By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
As we approach the 250th anniversary of the
Declaration of Independence, America is in a pretty foul mood, and I understand
why. For starters, Washington is broken, prices are high and rising, and AI is
scaring the stuffing out of people.
Understanding, however, is not synonymous with agreement.
In other words, some complaints about America in 2026 have more empirical
weight than others. Crime may be too high, but it’s been going down for a
while. Actually, let’s start there because crime is a good example of how
perceptions don’t necessarily reflect reality.
Since 2000, writes Gallup’s polling guru Frank Newport, “Americans’
views of the seriousness of crime nationwide … have averaged 43
percentage points higher than their views of local crime.” People tend
to think crime is much worse wherever they don’t live. While nearly half of
Americans think crime is a very serious issue in America, only about 1 in 10
think it’s a big deal in their cities and towns.
But the “where” is often less of an issue than the
“when.” I was a little kid in New York City a half-century ago during the
celebration of the bicentennial. Crime there and then, was much worse than today. The homicide rate was five times
higher. In 1976, the Big Apple, with a million fewer people, saw 1,622
murders (slightly down from 1,645 in 1975). In 2025, NYC saw 309 murders. So far, in 2026, murders are down about 25 percent from the same point in 2025.
But it’s not just crime. Surveys routinely find that
Americans think the country is in much worse shape than they are personally.
Even when large majorities of Americans say the nation is in a bad way, equally
large majorities say they’re personally doing okay. Last year, a Federal Reserve survey found that only about a quarter of
Americans thought the economy was doing well. But about three-quarters said
they were personally doing okay. Education in America routinely gets a failing grade, while the same graders
often say education in their community is pretty good.
There are understandable reasons for this disconnect.
What we think about the country is often filtered through the media
(mainstream, partisan, and social—all of which have a bad news bias). Also, our
perceptions are shaded by ideological commitments. Meanwhile, what we think
about our own life is experienced firsthand.
And then there’s nostalgia, which literally means homesickness,
but homesickness for the past.
Fifty years ago, America was in many respects much more of a mess than it is today. Inflation, gas lines,
crime, unemployment, political violence, race relations, geopolitical
tensions—including the just concluded Vietnam War—were not
the stuff of a golden age. Americans today are roughly
two and half times wealthier than we were in 1976.
And yet, many Americans tell pollsters we were better
off 50 years ago. But here’s the thing, lots of people always think things
were better 50 years ago. It has been that way since the dawn of polling. What makes people think the past
was better isn’t a careful study of statistics, but a lazy inventory of
feelings and a lazier outsourcing to media vibes. This tendency didn’t begin
with polling, the polling just made it easier to quantify the pull of nostalgia.
Ironically, the “system” so many people—on the left,
right and in the middle—heap scorn on for failing the current generation fuels
this malaise. Political demagogues, activists, journalists, and big
corporations seek to exploit or monetize the natural human tendency to pine for
simpler, happier times. The Roman poet Horace had a term for such people nearly
2,000 years ago: laudator temporis acti—“a praiser of times past when he was a boy.”
None of this is to say that Americans don’t have real
problems. We obviously do (starting with the fact we have a laudator
temporis acti in the White House). The problem comes when we think that the
easy solutions to those problems can be found by looking in the rearview
mirror.
Pick any era and you can find things worthy of nostalgia.
But you can also find plenty of things almost no one wants restored. For
instance, the infant mortality rate was three times higher in 1976 and 13 times
higher in 1926.
I’m a conservative, so I’m the first to concede that the
past is worth remembering and studying. But if all you do is cherry-pick the
good—real or alleged—while blinding yourself to the bad, you’re not studying
the past. You’re grading the present against a past that never was.
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