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Health & Wellness

The Fabric of America Is Fraying as the Economic Downturn Continues

By David Wann, Denver Post. Posted July 26, 2008.


Our economic success, as it's generally measured, obscures some deep social problems.
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By certain measurements, the U.S. economy has been quite successful in the last several decades, but the fundamental question remains: Successfully what?

We may lead the world in categories like gross domestic product, average house size, and ownership of color TVs, but we also "lead" the industrial nations in debt per capita, the child poverty rate, overall poverty rate, ratio of people in prison, rate of traffic fatalities, murder rate, carbon dioxide emissions per capita, and the per capita consumption of energy and water.

These are hardly distinctions we can be proud of. Clearly, we're not taking care of what really matters. On the upside, increased awareness of where we stand can guide a reordering of national and local priorities, resulting in a healthier and more satisfying American lifestyle.

Especially eye-opening is data compiled by John de Graaf, director of the non-profit Take Back Your Time, which advocates legislative and lifestyle changes to provide more discretionary time.

The data compares the U.S. with 14 European Union countries in key quality-of-life indicators, demonstrating that many of our economic and cultural priorities are out of step with what humans actually need. Despite the familiar aspiration to be/appear optimistic, it's clear that health care, safety, personal security, equality, education, and leisure time are faltering in America.

For example, even a need as basic as nutrition is compromised when money is poorly allocated or spent. The average American slurps 53 gallons of soft drinks every year, and now spends more in restaurants (many of the fast-food variety) than in grocery stores. "Even wild monkeys have healthier diets than most Americans," says anthropologist Katharine Milton, partly because in our fast-paced world, the emphasis is on snackability, convenience and shelf life rather than human life.

Americans also rank near the bottom among industrial nations in health per unit of food, spending the least for food (as a percentage of income) but the most for health care. In spite of these expenditures, we've fallen to 42nd place in the world for longevity, ranking below Guam and just above Albania. We're also 42nd in infant mortality but No. 1 in obesity, pumping 1 billion extra gallons of gas each year to carry the excess weight -- enough to fuel 1.7 million cars, according to a University of Illinois study.

Coincidentally, Americans are no longer the tallest population in the world; the Dutch are. (In fact, most European populations are, on average, taller than the average American). Researcher John Komlos of the University of Munich speculates that the EU's emphasis on social safety nets, especially in the critical childhood years, may be responsible. De Graaf, co-author of "Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic," agrees. "A 30-year trend of income tax cuts for the rich has decreased quality of life overall in the U.S.," he says. "In contrast, Western European countries invested in their social contracts. Strategic investments in health care, education, transportation, and common space reduced the need [and desire] of individuals to maximize their own incomes."


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See more stories tagged with: food, economy, health care, quality of life

David Wann is the coauthor of Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic (Berrett-Koehler, 2002) and author of its sequel, Simple Prosperity: Finding Real Wealth in a Sustainable Lifestyle (St. Martin's Press, 2008).

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Superb analysis
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Jul 26, 2008 12:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the finest, most pro-active commentaries ever introduced on Alter Net. I concur wholeheartedly and find no aspect to rebut. Its content should be made a paramount issue in the forthcoming elections because it transcends politics and addresses a mandate to achieve dignity based on reality and reversal. It evokes hope and recovery that is not only possible but also uplifting and binding to all of our suffering fellow citizens. We can do better and we must!

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Denver Post
Posted by: Sparks56 on Jul 26, 2008 3:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The wisdom in this essay is not new; many people have been saying the same thing in one form or another for years. What is significant is the publication in which the essay appears. The Denver Post is not The Nation or Mother Jones or the Utne Reader. It is a mainstream paper widely read in some of the most conservative areas in the country. I would be interested to read letters written to the editor in response.

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» RE: Denver Post Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com
Fabric shredded, foundation crumbling
Posted by: Dianka on Jul 26, 2008 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "fabric of society" is its social safety net (by any name), and we've shredded ours. America was at its strongest and richest when the social safety net was at its strongest.

Another way to understand our current situation: We've spent some 30 years redistributing the nation's wealth to the few at the top, while turning our backs on those at the bottom. Think of a house: Since the Reagan admin., we've been pulling the boards out of the framework to pile them up on the roof while simply ignoring our crumbling foundation. It's obvious to any observer that the house is going to collapse.

