for a middle class family earning about $100,000 USD is approximately 38 – 45 percent. Middle income earners in the U.S. pay an effective rate estimated at 30-35 percent but they are also reaching deeply into their pockets to fund health care premiums and deductibles, higher education that often costs tens of thousands of dollars annually, social security and payroll taxes, and incidental charges on toll roads or assessments to retire bonds used by local municipalities for schools or infrastructure.

Norwegians, meanwhile, have one of the most generous parental leave policies in the world that gives parents 49 weeks on full salary at home with their newborn or 59 weeks at 80 percent of their wages. There is also a monthly benefit check to all families for their children, regardless of household income, and the needy are offered social assistance programs that include housing and disability benefits, and financial support for low-income individuals or families. The rate of homelessness in Norway is among the lowest in the world at 0.07 percent of the population, which in 2022 meant the country counted only 3900 unhoused citizens. The U.N.’s annual World Happiness Report consistently ranks Norway as the happiest country on Earth with an effective social service structure and extremely low crime rate.

I saw nothing to contradict any of this happy data on my visit and during the question and answer session after my presentation I was asked to explain the differences between our two countries. The inquiry was from a man who was confused as to why a nation like the United States, with so many resources in great abundance, could often make such stupid mistakes like war and pollution and environmental degradation. He was, it became clear, interested in a political mystery.

“What many of us here in Norway don’t understand is how Americans can be such kind and interesting people and still choose someone like George Bush to be your president. His Iraq war is another American lie. We know it here. There are no weapons of mass destruction. How do you good Americans let this happen?”

I was not willing to be put in a position of defending Bush, especially since my first book had offered an early criticism of his administration and its politics. The argument I offered, even if it were facile, was that democracies can make mistakes.

“My hope is that this is just a huge error in judgment by our electorate and the Supreme Court that gave him the presidency,” I said. “I have faith that this war will make Americans realize they have been conned and we will make a correction in this cycle as he runs for reelection.”

There was as much laughter as applause after my response and when Bush was easily reelected I was invited back to Bergen to explain myself during the launch of a second book on his administration. I could not, of course, make our politics accessible to outsiders but I had become the beneficiary of an additional trip to a lovely country populated by wonderful people, who still wanted answers. I had none to offer. There are moments when an upside exists for being wrong.

Norway is recognized globally as a “welfare” state, a descriptor that is a pejorative on these shores. American politics and history have lived on the mythology of rugged individualism. Work hard and make it on your own or suffer the consequences. The government owes you nothing. Even when you do not have shoes, you are expected to pull yourself up by the bootstraps. The political right wants a government that does nothing more than protect the borders, pave roads, and then gets the hell out of the way of the people who can be relied upon to build and produce until the nation’s needs are adequately met. This patent silliness ignores the fact that government has been the organizing principle of virtually every country and culture in human history since ancient Sumerians began laying out streets and creating polity. No American billionaire would have made a dime without government providing roads and rail and harbors and safe aircraft.

There is a hope, even a perception, that the U.S. might be making a turn toward national sanity and more progressive policies, though we will certainly never become Norwegian. We gave ourselves an angry president who continues to tell us our country is on the verge of societal and economic collapse and media still offer him a podium and a microphone. Dramatic tension is good for viewership. Trump’s ascension empowered racists and xenophobes who came out of their hidey holes and began tossing off their epithets and threats in the course of daily life, and it was slowly, but effectively, normalized.

Veiled threats became a part of public discourse with claims blood will flow if the dispossessed conservative king is not reinstalled. Instead, the dark movement of MAGA is confronting an ethnic woman whose party leadership already seems to be stitching our wounds back together just by taking the stage. The polls have shown her moving quickly ahead just a few weeks after her announcement while her opponent struggles to finish sentences or thoughts. His febrile mind is obsessed with sharks and batteries and movie villains and helicopters that never crashed as his campaign rattles to a near stop on a Montana runway.

Maybe America just needed greater clarity of choice, or an option that did not exist until the current vice president assumed her new role. Not much positive has transpired in our politics during recent years to help us move toward “a more perfect union,” and we still cast a shadow across our democratic declarations with an unwavering support for the actions of Israel in Gaza. The present occupant of the White House keeps approving billions for bombs and missiles that have killed about 40,000 people, overwhelmingly civilians and almost 50 percent who were children. Whatever the horrors perpetrated by Hamas, they do not justify Israel’s ongoing slaughter of Palestinians, which is, demonstrably, an attempt at genocide. The Democratic candidate is making demands for a ceasefire and peace negotiations but the weapons are still flowing from profiting American arms manufacturers.

