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Perhaps Immigration Can Halt America's Slide
by George D. Pappas


This article was originally published in the Camden, New Jersey (U.S.A.) Courier Post April 7, 1991 by the author.

Walk down any city street and you see people rushing by.  Walk through Penn Station in New York City and you see swarms of people staring into space, oblivious to the homeless around them.  Read the newspapers and you see pictures of despair and death.  Whether it's the KKK or the LAPD, you can't miss the message.  Our society has lost its moral rudder.

There was a time when ethics and rules of conduct meant something, when individuals took responsibility for their actions.  We hear the copouts.

"I was born poor, so stealing is OK."

"I couldn't get a job because I'm black" - or fat or a woman.

Recently, the president of the National Fraternal Order of Police gave an "explanation" of the police beating of a black man in L.A.  He suggested the cause of this outrage cold be frustration with revolving-door justice.

I Remember when parents took responsibility for their children's moral education, when people took pride in their neighborhoods, when senior citizens were held in esteem, when teachers were respected members of the community and Sunday school brought neighbors together.

In the past, our society carved out clear-cut norms of conduct and people responded to unethical behavior.  Even Mayor Daley's Chicago machine commanded a degree of respect that seems beyond the grasp of today's elected officials.  Professional athletes of the likes of 
"Joltin Joe" or the "Babe" soared like gods in kids' eyes.  Today Ricky or Darryl won't play because the ante isn't high enough.

Things started to change after World War II.  For the first time, women ran households while husbands served in Europe and Asia.  There was rock 'n' roll and this, too, set off a few tremors.   But like James Dean, rock 'n' roll was a small rebel yell still waiting for a cause.  Nevertheless, the die was cast; the sound of fury was born.

JFK AND CAMELOT raised our hopes and cast a spell from another time and place.  The spell was shattered one dark and still November day, however, by a shot heard around the world.  The New Frontier seemed to vanish.

Then came the tidal wave of Vietnam.  Politicians and the wealthy were exposed for preaching "Do as I say, not as I do."  As less well-to-do kids were sent off to Vietnam while the wealthy found ways to keep their children home, people noticed and began to ask what happened to "fairness."

The hypocrisy exploded into the open.  In the aftershock, the "me" generation" was born.  It's battle cry: Since you don't take care of me, I'll take care of me.  

Traditional moral guideposts crumbled in the backlash against the war.  Mom and apple pie were tossed onto the ash heap of history.  Scores of people saw no moral rationale to accept responsibility for rules of conduct established by a society unwilling to ask everyone to shoulder the same burdens.

The post "Tet" years of the late 1960's saw the revolt against the establishment manifest itself in live-ins, riots, marches, psychedelia and drugs.  In many ways this uniquely American awakening shouted "tune in, turn on, drop out."  America's slide away form family, school and other established social institutions started the transformation from innocence to cynicism.  As the 1970's dawned, no institution was spared from inspection.

WATERGATE exemplified the hypocrisy of our government.  Lord Acton's dictum that "power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely" was brought to its crowning realization in this American tragedy.  After Watergate, America never turned back.

As we came to grips with the lost innocence of a bygone era, the "me generation" slid into ever deeper depths of self-absorption.  We began to grow away from social responsibilities and into aggressive, self-centered actions devoid of any social connection.  The flight to the suburbs symbolized the exodus of a people fleeing a society in decay.

The pendulum has swung far from a society of traditional ethical values.  The "me generation" has given birth to a generation of "Yuppies" obsessed with consumption and acquisition and material goods to demonstrate their worth.

Role models may have gone the way of the dinosaur.

Perhaps as new immigrants join American society, their ethics of hard work, respect for education and family will help America come to terms with itself as a nation where social values and responsibilities mean something again.

 

 

 

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