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Canary in the Coal Mine...
Posted by: Lily H. on Jul 26, 2008 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is something new? I think not...those who are
losing their homes and assets today were the same
self-centered folks I'd meet at community meetings
who brayed about the poor, "Get a job,", etc.
Now look where many of them are? This past week, I
noted an ad in my local freebie weekly, "Couple lost
home due to foreclosure and are homeless. Looking for
someone to donate a small RV/motor home. Any help is
greatly appreciated".

Well, the chickens have come home to roost. Nine will
get you ten this couple gave nary a thought to
those on the bottom until they got there themselves.
Our culture's social classes were, until now, mostly
obscured by the cloak of money and opportunities those
who could afford themselves could avail.

All I've seen on my local newscasts are features on
"How to Save Money...at your grocery store, the hidden
Thrift Store Markets:, etc., etc. We recently got a
glimpse of how adversity affected those hit by the
wildfires that displaced many middle-class and affluent, albeit nowhere near as badly as the poor
have to live on a daily basis. Here, we heard lamenting couples and heads-of-households "having to
downscale" to living in rental apts. from their
typically spacious homes. And numerous fire victims
had homes built relatively quickly and, of course,
larger than the ones that burnt down.

Yes, Virginia, class is a funny thing in America.
I suggest readers of this article link onto the
accompanying Alternet article about Survivalism.
Good companion article!

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» How do you know what you claim? Posted by: thinks4herself2008
Medicated and Busy
Posted by: makeadifference on Jul 26, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The most difficult task is to convince the bulk of the population that their life can be better. When telling others of the health care, education, child care, longevity, mass transit, opportunity and life style available in Europe in comparison to America, they don't believe it or don't want to hear about it. People in America believe the MSM propaganda that the USA is the BEST place in the world... and then watch in dismay when bridges fall, levees fail, murder rises, food's unsafe, drop out rates increase, people go bankrupt because of illness, etc.

People are medicated and busy and must love it... otherwise they would want to change it. Somewhere along the way they gave up their power without a fight. The Constituton guaranteed that power, but as we have seen they don't want that power and have allowed their Constitution to be shredded. The Europeans know how to fight and protest to get what they want.

Personally, I think it will get a lot worse before it gets better. Remember the scenery in "Children of Men?"

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» Beck you're 100% right Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
The New Americanism
Posted by: Spyder on Jul 26, 2008 7:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not really new since Pat Buchanan has been using this phrase for at least a decade, but it's certainly high time that most Americans begin to take it seriously. As other commenters have said, this problem has been steadily growing for several decades. In my opinion, it is the divide-and-conquer scenario that has been our own worst enemy. Pat Buchanan has some good ideas and some bad ideas, and the same can be said for Al Gore and many other public figures. The problem is that we have allowed the corporate media to brainwash us into seeing everything they want us to see as black and white issues, with no shades of gray to obscure the distorted imagery. We are Americans and it's time we recognize ourselves for who we are, and stop this silly, pervasive, destructive path we have chosen for ourselves.

The New Americanism and the Return to Quality

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DMM
Posted by: dmmaze6 on Jul 26, 2008 7:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been around awhile and over the past few decades it's become obvious that Americans have become so removed from the land, that is to say, nature, that most can't identify or name even ten native plants and/or animals in their surroundings. However a recent study found that the same people can identify as many as 1000 commercial logos. To spend time in the outdoors, people seem to want the ultimate in comfort, room temperature, sunny sky, not too humid, not too dry, no bad odors, no snakes, no bugs, etc. Get the picture? As I recently read, even the number of people who spend time outdoors to hunt and fish has declined. Will county, state and national parks be necessary in the future. I certainly hope so.

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Ill Researched and Bigoted Article
Posted by: Gravitas on Jul 26, 2008 9:13 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author completely lost me with his harping on obesity. In the first place, we are NOT number one in obesity. That information comes from a pharma marketing campaign. Australia, who has the second best longevity in the world, is supposedly now the fattest nation in the world. Actually, the U.S. never did come in number one in legitimate scientific study that was not funded by weight loss industries.

It is also absolutely irresponsible to site that lame Illinois study by Mickey Mouse researchers that claim obesity is wasting gas. Not only was the study garbage, it sets fat people up to be scapegoated for the oil crisis and global warming to deflect attention away from the real policy setters.

