What an Ecological Civilization Looks Like: Culture Shift
- The American Myths of Bigger and Better
- Share
The American Myths of Bigger and Better
There are great things about the United States, sure鈥攕tomping the British in the Revolutionary War, inventing the airplane, jazz, the NBA. But an endless insistence on our 鈥済reatness鈥 is definitely not one of them. American exceptionalism is not just untrue, it鈥檚 a sign of ruthless competitiveness that prioritizes a dubious ideal over human decency, human rights, and human life.
Much of the Left鈥檚 criticism of Trump鈥檚 MAGA sloganizing has hinged on the last 鈥淎鈥: What did he mean by again鈥攚as he referencing some supposed heyday before #MeToo, before the Civil Rights Act, or before the 19th Amendment? But you could drop the final A off the MAGA hat and still have plenty to quibble with: What does 鈥済reat鈥 even mean鈥攇reat for whom, great in what guise?
None of these questions are raised in Matthew Yglesias鈥檚 new book, One Billion Americans, which is basically a policy recipe for American Greatness. The title, in his view, is both the goal and the means. According to Yglesias, through pro-natalist and selectively pro-immigration policies, the American population can quickly grow to about three times its current size, hit the one-billion mark, and thus be both big and great. Why America must be great, Yglesias addresses only in the most jingoistic of ways: to beat China, to be 鈥済reater than ever,鈥 or to 鈥渟tay number one forever.鈥
A founder and former staff writer at the online media outlet Vox, Yglesias recently left his job to return to blogging. One of his first articles at his new blog Slow Boring was 鈥淢ake Blue America Great Again.鈥 After four years of dangerous and sometimes deadly indecency under Trump, it鈥檚 dumbfounding to see an alleged left-leaning media personality openly embrace the Trumpian slogan.
But despite the schoolyard insistence on 鈥渨inning,鈥 the details of his argument may be an example of the means justifying the ends. Bigger can also imply, in Yglesias鈥檚 telling, extending support to parents and welcome to immigrants. Instead of insisting on superlatives amidst spiking inequalities and insurgent fascism, we should be striving toward policies that are socially responsible and work to establish decent baselines.
Dipping into family assistance policy, housing and immigration reform, and even touching on traffic control, Yglesias loosely sketches out a basic road map of how the country might squeeze in one billion people. He also assuages unsubstantiated fears of overcrowding. But Yglesias鈥檚 platter, composed of mostly healthy ingredients, is in the end a dangerous nationalist concoction, based on an ideology that takes losers as a must and broadens existing divisions. He sells the policies not as sound and responsible in and of themselves, but as means to greatness.
In his first chapter, 鈥淎 Very Short History of American Power,鈥 Yglesias only seeks to measure national power, not question it. Much of his obsession is with China, and whether or not China is already richer or bigger, or can throw farther than the United States. Clocking the race between the two countries, he hopes for 鈥淐hinese blunders鈥 even as he recognizes they could spell catastrophe: 鈥淲hile from a standpoint of international competition [China鈥檚 blundering] might be nice to see, from a humanitarian perspective it would be a disaster.鈥 What, this reader wonders, does Yglesias count as a 鈥渂lunder鈥? To compartmentalize, say, the re-education camps in which China has forced as many as one million Uighurs, while gloating that at least the United States is 鈥渨inning,鈥 is a heartless, divisive, and dangerous project. He doesn鈥檛 recognize that it is competition itself that sparks such disastrous blunders.
This is the problem with a writer gaveling their conclusions instead of arguing toward them. 鈥淎 bigger country will be a richer country, and that will be good for everyone,鈥 Yglesias writes. Oh really? Each U.S. expansion over the last 200 years was basically a heedless stampede over the bodies of Black and Indigenous people. 鈥淥bviously, this is all a gross simplification鈥 writes Yglesias in a weak-tea defense of his 鈥渂igger is greater鈥 premise鈥攂ut gross simplification happens to be the opposite of what a book should do.
As inequalities abound, the celebrated achievements of so-called progress, innovation, or disruption are too often coupled with exploitation and the further entrenchment of racism.
Bigger, in nationalist terms, is not inherently better. Better is not even necessarily better. As inequalities abound, the celebrated achievements of so-called progress, innovation, or disruption are too often coupled with exploitation and the further entrenchment of racism. Obliviousness to history鈥檚 victims is abundant in this book. On the very first page, Yglesias is already celebrating that America sought to 鈥渟ettle the West, beat the Nazis, win the Cold War.鈥 Beating the Nazis was grand, but 鈥渟ettling the West鈥 included genocide, and 鈥渨inning鈥 the misnomered Cold War meant hotly鈥攁nd murderously鈥攚aging it in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Central America. Take the Korean War, one of the Cold War鈥檚 so-called 鈥減roxy wars,鈥 for example: The U.S. dropped more bombs on Korea than it dropped on the entire Pacific theater during World War II, and firehosed much of the countryside with napalm. In that war, an estimated 2鈥3 million civilians were killed.
How else can an innocent call for a bigger America be dangerous? Yglesias鈥 exultant prescription follows the same pattern we have seen for more than 150 years: growth as crutch, growth as safety valve. Greg Grandin explains the legacy of U.S. growth dependency in his illuminating 2019 book, The End of the Myth. The concept of the frontier, the drive ever outward, ever greatward, 鈥渟erved as both diagnosis (to explain the power and wealth of the United States) and prescription (to recommend what policy makers should do to maintain and extend that power and wealth).鈥 When the U.S. ran out of continental frontier at the Pacific Ocean, and when actively colonizing other states was no longer acceptable, the concept of the frontier was 鈥渁pplied to other arenas of expansion, to markets, war, culture, technology, science, the psyche, and politics.鈥 It was growth, Grandin writes, that 鈥渁llowed the United States to avoid a true reckoning with its social problems, such as economic inequality, racism, crime and punishment, and violence.鈥 Yglesias falls into that familiar trap.
What might be worth saving in Yglesias鈥檚 project is his work to mitigate the nativist fear of the other. Welcoming foreigners would be a boon for the country that we could manage with policies for better funding of public transportation, education, and childcare, taxing 鈥渂ad things鈥 like carbon emissions, and reducing funding for military intervention. Even welcoming a lot of foreigners, quickly, would be a net positive, and shouldn鈥檛 provoke worry about a run on resources. 鈥淎merica turns out to have 8,800 cubic meters of fresh water per person,鈥 Yglesias notes. 鈥淚f our population tripled, we would have 2,900鈥攓uite a bit less. Yet Spain gets by with 2,400; the UK has 2,200; Germany has 1,300; and the Netherlands has 650.鈥 The penchant for such stats is where Yglesias excels. These ideas might be better formatted into a few charts or infographics than in a book, though his vision of what a more populated but more sustainable America would look like illustrates that we really do have room to spare: 鈥淪o when you picture a land of one billion Americans, don鈥檛 imagine an endless sea of gleaming skyscrapers or a vast horrendous slum. Imagine France.鈥
If only Yglesias similarly tempered America鈥檚 claims to exceptionalism.