The Trump fatigue has become so great, though, my belief is that any Democrat of even modest repute might have stepped into the nomination and won. We are tired of his anger and name calling and lying about subjects as mundane as crowd size comparisons between his speeches and those of civil rights leader Martin Luther King. Further, how does he think he can win by calling Kamala Harris a “fucking bitch” while rolling around on a golf cart? As Trump begins to suffer from crowd envy and the huge numbers of people drawn to hear her message of freedom and hope, joy instead of rage, he seems to forget to use his orange face spray and begins to look weary and disaffected. My suspicion is he would drop out if he were not worried about being convicted of his early crimes against the country and thus not being able to pardon himself. His last threat will be to the electoral system that tallies his defeat and he will try to destroy the republic before he goes out the door. There exists, at least for now, a considerable chance he will soon be gone.

And Americans can start working again on their optimism and hope.

 

This article was originally published on Texas to the world.

James Moore is the New York Times bestselling author of “Bush’s Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential,” three other books on Bush and former Texas Governor Rick Perry, as well as two novels, and a biography entitled, “Give Back the Light,” on a famed eye surgeon and inventor. His newest book will be released mid- 2023. Mr. Moore has been honored with an Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for his documentary work and is a former TV news correspondent who has traveled extensively on every presidential campaign since 1976.

He has been a retained on-air political analyst for MSNBC and has appeared on Morning Edition on National Public Radio, NBC Nightly News, Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, CBS Evening News, CNN, Real Time with Bill Maher, and Hardball with Chris Matthews, among numerous other programs. Mr. Moore’s written political and media analyses have been published at CNN, Boston Globe, L.A. Times, Guardian of London, Sunday Independent of London, Salon, Financial Times of London, Huffington Post, and numerous other outlets. He also appeared as an expert on presidential politics in the highest-grossing documentary film of all time, Fahrenheit 911, (not related to the film’s producer Michael Moore).

His other honors include the Dartmouth College National Media Award for Economic Understanding, the Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio Television News Directors’ Association, the Individual Broadcast Achievement Award from the Texas Headliners Foundation, and a Gold Medal for Script Writing from the Houston International Film Festival. He was frequently named best reporter in Texas by the AP, UPI, and the Houston Press Club. The film produced from his book “Bush’s Brain” premiered at The Cannes Film Festival prior to a successful 30-city theater run in the U.S.

Mr. Moore has reported on the major stories and historical events of our time, which have ranged from Iran-Contra to the Waco standoff, the Oklahoma City bombing, the border immigration crisis, and other headlining events. His journalism has put him in Cuba, Central America, Mexico, Australia, Canada, the UK, and most of Europe, interviewing figures as diverse as Fidel Castro and Willie Nelson. He has been writing about Texas politics, culture, and history since 1975, and continues with political opinion pieces for CNN and regularly at his Substack newsletter: “Texas to the World.”

 

 

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13 comments

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  1. Old bloke

    Such a fine, considered piece of writing. Thank you.

  2. Steve Davis

    “There exists, at least for now, a considerable chance he will soon be gone.
    And Americans can start working again on their optimism and hope.”

    Sorry James, I wish you were right, but Trump is a symptom, not a cause.

    There will be no cause for optimism until the delusions outlined in the article are eliminated.

  3. Canguro

    I think Steve’s right… the rot has well & truly set in in that blighted land. I can’t see the last two hundred years of militant aggression, racism, state-sponsored thievery and oppression, discrimination, playing to the corporate and wealthy at the expense of the ordinary people, down-scaling of basic governmental responsibilities like health care, education, infrastructure maintenance and more, as well as the obscenity & corruption of the political circuses, the fear and loathing and divisions within that society, the plague of gun-related violence, the xenophobia towards other countries, the never-ending sabre-rattling, the stoking of fear and hatred towards refugees, the hubristic attitudes towards other nations, the never admitting of their role in provoking wars and political disturbances across the planet, or of false flagging, or sabotaging other countries’ infrastructure, or of providing one country (Israel) the means to conduct a campaign of genocidal annihilation of another people (the Palestinians) or of a decades-long deliberate program of dumbing down their citizens, or of poisoning their lands and people with massive distribution of toxic chemicals throughout the landscape as well as the food chain and processed food distribution…if there exists a nation on this planet that qualifies for the description of ‘truly & royally fucked’, then surely that nation is the USA.

  4. Andyfiftysix

    Well Steve and Canguro, you have to give a clap that at least they are going to turn the ship off coarse from an iceberg.
    Lets hope that its their “its time” moment. I for one have always called them out for their ignorance and stupidity but when they show hopeful signs, i must in all fairness give them a rap. I am under no illusions that she will be brilliant cause non of the past presidents have been. Always a first…..

