America - what went wrong?
Last weekend I returned to Canada for a book event and some
media appearances in Calgary, Alberta. I was so struck by the differences in our two countries that I felt compelled to write about them. There was a time when Canada seemed to follow the United States and we
were the free world’s leader. No
more. Being in Canada really
showed me how far wrong we have gone, here in America.
The Culture of Fear
When I was a teenager, I hitchhiked all over New
England. I never feared for my
safety, and I never got attacked.
Today, many Americans are afraid to drive cars alone many places, and hitchhiking
is asking to be killed. Yet the
statistics show that the chances of being assaulted while traveling are
actually lower today than they were forty years ago.
We have a few cities that are deemed walker friendly, but
most are dangerous, either in spots or in total. I don’t know if that is really true, or just a perception,
but the perception of Canadian cities is that it’s safe to walk anywhere, any
time. And enough people do it that
I think I’d know if reality were otherwise.
I got lost on one of my walks, and strolled into a Calgary
police station to ask directions.
When I walked in the door I found a broad counter, with an officer at a
computer terminal, helping someone else.
When he finished I asked for directions to the freight yard, and he went
to Google Earth and printed me directions.
I was struck by his friendliness, and his
accessibility. In an American
city, the desk cop would have been hiding behind inch-thick bulletproof glass. My own town – population 20,000 – is like
that. What are we afraid of
here? Do we perhaps invite attack
by such unfriendly facilities?
The difference between the feel of the Canadian police
station and similar places in the US is striking. Individual cops may well be the same, but there is an
institutional accessibility and friendliness in the Canadian structure that
surely influences every interaction within.
I asked the cop if it was safe to walk there, and he looked
at me in surprise. Of course, he
said, it’s safe to walk anywhere.
Just watch out for cars!
You would never hear that in a big American city. Why not? Is it all attitude?
When you walk through any American airport you are assaulted
by endless recorded messages. The threat level is Orange. Do not let your bags our of your sight,
lest someone stuff dangerous objects into them. And on and on.
What has all that achieved, besides making air travel a lot more uncomfortable?
Walk through any Canadian airport and the lack of threats
and warnings is refreshing. It’s
like walking through an airport here, twenty years ago.
The costs of our airport security are obvious. Where are the benefits, as compared to other countries?
The economy
Right now, Canada’s published unemployment rate stands at
7.6%. That’s quite a bit better
than our rate of 9%, but that one number does not tell the whole story. Canada’s rate has averaged just over 8%
for the past 35 years, whereas our unemployment skyrocketed from 4.5% to 10%
when the economy collapsed a few years ago. They do not seem to have the ups and downs we have here.
And the other part of that story . . . taxes in Canada
average 10% higher than what we pay here, but in exchange for that Canadians
get health care and security that we seem to strive for and never attain. For me, the $14,000 I pay for health
insurance alone would more than make up any tax difference.
Walk through most major cities in the USA, and you see shuttered
buildings everywhere you go. In
places like Buffalo, whole sections of the city lie abandoned. Canada has nothing like that form what
I have seen this year.
The result: Just as Canadians do not seem to fear their
neighbors and their cities, they do not seem to fear for their jobs or economic
security.
Politics
An analysis of American news stories shows that we devote a disproportionate
share of our media coverage to inter party squabbles and scandal and tabloid
coverage. Reasoned discussion of
the hard issues facing our country has fallen by the wayside. How is it that the Canadians have
avoided this “tabloid trap?” I don’t
know, but I wish we could devote a bit more effort to solving the real problems
in this country. Congressman
Weiner may be entertaining but there is a real fundamental problem when stories
like his dominate the news, and we remain mired in a war no one wants with one
person in six in my home city out of work.
Population and production
Is the fundamental problem that we have too many people
here? Or is the issue that too
many Americans are riding on the backs of too few real production workers. I could not find any statistics to show
the percentage of Canadians engaged in actual production versus administration
and government workers, compared to the USA. But I’ll bet it’s lower.
Creating and making things is what made this country great
and strong, yet that is not where we focus our education or job creation
efforts. I wonder if we can
bring that back; at times it feels like the bureaucracies are too entrenched. Would our TSA workers move from their
current jobs to doing something that adds value, like making cars or
computers? So many of the new jobs
we’ve created in the past 20 years actually harm our country’s efficiency and
its ability to compete globally.
Food
I have been fortunate to eat in good restaurants, both here
and abroad. One thing I notice
when comparing Canada to the US is the greater emphasis on natural and organic foods. Our Canadian neighbors seem to have a
better handle on food that’s safe and healthy.
The environment
The Canadians have some notable environmental messes, like
the oil sands mining. However,
that is contrasted with much more use of wind and water power, and a generally
grater regard for the environment.
For example, Canada uses much less salt on its roads and they have
reduced salting in the past decade.
We have gone the opposite way in the Northeastern US, and our roadside
grass is dead while our cars rot away.
Comments
I think our two nations have so much to share and learn from each other though - as our current Prime Minister is set to take us back to what the US had in the Bush administration, while your country moved leaps and bounds in electing Obama.
As an amateur photographer I really enjoyed your camera's perspective on Calgary. I am just a few provinces over in Manitoba - we do hope you'll consider visiting us sometime soon. We are in the final stages of constructing the International Museum for Human Rights, and we have one of the oldest running vintage trains on the continent (http://www.pdcrailway.com/about.htm).
I'm on the Board of Directors for the Asperger Society of Manitoba, and my son is an Aspie. We have an annual conference here and would love to be able to host you as a keynote speaker one year!
Canadians.... a lot of us are nice people... but like the Hulk... don't get us angry!
Might this not produce such a decline. Is the American empire in an irrecoverable decline like the Rome's glory in Wagner's opera "Rienzi"?
High unemployment can't be fixed when we continue to create government jobs and unions. Who pays for this? The taxpayers who are working.
If we continue to ship jobs to other countries what exactly are we going to do?
We continue to put more restrictions on small businesses so that they can't hire new people which in turn means more unemployment.
Men are no longer in the house to teach the next generation of little boys to be men. Some have never even seen their father. Who is teaching them values of work and responsibility. Little boys and girls need their father.
As the family goes so goes the country.
I could write pages and pages about this issue. To say I am very passionate about this would be an understatement.
Wonderful. So glad to hear someone else say it. We've become a service industry economy, with nothing to feed it. Hands on kids are lost in our schools.
Canada's banks are nationalized as is their health care. Canada does not engage in "nation building" outside of their own borders. I think there is a message here. However, Canada's labor union antics and postal strikes are legendarily horrendous. Maybe this is a small price to pay, comparatively speaking.
It used to be that the Canadians seemed to suffer from an obsessive inferiority complex, because they weren't us (U.S.?). The tables have turned, in my life time.
I created a blog post last year called The Price of Fear that talked about how fear is stopping us from doing the things we really want to do. It was BY FAR my most popular post.