Soviets? Us? The Ones Who Won the Cold War?
cultural diseases infect different hosts in different ways but have similar symptoms
I finally got around to reading Niall Ferguson’s “We’re All Soviets Now” over at The Free Press … and boy howdy … it makes me seem like an optimist.
I’ve got a lot of pull quotes, but I want to pull something mid-article that most of our nation has not fully come to grips with and is, at its core, the primary indicator that we have a serious problem.
In 2022 alone, more Americans died of fentanyl overdoses than were killed in three major wars: Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
We won the Cold War, but lost the peace as we expended irreplaceable real, national, and moral capital in a “Global War on Terrorism” for two decades that left us … well … just look around you.
I first pointed out that we’re in Cold War II back in 2018. In articles for The New York Times and National Review, I tried to show how the People’s Republic of China now occupies the space vacated by the Soviet Union when it collapsed in 1991.
This view is less controversial now than it was then. China is clearly not only an ideological rival, firmly committed to Marxism-Leninism and one-party rule. It’s also a technological competitor—the only one the U.S. confronts in fields such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing. It’s a military rival, with a navy that is already larger than ours and a nuclear arsenal that is catching up fast. And it’s a geopolitical rival, asserting itself not only in the Indo-Pacific but also through proxies in Eastern Europe and elsewhere.
But it only recently struck me that in this new Cold War, we—and not the Chinese—might be the Soviets. It’s a bit like that moment when the British comedians David Mitchell and Robert Webb, playing Waffen-SS officers toward the end of World War II, ask the immortal question: “Are we the baddies?”
Viewed from the outside looking in, and the inside looking out - just look at what we have built in the last thirty years;
A chronic “soft budget constraint” in the public sector, which was a key weakness of the Soviet system? I see a version of that in the U.S. deficits forecast by the Congressional Budget Office to exceed 5 percent of GDP for the foreseeable future, and to rise inexorably to 8.5 percent by 2054. The insertion of the central government into the investment decision-making process? I see that too, despite the hype around the Biden administration’s “industrial policy.”
Economists keep promising us a productivity miracle from information technology, most recently AI. But the annual average growth rate of productivity in the U.S. nonfarm business sector has been stuck at just 1.5 percent since 2007, only marginally better than the dismal years 1973–1980.
The U.S. economy might be the envy of the rest of the world today, but recall how American experts overrated the Soviet economy in the 1970s and 1980s.
And yet, you insist, the Soviet Union was a sick man more than it was a superpower, whereas the United States has no equal in the realm of military technology and firepower.
Actually, no.
We have a military that is simultaneously expensive and unequal to the tasks it confronts, as Senator Roger Wicker’s newly published report makes clear. As I read Wicker’s report—and I recommend you do the same—I kept thinking of what successive Soviet leaders said until the bitter end: that the Red Army was the biggest and therefore most lethal military in the world.
On paper, it was. But paper was what the Soviet bear turned out to be made of. It could not even win a war in Afghanistan, despite ten years of death and destruction. (Now, why does that sound familiar?)
On paper, the U.S. defense budget does indeed exceed those of all the other members of NATO put together. But what does that defense budget actually buy us? As Wicker argues, not nearly enough to contend with the “Coalition Against Democracy” that China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea have been aggressively building.
In Wicker’s words, “America’s military has a lack of modern equipment, a paucity of training and maintenance funding, and a massive infrastructure backlog. . . . it is stretched too thin and outfitted too poorly to meet all the missions assigned to it at a reasonable level of risk. Our adversaries recognize this, and it makes them more adventurous and aggressive.”
Have the American people and their elected representatives executed proper stewardship of the “Shining City on the Hill” that Ronaldus Magnus spoke of? Are we, as a nation, even trying?
Even more striking to me are the political, social, and cultural resemblances I detect between the U.S. and the USSR. Gerontocratic leadership was one of the hallmarks of late Soviet leadership, personified by the senility of Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov, and Konstantin Chernenko.
