David Brooks does not explain why he thinks we should
evaluate the contributions, positive and negative, of the Baby Boom generation.
Being as I am not a Boomer, I am happy to join in. For the record, Brooks
himself is too young to be a Boomer, a member of the generation born after
World War II through around 1960.
At the least we should say that the Boomers, the children of
what Tom Brokaw called The Greatest Generation, have not lived up to the
achievements of their parents. The Greatest Generation defeated Nazi Germany,
Imperial Japan and Fascist Italy. The Boomers did not quite lose in Vietnam.
Most of them refused to fight. And severely disparaged those who did. As Winston Churchill once said: it's better to fight nobly and lose than to refuse to fight at all.
Brooks does not notice that the children of the Boomer
generation comprise what are now called the millennials. About the current
state of the millennial generation, no one should feel proud.
When it comes to politics, the Boomer generation does not
look very good. Brooks notes, sagely:
The baby boomer political era began in 1992,
with the election of Bill Clinton. In the five years before that, these leaders
dominated world politics: Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Mikhail Gorbachev,
Nelson Mandela, John Paul II, Helmut Kohl and François Mitterrand.
Baby boomers have been unable to match that
level of talent. During the years of boomer dominance — from Bill Clinton
through Donald Trump — America’s political institutions have become
dysfunctional, civic debate has crumbled, debt has soared and few major pieces
of legislation have passed.
Obviously, Mitterand was not a titan walking on the world
stage. And Brooks managed to leave out Deng Xiaoping… probably the greatest
economic reformer in world history.
And let’s not forget, the Greatest Generation gave us our
first pretty-boy celebrity president in John F. Kennedy. And it gave us Lyndon
Johnson.
Yet, Brooks is correct to point out that under the aegis of
the Boomer generation politics and America’s institutions have become
dysfunctional. We are living on massive and unsustainable debt and no longer
engage in civil civic debate.
Why should this be the case? Were I to hazard a hypothesis,
I suggest that the Boomers were almost all brought up according to the
principles laid down in Benjamin Spock’s book on childrearing. The book sold in
the tens of millions. It’s goal was bring up children to be individually
self-actualized, not to conform to societal norms and to follow cultural rules.
During the Vietnam War, some thinkers did suggest that the counterculture grew
naturally out of Spockean childrearing practices. I have no way to test the
hypothesis, but it makes some sense.
Brooks notes that Boomers distrust institutions. And they
have little use for codes of correct conduct. Thus, they were happy to promote
movements that fought to overthrow the social order… sometimes for good,
sometimes for less good.
Boomers are bad at politics because they
distrust institutions. But this has made them good at leading decentralized
social movements: environmental, feminist, civil rights, L.G.B.T.Q. rights.
One lesson of the age is that when all media are
focused on left-wing, elite-approved movements, it’s important to notice the
people quietly reacting against them. The right-leaning boomer movements are
just as important: the conservative movement, the religious right, the Tea
Party movement, the pro-life and gun rights movements, the populist revolt.
Brooks gives the Boomers an A for these movements, but,
however much we admire them all, they have still rendered the nation’s
institutions dysfunctional. They have been built on the principle that our
institutions and our government is so corrupt that it cannot solve problems.
This is not a useful thought. About that no one should be proud.
Apparently, the Boomers have compensated for it all by
contributing massive to popular culture. True enough, the generation that
refused to fight in Vietnam-- about that Brooks has nothing to say-- tried to
compensate by creating better rock music, but still:
It makes sense that a generation raised on rock
'n' roll and TV would put its energy into popular culture. The boomer
generation has produced a string of greats who can withstand comparison with
members of any other generation: Steven Spielberg, Meryl Streep, Stephen King,
Jimi Hendrix, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Oprah, Ron Howard, Madonna, Stevie
Wonder and on and on.
Of course, no other previous generation was raised on
television. And technology allowed the Boomer generation to do things with film
that no previous generation could possibly do.
In any event, this feels like a sop to the ego of Boomers
who are too delicate to recognize that they did not do all that well.
Interestingly, and aptly, Brooks notes that the Boomer
generation has not produced very much of real value in the world of high
culture, such as it is.
The boomers entered college just as universities
were expanding and becoming more specialized and professionalized. This
produced the most educated generation up to that time, but the specialization
and ghettoization of intellectual and artistic life took its toll on the
nation’s culture.
It’s not that people aren’t producing good work,
but its influence tends to be confined to the academy or specialized
subcultures. Art, classical music and novels have lost cultural influence.
Boomer writers do not play the same roles as Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, Maya
Angelou, Thomas Pynchon, Philip Larkin, John Updike and Toni Morrison. Many of
the most influential living philosophers are pre-boomer — like Amartya Sen,
Charles Taylor and Alasdair MacIntyre.
Of course, the Boomer generation cared far more for popular
culture than it did for high culture. It sought to influence the popular mind,
the general public, and did not strive for true and enduring excellence. One
reason might be, if I were to speculate, that Boomers were less interested in
greatness and more interested in manipulating public opinion. Why would that
have been so?