If all their research is as sloppy as their obesity facts, the credibility of this article is totally diminished. People who want to rant just to rant and grab at anything just to make a point, not caring how much damage they cause.

p.s. I personally weigh 220lb and not one ounce is "excess." My body is EXACTLY the way mother nature intended it to be!!!! I don't drive and use far more resources than the average American. Have the guts to compare your carbon footprints to mine???

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» RE: Ill Researched and Bigoted Article Posted by: anonymous black writer
Blame it on greed
Posted by: HughScott on Jul 26, 2008 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to the L.A. Times, rich people in Los Angeles contribute less money to charity as a percentage of income than does the middle class and working poor. Nationally, I suspect, the ratio -- or "greed index" -- is similar, one of the reasons America is rapidly becoming a two-tier, Have and Have-Not society.

Last year, for the first time ever, Fortune 400 members were all billionaires. Meanwhile, after growing rapidly during the 1990's boom, the net worth of an average American family decreased after adjustment for inflation.

So who's to blame for the upward distribution of wealth? I say George Walker Bush.

At the beginning of his first term, he shrewdly tapped into the tendency of rich people to be greedy by passing tax breaks that unfairly favored wealthy Americans. The end result was an elitist, nonpolitical constituency that smothered objections to Dub-ya's 2001 lop-sided IRS rules.

Virtually ever news person you see on national TV earns $500,000 or more per year, even weather forecasters. Keeping that statistic in mind, ask yourself when was the last time you saw a program that addressed the unfairness of Bush's tax cuts with specific examples?

It has never happened, folks, and for good reason. Bush's nonpolitical constituency, including the mainstream media, doesn't want to rock the luxury liner they are riding in.

To tear down the economic barriers that divide our country into Have and Have-not cultures, the next administration must radically reform the IRS tax code so that it benefits ALL Americans, not just the wealthy. You can bet your maxed-out credit cards that won't happen if John McBush wins in November.

Meanwhile, as individuals we must endeavor to improve our local communities so we are less dependent on Big Brother in Washington, no matter which party is in power.

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So?
Posted by: ankhet on Jul 26, 2008 11:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So you're smaller, dumber, more isolated, sicker than your European counterparts. Well, itzyerown damn fault. Something within you - your genes, is causing you to fail to adjust. And whining about it is unpatriotic, isn't it? Look into yourself, find your weakness, join a self-help group to confess your personal failure! (Everyone else is doing fine.)

So butch up! Real Americans don't need nature, friends or nutrition! that's for pussies and the French.

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» RE: So? Posted by: dmmaze6
» RE: So? Posted by: ankhet
ba
Posted by: mnstra on Jul 26, 2008 11:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good article for a mainstream paper.It has all been said decades ago when RFK stated that GDP does not reflect how Americans feel.
Noam Chomsky wrote a book about failed states. In it he describe and defined what constituted a failed state crime, poverty,no govt protection for all citizens. environmental degradation, etc. Afghanistan, Darfur the USA. all fit the definition/. This was before the current administration fleeced the American taxpayer more to pay off the big banks who stole billions from many homeowners; stole the SS trust funds to invade another country against the will of its people and so on.The few elite who control most of the wealth however, are not living in a failed state as yet.They will be fine as the always are.
The next few years will be more or the same and I don't see any change coming unless we get a third party under way soon.Forget the current system of government.

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Ailing economy
Posted by: willymack on Jul 26, 2008 11:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like a parasite which has weakened its host to death, our greedy rat bastard "business" interests, especially Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac have brought many of us to our knees with their unregulated and unchecked GREED, and typically seek relief from Uncle Sucker. I say let 'em fall and see what it's like for the rest of us.

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so WTF does height have to do with anything?!
Posted by: DaBear on Jul 26, 2008 11:30 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Coincidentally, Americans are no longer the tallest population in the world; the Dutch are. (In fact, most European populations are, on average, taller than the average American).

Had to be written by a tall person... what a stupid statement... in a paragraph that has nothing at all to do with supporting such a bizarre claim. What is it with tall people... they're so damned obsessive about their vertical mutation....

