As I’ve been watching the leaves turn colors and then fall onto the ground and die this fall, I’ve been seeing them as a metaphor for empires from history that come and go. And I’ve been wondering whether the people who lived in those fallen empires ever had the sense that their empire was fading away.
My suspicion is that if there had been newspapers or bloggers in the dying days of the Roman Empire or the Mongol Empire or the Holy Roman Empire, one of them might have written something a bit like this: “Amid all the talk of gloom and doom in the Roman Empire today, it’s worth pausing to remember that our great empire remains the greatest and most powerful country on Earth. It is a nation with a promising future.”
Don’t you think they would have seen it that way? I say that because this country is clearly in decline as an empire. (Well, we’re usually too polite today to use the word “empire,” but it’s not really any different, is it?) Every great empire from the past has been seen as unique and long-lasting when it was powerful, but each has fallen over time. Even though the United States remains the strongest military force in the world and even though its economy is still very powerful, what is it that makes us believe we will be any different from those empires that have died and been replaced by something else?
The truth is that Americans really do believe — as the people of those empires believed — that we’re somehow different. We’re “the greatest country on Earth.” (Here’s a recent opinion column in the Los Angeles Times that sings yet another verse of that popular song.)
Preview of 2012? Voter landslide in Colorado against new school taxes
Visit with high school best friend leaves me pondering my old fears
Do people change? Or do we just learn how to manage our faults?
Little girl’s face and colorful sky have power to pierce my heart
If you care about education — not just schooling — please read this paper right now
Tell me the music you listen to and that’ll reveal a lot about you
She says she’ll always love me, but she didn’t say who she was
How could a stranger at sunset possibly know what I had to say?
Nothing new here: Russell Brand pushing same old socialist idiocy