By Jonah
Goldberg
Wednesday,
June 21, 2023
“Remembrance
of things past is not necessarily the remembrance of things as they
were.”—Marcel Proust
Nostalgia,
a term that originated as a medical diagnosis for Swiss mercenaries suffering
from homesickness, is the sorrowful longing for a lost past. An April Pew
survey found that nearly 6 out of 10 Americans (58 percent) think the country
was better off for people like them 50 years ago. For Republican and
Republican-leaning respondents, nostalgia for the early 1970s reached 72
percent.
This is
bad—but not for the reasons you might think. First, some context. In
1939, Gallup found that 62 percent of Americans
thought people were better off in the horse-and-buggy era (though only 25
percent said they’d actually want to live then).
Indeed,
Americans have always had a thing for the “good old days.” The problem is that
what—or when—constitutes the “good old days” is a constantly moving target. It
often seems to be about five decades earlier from right
now.
Karlyn
Bowman studies public opinion at the American Enterprise Institute. She found that in recent surveys the
1980s and 1990s are starting to supplant the 1950s as the new “good old days.”
You can see evidence for this all over the place in popular culture, from the
remakes of old sitcoms to original offerings like Stranger Things that
cast those years as a lost time of innocence.
But take
it from someone who was there, Americans were pining for the good old days back
then, too. I grew up on Happy Days and, later, Back to
the Future. In the early 1990s, it was The Wonder Years, which
was set in the 1960s. The 2021 reboot of The Wonder Years is
also set in the 1960s, which is now nearly 60 years ago.
Indeed,
in the ’80s and ’90s, popular culture was shot through with baby boomer and Gen
X angst about contemporary society. The Big Chill, Grand Canyon, Thirtysomething, Reality Bites, American Beauty, Singles, and Fight Club were premised on the idea that life was
unsatisfying because it lacked purpose—or something. And don’t even get me
started on such themes in music.
The
simple fact is that nostalgia is a constant in American history. Indeed, it
started being a potent force in American politics right when the founding
generation died out. Andrew Jackson’s populism played to it. When he vetoed the
effort to recharter the Second Bank of the United States, he declared he was
doing so to “revive that devoted patriotism and spirit of compromise which
distinguished the sages of the Revolution and the fathers of our Union.” Not
quite as pithy as “Make America Great Again” but you get the point.
Politicians
play on nostalgia because it is one of the most powerful human emotions. My
hunch is that many people confuse their own gauzy memories of their personal
life with a narcissistic and ideological indictment of today.
I look
fondly at my 1970s childhood, but it would be ludicrous for me to think such
fondness was proof the country was doing better. When Americans say things were
better 50 years ago, do they mean the runaway “stagflation”—high inflation plus
low growth? The gas lines? The Vietnam War? Watergate?
We hear a lot about rising crime these days. It’s
a legitimate issue, but perhaps we’re nostalgic for the 1970s and 1980s not
just because crime gets so much coverage but also because we’ve memory-holed
the fact that crime was so much worse (maybe the lead poisoning from those days caused amnesia?). Violent crime exploded in those decades and has been trending
mostly downward since 1993. In an 18-month period from 1971-72, according to the
FBI, there were an average of five terrorist bombings per day. In
1976, an FBI spokesman described San Francisco as the “Belfast of North
America.”
Americans
are richer today than decades ago. Adjusted for
purchasing power, Mississippians—who live in our poorest state—have higher
incomes than the French. We live longer, have more free time, and travel more affordably. Infant mortality
has been cut in half, our air and water quality is vastly improved. Our cars are
much better and much safer. Our homes are bigger and more comfortable. The number of people injured or killed on the job has plummeted. We’ve made real progress against racism in the last several decades.
None of
this is to say today is perfect. Nor is it to say that everything has gotten
better. Rather, it’s just to note that nostalgia is a terrible guide, because
it tends to take progress for granted and replaces feelings for
memory. Any politician who actually delivered the reality of the “good old
days” would be pelted from office. Which is why it’s a good thing they can’t
deliver on such promises.
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