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Such a plebian philistine comment. Size and height is an indicator.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Jul 26, 2008 1:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Health brings out the maximum phenotype capacity of your genes. Though I do wonder if they factor in immigrants who may start out shorter in stature. Just as life expectancy and birth survival are indicators of national health of the 'average American' too. The USA is also number one in CO2 emissions, China will soon surpass us on that. Not something good to shoot for either.

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Statistical Games
Posted by: AMC on Jul 27, 2008 7:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not to dispute the thrust of the article, it should be noted that average height of "Americans" (Census count no doubt, meaning "people living in America who respond to thecensus taker" is strongly influenced by the immigrants, especially from Latin America and Asia: people considerably shorter in average height than others.

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» RE: Statistical Games Posted by: ankhet
» RE: Statistical Games Posted by: cruzcontroll
» RE: Statistical Games Posted by: ankhet
» RE: Statistical Games Posted by: ankhet
All complaints automatically referred to the Hobbesian law firm of Nash, deBrutus, and Shorte
Posted by: mclemens on Jul 27, 2008 10:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With apologies to Tom Pynchon for stealing his jape.

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Free-Range Children
Posted by: Dboy on Jul 27, 2008 1:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
asphalted school playgrounds in America now display signs that say, "No running!" The design of playgrounds often excludes the rough, green edges of nature where kids love to play; instead the aim is to minimize liability, reduce maintenance, and improve surveillance.

I found that little observation to be VERY sad. Is this true? If kids are now in a little bubble protecting them from the wonders of nature then where are the next generation of scientists going to come from? Where's this school yard fascism coming from? Kids fall down and get bloodly..no big deal. That's why we have band-aids. Who runs these schools now, Corrections Corp of America?

dboy

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Commondreamer
Posted by: CommonDreamer on Jul 27, 2008 7:20 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A great article! However, we as progressives have always know that this extremist, facist capitalism would be a social disaster and that the free market is only free to those in control. Well, the disaster has come into full view...falling bridges, shootings, no social safety net, no looking after your neighbor, no compassion and no family time. All of this, brought to you in prime time by the "family values" cabal.

We must throw out this regime and install a socially responsible government that is inclusive and not divisive...we must stop regressive taxes right now before any more damage is done, and we should seek reparations in the form of confiscating the undeserved profits of the shills at the finance firms that engineered this mess...and plow that back into society - where it should have been going in the first place. So much for the triumph of extremist capitalism....the death knell for "trickle down"...for "supply siders"...and for all of the other sophistic and inane theories that we have been subjected to by plutocratic and selfish rulers. It's time for Main Street to overthrow Wall Street - and not a moment too soon.

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And still no one believes....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Jul 28, 2008 12:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This isn't new. Americans have been duped & bamboozled into believing the lies of the last 30 years. You know government is bad, there is no such thing as class, individuality is the way to go, the free market will take care of everything, unions are bad, etc..

The only thing the free market has taken care of is itself and the rich that can invest their millions. The rest of us are paying whether we like it or not. Americans in a race to the bottom , like it or not we compete with China .50cents/day and India .40cents/day. Thats how much people over there are making for a days wage. In the meantime the American public has bought into the lies.

What has suffered during all of this is the quality of life for most people. Families have suffered because people are working harder, farther away from where they live for less money. Yet they are paying more for the things they do have. If you live in a poor neighborhood the quality of your fruit and veggies is an anathema, ergo your health suffers.

When did the care of health become a business and why do we continue to let it be so? Why are there no sidewalks so Americans aren't the fattest people in the world? Why is it that parks are so far away from where they need to be? America has been designed so that we can drive everywhere, yet leisure is put down. Time to be with friends and family needs to be budgeted for in you PDA! We as a nation need to work toward having more time for each other and stop being serfs for the corporate masters!

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Civilization
Posted by: Ignatz deFyre on Jul 28, 2008 3:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"An advanced state of intellectual, cultural, and material development in human society, marked by progress in the arts and sciences, the extensive use of record-keeping, including writing, and the appearance of complex political and social institutions."
American Heritage Dictionary

For American society (term used loosely) I redefine as follows:
"An advanced state of nescient, aggressive, and consumerist development in human society, marked by progress in manipulative strategies and exploitative techniques, the extensive use of score-keeping, usury and propaganda, the appearance of complex commercial entities both overt, and disguised as political and social institutions."

Social contract and capitalism are mutually exclusive. The pursuit of profit and pursuit of ownership is not the same as pursuit of happiness.

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