But by current American standards, the later Soviet leaders were not old men. Brezhnev was 75 when he died in 1982, but he had suffered his first major stroke seven years before. Andropov was only 68 when he succeeded Brezhnev, but he suffered total kidney failure just a few months after taking over. Chernenko was 72 when he came to power. He was already a hopeless invalid, suffering from emphysema, heart failure, bronchitis, pleurisy, and pneumonia.
It is a reflection of the quality of healthcare enjoyed by their American counterparts today that they are both older and healthier. Nevertheless, Joe Biden (81) and Donald Trump (78) are hardly men in the first flush of youth and vitality, as The Wall Street Journal recently made cringe-inducingly clear. The former cannot distinguish between his two Hispanic cabinet secretaries, Alejandro Mayorkas and Xavier Becerra. The latter muddles up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi. If Kamala Harris has never watched The Death of Stalin, it’s not too late.
Another notable feature of late Soviet life was total public cynicism about nearly all institutions. Leon Aron’s brilliant book Roads to the Temple shows just how wretched life in the 1980s had become.
…
Look at the most recent Gallup surveys of American opinion and one finds a similar disillusionment. The share of the public that has confidence in the Supreme Court, the banks, public schools, the presidency, large technology companies, and organized labor is somewhere between 25 percent and 27 percent. For newspapers, the criminal justice system, television news, big business, and Congress, it’s below 20 percent. For Congress, it’s 8 percent. Average confidence in major institutions is roughly half what it was in 1979.
Go to the once-great city of Baltimore. Visit the Kensington part of Philadelphia. Compare the New York City of 2004 to the New York City of 2024. Look at the opinion of our military amongst multi-generational serving families.
Then look at those, from “non-profit” heads who make almost $1 million or more a year, elected representatives making money hand over fist trading stocks in companies they can impact through legislation, retired General and Flag Officers who will go to known shady operators and tell them - before the uniform they wore to their retirement ceremony is even cold - that they “want to make money.”
Our nation was never perfect, nor will it ever be, but …
Meanwhile, as in the late Soviet Union, the hillbillies—actually the working class and a goodly slice of the middle class, too—drink and drug themselves to death even as the political and cultural elite double down on a bizarre ideology that no one really believes in.
poverty and servitude, while Stalin, who had started World War II on the same side as Hitler, utterly failed to foresee the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, and then became the most brutal imperialist in his own right.
The equivalent falsehoods in late Soviet America are that the institutions controlled by the (Democratic) Party—the federal bureaucracy, the universities, the major foundations, and most of the big corporations—are devoted to advancing hitherto marginalized racial and sexual minorities, and that the principal goals of U.S. foreign policy are to combat climate change and (as Jake Sullivan puts it) to help other countries defend themselves “without sending U.S. troops to war.”
In reality, policies to promote “diversity, equity, and inclusion” do nothing to help poor minorities. Instead, the sole beneficiaries appear to be a horde of apparatchik DEI “officers.” In the meantime, these initiatives are clearly undermining educational standards, even at elite medical schools, and encouraging the mutilation of thousands of teenagers in the name of “gender-affirming surgery.”
As for the current direction of U.S. foreign policy, it is not so much to help other countries defend themselves as to egg on others to fight our adversaries as proxies without supplying them with sufficient weaponry to stand much chance of winning. This strategy—most visible in Ukraine—makes some sense for the United States, which discovered in the “global war on terror” that its much-vaunted military could not defeat even the ragtag Taliban after twenty years of effort. But believing American blandishments may ultimately doom Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan to follow South Vietnam and Afghanistan into oblivion.
Do you have people in your life who have turned to doctors who prescribe anti-depressants to get them to be numb to life as we find it - drugged to the point they change into a different person you’ve known for decades? Just as addicted as the people in Kensington, just high-functioning - but, nonetheless - numb in their artificial world as the real world moves around them?
We abandon Afghans to their fate. We let a sub-4th rate power attack shipping in the Red Sea, their leaders in relative safety ashore. We spend more in interest payments than we do on our own defense.
