The 1970s in the American imagination stands out as a time of decline. It ain’t Kennedy and the moon-landing, definitely ain’t Reagan and winning the Cold War or the booming 90s. Instead, between losing in Vietnam, Watergate, President rhymes with dud, President Carter preaching /gasp/ reduced consumption, the oil price hikes, stagflation, rising divorce and drugs rates etc, it just might be as a Doonesbury strip put it, ‘a kidney-stone of a decade’.
All true, but not quite as you think, suggests Professor Thomas Borstelmann, a professor out of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He suggests that an excessive focus on the woes of the decade misses both what makes the era important and the continued effects of changes within that decade on the current events either riling or amusing you.
A better title for the book, in my opinion, should have been something correctly hyperbolic, like 1973-1979: Six Years that Changed the World! This is because this book is many things, but it barely qualifies as global and it doesn’t even cover the decade. The book is exercised by the impact of global events on the American psyche, as such, the history of other countries in that period, figure, not in their own right, but in as much as they are connected with the American tale. The book is narrowly focused on events from 1973-79, although a final, rather unnecessary chapter examines the impact of the events in those years on current events. The book was published in 2012, but the shadows linger, casting a wry light on current events. Quick guess: What decade do you think that events in Iran had such important ramifications for American politics?
Professor Borstelmann may not have gotten the book title he wanted, but he communicates his core thesis perfectly. The 70s saw a process of dual liberalisation in the social and economic spheres. Americans became race and gender egalitarians at the expense of increasing economic inequality. That process spread worldwide in an atmosphere of increased concern for human rights and the transformative effect of faster communications. All made in America or at least, spearheaded from America. You may have noticed one of the leading institutions in that transformation being body-slammed WWE style by the American President.
The dual liberalisations also introduced into American politics the politicised question of government size and reach. The expansion and protection of those new rights require expansive government, but so also does the policing of any attempts to roll back those rights. Republican or Democrat, the government grows regardless. Those liberalisations had been at the expense of a much coarser culture. Americans despaired at that, especially with its effects on their representatives. In 1975, only 13 per cent of Americans had ‘a great deal of confidence’ in the President and Congress. By 1978, nearly 90 million bottles of valium were being prescribed annually. To deal with societal despair from the erosion of American exceptionalism in Vietnam, the Americans were imperial in Angola, Chile and others, but they further despaired at the amorality of the actions taken by their representatives, and decided to plump for outsiders to ‘drain the swamp’. Since President Carter, only Presidents Bush I and Obama have not been ‘Beltway outsiders’. To think the McCains and Clintons of the world thought pointing out the inexperience of their opponents was a bad thing…
The big winners of America’s newly money rules, prejudice stinks consensus were racial and social minorities, especially blacks and women, who in comparison to earlier eras were increasingly welcomed into the corridors of power. The market revolution cannot be divorced from the process; in the words of William Wiedner, ‘We don’t care how tall you are, how short you are, how fat you are, what colour you are. Green is the most important colour’. Abroad, the big winners were China and Israel, with the former’s turn to capitalism painting dollar signs over the eyes of American business. Israel was the beneficiary of the exclusion of anti-semitism from social acceptability, as well as the growing consciousness of the Holocaust, an outgrowth of the close-run Israeli victory in 1976.
The rise of environmentalism and religious fundamentalism were the anti-thesis to the 70s thesis that leaves us in the flux of now. Environmentalism, over this period, morphed from an earlier bipartisan concern with cleaner forests, air and water into a movement that combined those concerns with a broader critique of increased consumption, if not capitalism itself. The Republican response was, well, drill, baby, drill! They spurned the pious evangelical, Jimmy Carter with his talk of reduced consumption for the optimistic, non-church attending divorce, Ronald Reagan. An apt symbol for this change can be seen in President Reagan taking off the White House solar panels installed by President Carter. As Americans got more stridently ideological, the conformity of their leaders to those ideological standards became less important than political victory.
I liked this book. While it is by no means perfect, it tells its story with verve and does an excellent job in giving a much-needed perspective to the exaggerations of the present. The 70s were as coarse, if much less dangerous than today. Congressmen didn’t just dance, they danced with Argentinian Firecrackers. The Soviets seemed to be expanding. Inflation was king. A sitting president was impeached, resigned and was replaced by an unelected President who gave him a blanket pardon and so on. Greater familiarity with its thesis and collection of facts would do the American body politic good, with attendant mental benefits for the rest of us.