Everything’s going to be more or less OK.
A. Barton Hinkle writes:
“Our Miserable 21st Century” is the headline on a recent piece in Commentary, not to mention a pretty good summation of the general mood these days. Economic malaise, an opioid crisis, climate change, spiking crime rates in major cities, a political atmosphere that’s about as chummy as a prison riot…
Nobody should dismiss these grim signs of impending societal collapse, or the many others that, while equally important, have not yet received sufficient attention. (I refer of course to the use of “concerning” as an adjective—as in “The president’s behavior is very concerning”—along with the appalling, yet apparently proliferating, belief that “to include” is a suitable replacement for “including.” It isn’t.)
At the same time, it is possible to make too much of our current troubles. A little perspective is in order.
One way to regain that perspective is to spend a few minutes on HumanProgress.org, which tracks the generally meliorating conditions of human existence over the short, medium, and long term. It is filled with data showing how much better things today are than they once were: Hundreds of millions of people have climbed out of poverty. Literacy rates are rising, the gender wage gap is shrinking, child mortality is falling. Air travel is both cheaper and far less dangerous, food is more plentiful, malaria deaths have plunged, and on and on.
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