Meanwhile, the balance of the richest counties in the nation are those that surround our nation’s capital - itself awash in crime, drugs, and corruption - a host of rent-seekers deriving sustenance from taxes from hard-working citizens and debt borrowed in the name of children yet born … but having nothing in common from either.
To see the extent of the gulf that now separates the American nomenklatura from the workers and peasants, consider the findings of a Rasmussen poll from last September, which sought to distinguish the attitudes of the Ivy Leaguers from ordinary Americans. The poll defined the former as “those having a postgraduate degree, a household income of more than $150,000 annually, living in a zip code with more than 10,000 people per square mile,” and having attended “Ivy League schools or other elite private schools, including Northwestern, Duke, Stanford, and the University of Chicago.”
Asked if they would favor “rationing of gas, meat, and electricity” to fight climate change, 89 percent of Ivy Leaguers said yes, as against 28 percent of regular people. Asked if they would personally pay $500 more in taxes and higher costs to fight climate change, 75 percent of the Ivy Leaguers said yes, versus 25 percent of everyone else. “Teachers should decide what students are taught, as opposed to parents” was a statement with which 71 percent of the Ivy Leaguers agreed, nearly double the share of average citizens. “Does the U.S. provide too much individual freedom?” More than half of Ivy Leaguers said yes; just 15 percent of ordinary mortals did. The elite were roughly twice as fond as everyone else of members of Congress, journalists, union leaders, and lawyers. Perhaps unsurprisingly, 88 percent of the Ivy Leaguers said their personal finances were improving, as opposed to one in five of the general population.
As Ferguson states at the end;
Are we the Soviets? Look around you.
"...Look at the opinion of our military amongst multi-generational serving families...."
This. Fathers, me, sons and daughter.... I cringe at the very idea that my grandsons (daughters) might continue in pursuit of ANY military service. such a sad state.
"China is clearly not only an ideological rival, firmly committed to Marxism-Leninism and one-party rule. It’s also a technological competitor—the only one the U.S. confronts in fields such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing. It’s a military rival, with a navy that is already larger than ours and a nuclear arsenal that is catching up fast. And it’s a geopolitical rival, asserting itself not only in the Indo-Pacific but also through proxies in Eastern Europe and elsewhere."
And guess who is pumping fentanyl over our borders to kill more people "than were killed in three major wars: Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan." We are at war and few have the guts to call it what it is! and We are getting our clock cleaned. They are slaughtering us and our fighting age productive age generation, and we have laid out the red carpet at the border to assist them. Because it is the same Bolsheviks in DC that are ideologically wed to the old school Bolsheviks that once peopled the Kremlin. They LOVED "Russia Russia Russia" until Russia collapsed and gave up on Communism and tried to revert to its Christian heritage. Meanwhile, "Our team on the left is now marching on the right.... " And it isn't that we COULDN'T win against Afghans any more than we COULDN'T WIN against the Viet Cong. It's that we WOULDN'T, because too many in DC make their fortunes to pay for their absurd houses in Loudoun, McLean, Clifton and Potomac from the never-ending wars. They WOULDN'T win. They refuse to. It's treasonous and disgusting beyond belief. Very few people have the guts to say that the gerontocracy that is willfully destroying our Republic needs to be making big rocks into small rocks at Gitmo and Leavenworth till they finally die, if the devil would take them.
Trump is the only one who seems to see this clearly and call out who the real enemy is, because China hasn't bought and paid for him. (P.S. do not be so sure his conflation of "Nancy and Nikki" wasn't entirely intentional. Both have profited tremendously from these never-ending wars.)
Great observations, Phib. We are the old time Soviet Union, without the cool subway though. The absolute crime of not bringing Russia into the community of nations in 1992 as a full trading partner and helping them weather the storm in becoming a market economy is to our everlasting shame. The peoples have much in common, and it could have been the economic partnership to dwarf all economic partnerships. Instead, we insisted on driving our father's Cold War Oldsmobile right into the ditch. 33 years later we pay the price for demonizing a nation that was ready to play the game more our way. We sure are stupid. Because now, we still can't see who the real enemy is. You've been ringing that bell for 2 decades and no one listened. Sad!