  5. Phil Pryor

    The USA is a part of Nth. America, thus a small part of America, and a defective confabulation and emanation it is, the product of filthy fantasy when deviates sought a nirvana, an escape, an el dorado, a paradise, a promised land, and they killed, grabbed, robbed, enslaved, despoiled, humiliated, oppressed, sacrificed, ruined, exploited, took and shook, until the savagery was quieted. Scaps, plops, bowel ejections and upchucks from British and European areas initiated this, rubbish who would not obey or honour, runaways, traitors, dropouts, illegals, tax avoiders, marital bludgers, poxious noxious reffo types, fleeing cheaply. Consider the Trump/Drumpft lot of lowlife fleeng fraudsters, untrustworthy to the core, with Donald now the shining light, or is the glow worm’s arsehole a’winking?? The USA stinks and fades, thanks to its habits, attitudes, people. Sorry to the many good ones, and I’ve met so many, now confused, dismayed. If the answer exists to better, the question remains a mystery now. How can the USA get sense, diminish its disgusting, futile egoswollen self seduction and actually improve? The whole world, its survival. its peace, its educated advances, must be gained by our efforts, against all odds.

  6. GL

    The US does have a few things in it’s favour, Bill Maher and John Oliver just to name two.

  7. Patricia

    An interesting article, but, the idea that trump is on his way out might be fanciful thinking. Never underestimate the ability of the voter to do, time and time again, what is absolutely not in their best interests.

    The irony of his diatribes about immigrants is, of course, that Trump, and the majority of his immigrant hating followers are the products of immigration. If it were not for immigration the that we see today would not exist.

  8. Gregory Sclater

    Good article Mr Moore. You mean there is a chance that the Divided States of America will become a country we can look to with some respect again? The whole world looks forward to that!

  9. Clakka

    From the ousted Puritans from Europe, and the English and Scottish freebooters in the north, the USA fashioned its own ignorant competitive brutality. All in the name of their invented god, named in their now adored bloodthirsty anthem, the Star Spangled Banner. Rather than like other colonial victims trying to recover, and QEII trying to retire from thieving and brutal imperialism, the USA, with hubris after saving the ‘west’ from Hitler’s Germany, went on to irrevocably entrench thieving and brutal imperialism as its own m.o. by stealth and shadows – the manner by which it has progressively broken itself and rather than being helpful, dragged so many others down with it.

    Although I know mostly good folk Americans from my frequent visits, it seems many there cannot forgive each other’s divergences, forever seeing themselves as exceptional, arguing over just which version of imperialism they should adopt – like the old argument of ‘good’ depots vs ‘bad’ despots decided by an utterly dysfunctional political system. And the whole world looks on askance, feeling held to ransom by the US hegemony.

    It appears Harris can bring some hope, but just how long will it take to retrain the paranoid warring mongrels into peace and productivity?

  10. Bert

    The hope Harris may bring has some serious competition

    .1. Acceptance of another election defeat by Trump is highly dubious, in fact steps are already in place to ensure that the vote validation process will be upended, throwing doubt into the validity of the result.

    Harris is a coloured person, and a female. How the hell with the rednecks ever accept that sort of person as a President?

    3.The Supreme Court is in Trump’s pocket and should any question be lobbed that way the result will favour the God of America. The precedent here is the Florida court decision to give GW BUsh the presidency against Gore.

    I do love the optimism in the article but the last point is that there are more guns than people in the USA and it would appear that the Trumpians have more of them that the other mob.Civil war is being promoted through Trump’s rhetoric.

  11. paul walter

    Just announced., The USA is handing over another twenty $ billions of ordnances to Israel. They have demolished an entire city, the Israelis, and killed tens, even hundreds of thousands of, mainly, civilians.

    So, they are using Israel as a pretext for war with Iran, or Iran as an excuse to arm Israel? Insanity.

  12. Terence Mills

    The saddest and most shocking thing I heard on the news this morning was of the father in Gaza who had gone to register the birth of his twin daughters – a highly bureaucratic process even in time of peace – only to find on his return that his home had been bombed by Israelis and his wife, baby daughters and his mother-in-law had all been killed.

    Netanyahu must be declared a war criminal, arrested and put on trial.

  13. Allan

    Remember how both Labor and the Liberals treats genocide (in Gaza) next time you vote. Zionists are somehow leveraging the stupidity or cowardice of leaders of Western nations. This year, the mayor of Nagasaki excluded Israel, Russia and Belarus from commemarations of the WW2 atomic bombing of Nagasaki.

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