This July 4 comment is adapted from my book What's So Great About America. For more information on that or my other books, go to dineshdsouza.com
America is today the most loved society in the world--and the most hated. At a time when we are constantly lectured about our nation's flaws, it is useful to be reminded of the other side of the story. This July 4 weekend, it's worth thinking about what this country does right. The forgotten truth is that America
is still the most attractive society in the world, and its appeal is felt even by the children of the America-haters.
Whatever the flaws of American policy and American culture, let's remember that immigrants from every continent continue to brave dislocation and hardship to come to America
. Why do they do it? The conventional wisdom is that immigrants come to
for one reason: to make money. This notion is conveyed in the "rags to riches" literature on immigrants, and it is reinforced by 's critics, who like to think of America
as buying the affection of outsiders through the promise of making them filthy rich. But this Horatio Alger narrative is woefully incomplete; indeed, it misses the real attraction of Ameica
to immigrants, and to people around the world.
There is enough truth in the conventional account to give it a surface plausibility. Certainly America offers a degree of mobility and opportunity unavailable elsewhere, not even in
Europe . Only in America could Pierre Omidyar, whose ancestry is Iranian and who grew up in
, have started a company like eBay. Only in America
could Vinod Khosla, the son of an Indian army officer, become a shaper of the technology industry and a billionaire to boot.
In addition to providing unprecedented social mobility and opportunity, America
gives a better life to the ordinary guy than does any other country. Let's be honest: rich people live well everywhere. In fact if you are very rich, my advice to you is not to live in America
. The reason is that in most countries, but not in the United States
, money buys you the pleasure of aristocracy-the pleasure of being a superior human being. Americans, however, share a social ethic that is deeply egalitarian. Americans believe that no matter how much money Bill Gates has, he is not better than they are.
America's greatness is that it has extended the benefits of affluence, traditionally available to the very few, to a large segment in society. America is a country where "poor" people have television sets and microwave ovens, where maids drive rather nice cars, where plumbers take their families on vacation to
Europe . Recently I asked an acquaintance in Mumbai why he has been trying so hard to relocate to America
. He replied, "I really want to move to a country where the poor people are fat."
The typical immigrant, who is used to the dilapidated infrastructure, mind-numbing inefficiency, and multi-layered corruption of developing countries, arrives in America to discover, to his wonder and delight, that everything works: the roads are clean and paper-smooth, the highway signs are clear and accurate, the public toilets function properly, when you pick up the telephone you get a dial tone, you can even buy things from the store and then take them back. The American supermarket is a thing to behold: endless aisles of every imaginable product, many different types of cereal, fifty flavors of ice cream. The place is full of numerous unappreciated inventions: quilted toilet paper, fabric softener, cordless phones, disposable diapers, and roll-on luggage.
So, yes, in material terms America
offers the newcomer a better life. Still, the material allure of
does not capture the deepest source of its appeal. Recently I asked myself how my life would have been different if I had not come to America
. I was raised in a middle-class family in India
. I didn't have luxuries, but I didn't lack necessities. Materially, my life is better in the United States
, but it is not a fundamental difference. My life has changed far more dramatically in other ways.
Had I remained in India
, I would probably live my entire existence within a modest radius of where I was born. I would undoubtedly have married a woman of my identical caste, religious and socioeconomic background. I would face relentless pressure to become an engineer, like my father; a doctor, like a couple of my uncles; or a computer programmer. My socialization would have been almost entirely within my ethnic community. I would have a whole set of opinions on religion and politics and society that could be predicted in advance. In sum, my destiny would to a large degree have been given to me.
By coming to America
, I have seen my life break free of these traditional confines. At
Dartmouth
College, I became interested in literature, and switched my major to the humanities. Soon I developed a fascination with politics, and resolved to become a writer, which is something you can make a living doing in America, and which is not easy to do in India
. I married a woman of English, Scotch-Irish, French, and German ancestry. Eventually I found myself working in the White House, even though I was not an American citizen. I cannot imagine any other country allowing a non-citizen to work in its inner citadel of government.
In most of the world, even today, your identity and your fate are largely handed to you. This is not to say that you have no choice, but it is choice within given parameters. In America
, by contrast, you get to write the script of your own life. What to be, where to live, whom to love, whom to marry, what to believe, what religion to practice-these are all decisions that, in America
, we make for ourselves. Here we are the architects of our own destiny.
Some critics, both in
and abroad, have noted that this freedom to shape one's own life is not an unmixed blessing. Freedom can be used well or badly. Some Americans do indeed make mistakes with freedom, as the country's high divorce and illegitimacy rates suggest. These are unfortunate social trends, but we should remember that while freedom allows vice its scope, it also gives greater luster to virtue. It is no great achievement for an Indian couple to keep its marriage together, because the social stigma against divorce is prohibitive. By contrast, American couples who stay married deserve greater credit because they have chosen the good when the good is not the only practical option.
