Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Perspective

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"Sometimes I think of America from a different vantage point.  I imagine America as a chapter in a book, centuries after the country has collapsed, encapsulated by the casual language we use when describing the foreboding failure of the Spanish Armada in 1588.  And what I imagine is a description like this:

The invention of a country is described. 
  • This country was based on a document, and the document was unassailable.
  • The document could be altered but alterations were so difficult that it happened only seventeen times in two hundred years (and one of those changes merely retracted a previous alteration). 
  • The document was less than five thousand words but applied unilaterally, even as the country dramatically increased its size and population and even though urban citizens in rarefied parts of the country had nothing in common with rural citizens living thousands of miles away. 
  • The document's prime directives were liberty and representation, even when 5 percent of the country's population legally controlled 65 percent of the wealth. 
  • But everyone loved this document, because it was concise and well composed and presented a possible utopia where everyone was the same. 
  • It was so beloved that the citizens of this country decided they would stick with it no matter what happened or what changed, and the premise of discounting (or even questioning) its greatness became so verboten that any political candidate who did so would have no chance to be elected to any office above city alderman. 
  • The populace decided to use this same document forever, inflexibly and without apprehension, even if the country lasted for two thousand years."

From BUT WHAT IF WE'RE WRONG by Chuck Klosterman


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