For one, they had copped out of a war and had happily accepted
defeat in Vietnam. Thus, their primary goal was to ensure that the public at
large did not see them as cowards, unworthy of the legacy bequeathed them by
their parents.
Brooks continues to say that the Boomers excelled in
technological innovation. About that there can be little doubt:
Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web.
Teams led by Francis Collins and Craig Venter decoded the genetic sequence.
Steve Jobs, Bill Gates and Steve Wozniak are among a great cloud of boomer tech
innovators. Robert Jarvik, who developed the implantable heart, stands in for
all those doing amazing work in medical innovation.
When it comes to lifestyle innovations, Brooks credits the
Boomers with many successes, though they feel rather dubious to me, almost as
though he had simply gotten tired:
This isn’t even close. Restaurants are much
better now. Products and buildings are designed in more interesting ways.
Coffee, ice cream and all else is far more varied and delicious.
Heaven knows how we can judge the different qualities of
restaurants and coffee and ice cream. Are fool products fresher than they were?
How can we judge ice cream now and then? An old Latin saying says: De
gustibus non est disputandum. It means: there’s no arguing with taste.
Brooks would have done better to skip this one. He might be arguing that, what
with the advent of Starbucks, coffee tastes better. But still, better than
what… than French expresso?
Besides, a culture that judges itself in terms of how many varieties of cheese it has is decadent. See the luminous example of France.
Brooks is none too happy with the changes in manners and
morals. Neither am I.
He begins with manners:
In the realm of manners, boomers brought on the
triumph of the casual. Everything that was refined, stuffy, formal and stiff
was loosened up by the boomers, and this is very good.
No, it is not very good. Social
interactions are infested with rudeness, discourtesy, tactlessness, shameless
and incivility. These are rationalized by the Boomer generation as a step
toward liberation from social customs. They are a nail in the coffin of social
harmony.
As for what Brooks calls morals,
allow him:
In the realm of morals, things are more
complicated. If the ethos of the silent generation was “We’re all in this
together” and the code was self-effacement (“I’m nobody better than anybody
else, but nobody’s better than me”), then the ethos of the boomers is “I’m free
to be myself” and the code is “Do you see how special I am?”
Personal freedom has been the master trend for
this generation. That was a legitimate reaction against conformity. On the
other hand, there is more isolation, bitterness and division. The ethos of the
meritocracy filled the values void left by the retreat of any shared moral
vocabulary.
I have no idea where Brooks found the sentence: “I’m nobody
better than anybody else…” but it looks to be a typo, or a clear instance of
garbled syntax. Doesn’t the New York Times have any editors any more.
As for self-effacement, military organizations did have strict hierarchies.... thus I have no idea what Brooks is talking about.
And yet, the Boomer generation did rebel against conformity.
And, Brooks does not understand that undoing conformity to advance
the casual was not legitimate and did not represent a civilizational advance.
Being who you are and being special is not quite the same as being a
responsible adult and a loyal citizen of the republic.
Brooks gives the Boomer generation a B… for what, I do not
know:
As a generation, boomers have excelled at the
material things that make life pleasant, convenient, long and fun. They have
struggled in the realms that other civilizations would have considered more
profound: governance, philosophy, art and public morality.
Other civilizations have considered these matters more
profound because they are more profound. Boomers have excelled in the
superficial, though they have happily elevated the superficial and the decadent
to a more exalted status.
As for the most prominent Boomers, Brooks begins with a
notably talented politician, named Bill Clinton. He does not remark that
Clinton was an accused rapist, a serial sexual harasser and a model of human
decadence. He does not note that Bill Clinton dodged the Vietnam draft. And he
does not add that Clinton’s feckless leadership allowed al Qaeda to fester.
He adds Madonna and Steven Spielberg, even though no one would serious compare their contributes to those of Dwight Eisenhower or
George Marshall. Pop culture icons are not great statesmen or great leaders.
They are the entertainment.
Then again, perhaps that will be the ultimate Boomer legacy:
turning life into nonstop entertainment. It’s nothing to be proud of.
2 comments:
It is interesting to speculate about whether there was more Conformity in the 1950s (the era of the Man in the Gray Flannel Suit), versus today. I'd be inclined to think that there is really more Conformity today, except:
I ran across a William Whyte article in which he mentions a documentary put out by Monsanto. This would have been sometime around 1952. “It was a pretty good film, but what did it have to do about Monsanto’s research–much of which has been most imaginative? In one part of the picture you see five young men in white coats conferring around a microscope. The voice on the sound track rings out boldy, “No geniuses here. Just a bunch of good American working together.”
To modern ears, this is just bizarre. I doubt that very many companies would want to make such an assertion about their researchers today.
To the extent that this level of "don't be a standout" was common, there had to be some reaction in the other direction.
"Brooks gives the Boomer generation a B… for what, I do not know:" It's a B for "Brooks", and otherwise meaningless.
I'm a war baby. I concluded that Brooks was pretty useless, and the NYT is a perfect place for him.
The voice on the sound track rings out boldy, “No geniuses here. Just a bunch of good American working together.” I read this as "We're a team, working together."
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