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Wondering What We Have Become

More than we may want to acknowledge, a large segment of the society is comfortable buying what Donald Trump is selling.

In a recent opinion piece in the New York Times Columnist Carlos Lozada wrote that “throughout Trump’s life, he has embodied every national fascination: money and greed in the 1980s, sex scandals in the 1990s, reality television in the 2000s, social media in the 2010s. Why wouldn’t we deserve him now?” Lozada notes that “the tragedy is not that this election has taken us back, but that it shows how there are parts of America’s history that we’ve never fully gotten past.”

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The same view is quietly expressed in peer nations. Many believe we live in a culture awash in sensation-seeking and shallow pursuits. Even a sober friend of the U.S., former German Chancellor Angela Merkel, wonders what is going on. She expressed “sorrow” at Trump’s election because of her own experiences in his presence at international meetings. “He was obviously very fascinated by the Russian president,” she wrote in her new memoirs. “I had the impression that politicians with autocratic and dictatorial traits captivated him.“ She also recalls the telling incident when he refused to shake her hand: an early clue to his basic rudeness. His aberrant behavior then was less focused on how the international community might solve common problems and more on the chances to exploit them.

The grifter is a familiar sometimes admired American type. More than we want to acknowledge, the avaricious President-elect is more like us than we might admit.

At its worst, American culture has shrunk from the idea of the common good or acceptance of the values and actions of humane and shared power. Our cultural interests seem to have narrowed to the shorter purview of how politics affects the acquisition of things or experiences. We may be comfortable, but we resent those who have even more. Hence, the price of gasoline matters more than attempts to mitigate the effects of its overuse. And vacationing like a prince can occur in the absence of awareness of basic realities like the monstrous American carbon footprint. According to the World Bank, the U.S. is far ahead of other nations in per capita consumption, doubling the rates of other peer states like France and those of Scandinavia. The idea of sufficiency doesn’t really apply. We have more clearly turned ourselves into exuberant materialists.

In the process of trying to purchase our way to a Mar-a-Lago of comforts, our older children now acquire huge amounts of consumer debt, most Americans drive fat cars, and cities are designed to accommodate them. Black Friday and Cyber Monday seem to have become national holidays for expressing our accumulated abundance. Many have forgotten the collective values once fostered by presidents, including sacrifice for the good of other democracies, or honoring our birthright commitment to accept new arrivals. As Lozada notes, in America there is “a long tradition of xenophobia — against Southern Europeans, against newcomers from Asia, Latin America and the Middle East.”  Under the next President this embedded habit is in danger of becoming a core American principle.

Beyond of love of things, where is the compensating consciousness of the nation’s giants of art and literature? The first Trump White House was mostly a no-go zone for concerts. I suspect the Scottish and Italians have a better collective awareness of titans in their shared past. The Japanese, British and Swedes seem to be ahead of us in protecting their nations’ natural assets. Even the simple pleasures of using nearby public spaces seem overlooked, with many localities barely providing basic amenities like sidewalks or housing for the destitute. In economist Kenneth Galbraith’s words, our mantra seems to be to amass “private wealth” even at the expense of “public squalor.”

Of course broad generalizations are subject to many exceptions. “We” can only be a suggestive pronoun when broadened to represent an entire culture. And the U.S. covers a large part of an entire continent. But 63 million Americans voted for Trump in 2016, and a commanding 76 million this time around. His bluster and fakery does not represent everyone. But many accept his forged identity as an achiever and a builder. As Daniel Boorstin noted long ago, America is the natural home of the “man on the make:” the striver who delivers more bluster than truth about achieving material success. With our now ominous avoidance of serious cultural ideas and ideals, more of us are willing to rely on the thinest of impressions to  to buy what Trump is selling.

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I’m Not Exactly Sure Who is Managing My Computer

Every time I boot my machine it sounds like a gremlin is busy hiding things out of sight.

Writers take pleasure in the fact that they are in charge. Creating one’s own words is a cherished right for those of us who still care. But now the ubiquitous personal computer appears to have become a true collective enterprise jointly managed by Microsoft, Google, a very fussy Adobe. I’m there too when I’m allowed. After everyone is done inspecting and changing “my” software, I weigh in from time to time to see what changes have been done.  Not long ago my computer was scrubbed  for a day of anything connected to Google. Whose idea was that?

It is an old topic to complain about wayward computers. So it’s my turn. Perhaps Elon Musk will want to take a shot at this old HP home computer and make it self-driving. Will it be days or weeks until my disk drive tells me to take a hike and let A.I. manage my digital life?

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At start up my hard drive sounds like what you might hear outside a house when kids inside discover that their parents are home.

Every time I boot my machine it sounds like it is extremely busy hiding things out of sight. At start up my hard drive sounds like what you might hear outside a house when kids inside discover that their parents are home. Most mornings the digital furniture always seems to be hastily reassembled, with Microsoft trying to find a more spacious location to hang out as the jilted browser-in-waiting.

Like kids everywhere, most of those who have claims on my computer occasionally go on a break. “Not responding” is like the reaction I used to get from our 13 year old. Now I get it much more frequently when I’m engaged in routine reading or editing.  My computer and I wait together while misplaced pixels are located and put back where they belong.

I pay for another service to guard the ramparts, boldly going nowhere fast to report back every week that I’ve not been invaded. But I still get those ominous “Your Computer is Locked” screen while a monotone voice of a woman tells me I will need to call her if I want it fixed. Some cretins have figured out this malware in an effort to blackmail us. But so far, I’ve managed to escape this frozen state by starving the machine of power and hanging cloves of garlic on the screen.

If you use Apple products the heavy hand of control is also present. Apple has a gentle way of reminding users that their music and software is really their stuff. They at least acknowledge that you have some rights. But they work hard to keep alien Androids at bay. Sooner or later the Geek Squad will have to pay an emergency visit to put me and “my” quarreling software into rehab.

Finally, and more to the point, I worry that software “help” on various tasks can lapse into A.I. mush that looks passable as someone’s efforts. On my Word top-of-screen ribbon “Ghostwriter Autopilot” sits ready to relieve me of my complete authorship of an item. Their preferred phrase is that the tool will “accelerate content development.” A.I. Images like the visual one at the top of this piece are on thing.  But words in my name are a no go.

And who can miss the new Apple ads promising that even an office deadbeat can generate enough A.I. stuff to look productive? The humor in these advertisements is far less inviting than the unintended message that their software can conceal incompetence. For once, Apple should try straightforward and earnest advertising. They would look just as cool if their messages suggested that their users were supremely capable.