Those who have tasted the exhilaration of freedom-which entails responsibility for one's own choices and one's own life-can hardly imagine living in any other system. The core American idea is the "pursuit of happiness," which means that happiness is not a guarantee, but that
you have a chance to find it for yourself. No wonder that so many young people throughout the world are magnetically attracted to what
America represents: they find irresistible the prospect of being in the driver's seat of their lives. So, too, the immigrant discovers that America
permits him to break free of the constraints that have held him captive, so that the future becomes a landscape of his own choosing.
Reader Comments ( Page 3 of 11)
31. Mokele- remember what I profess about saying precisely what I mean?
I merely said he was finally being "honest". A shameless plug is just that.
P.S. Glad you got the voltage regulator working, your "America" post had me worried. LOL buddy!
ZZZZZZT! BOOOM!! AAAAAAAAAH.....
Robert at 11:45AM on Jul 3rd 2008
32. Last night I finally saw the 2G1C and BMEPO:FR videos (I finally have home internet). They take away a piece of your soul (esp. the latter), but the reaction videos (and academic essays!) bring joy back into your recently ruined life! I'm trying to decide how much I'm willing to pay to see the Objective Ministries folks forced to watch and react...
Someone wrote a critical essay about the feminist overtones (or is it undertones) of 2G1C. It's damn funny as the student analyzes the cinematic devices and direction, while the professor reacts with crimson ink. Grade? 0%!
Mokele Mbembe at 11:53AM on Jul 3rd 2008
33. Moke-
Clarification? 2G1C? BMEPO:FR?
Had actual work to do, must have missed those...
Robert at 11:57AM on Jul 3rd 2008
34. Robert,
It's a sensitive subject, so I'll spell them out sdrawkcab:
puc 1 slrig 2
dnuor lanif :scipmylo niap emb
Mokele Mbembe at 12:06PM on Jul 3rd 2008
35. Now that I know- glad that I did.
Happy Independence Day, Everyone!
Robert at 12:14PM on Jul 3rd 2008
36. One sees and hears this Dinesh guy giving his dgushing comments about America now and then on TV. America the most revered country. I spend a lot of time in Europe. Many Europeans came here, worked in the factories when there were manufacturing jobs that were unionized, married, raised families and reired. They had dual citizenship then. I run into these persons when visiting my son, an ex-pat living and raising a family in a country that is a democracy...a social democracey where workers are viewed as important to the national economic goals rather than cogs in the industrial wheel. There workers get 6 weeks vacation from day one of employment, a guaranteed government retirement which benefits move with the worker with job changes. Children get a free education through college or tchnical schools as long as they keep up their grades. One doesn't see many Germans, for instance, in unskilled jobs because they have an intellingent short term work program workers from other countries. Further, if one looks at the 25% smartest persons in either China or India as compared to the 25% smartest persons in the US, one finds both 25%ers from the first two as greater in number than the total population of the US (360 million?) The US has a system of education that made the industrial revolution of the 1800's a success. This is true, too, of the digital revolution. Unfortunately, even those talented persons in the computer game, hired by Gates Inc are many time kept as temps rather than full time workers, and then the corp hires workers from the international workforce as well and no person is migrating to upper middle class status. Can Dinesh offer up one area outside of the Defense Industry where America is number one? Education, no. Health Care, no. Auto building, no. Social welfare, no. Child care for working parents, no. Here's another example: When Norway found oil in the North Sea it became awash in petro dollars. Were these used to enrich the already rich? No, the money was used for the society as a whole on infra-structure such as, you won't believe this, heating sidewalks so business owners or city workers don't have to shovel and shoppers can walk safely. Dinesh should come out her to the Rocky Mountain West and drive the back roads where poverty hits you squarely in the eye. The last four redistributions of wealth have gone to the wealthiest .01 per cent-the wealthiest of the wealthy. Money is like manure. Stack it in one place and it stinks. Spread it around and things begin to grow. However, this country is in a decline from which it will never recover. George Carlin was right. Power does what power wants. And power wants voice likes Dinesh's out there pimping for the powerful. Good job, you know nothing.
Ken at 7:16PM on Jul 4th 2008
37.
Mokey left out the dirty letters, but if you add 'em in later, it's interesting. I know, republicans don't do I-ron-ee or sub-tile-tee, but it's still cool.....and in code, comrades!
uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc? uc?
OD'd on GOP.........
Clif Kuplen at 12:36PM on Jul 3rd 2008
38. It can all be summed up in one quote from the US constitution:
"No title of nobility shall be granted by the United States." -Article I, Section 9
I think that this is probably the most important line in the entire constitution. It's my favorite, at least.
Lamar at 12:58PM on Jul 3rd 2008
39.
Wow Moke - those girls set of 4th of July Fireworks.
Did you know I was on one of HBO's Sexbytes/Real Sex shows?
T.Brough at 1:13PM on Jul 3rd 2008
40. aw, you don't do the shameless self promotion BEFORE the article!
i think that dinesh is the kind of guy that was his own personal cock block at parties.
hannah at 1:19PM on Jul 3rd 2008
41. Despite all it's messes,America is still the best nation in the world.Why?Because you can say 'Our Goverment is rubbish'and still have your rights respected.And you can be as powerful as George .w or william j.,and still get called into account for any wrongdoing you do.Dont lose hope America,You are still the number 1.
mad african christian at 1:25PM on Jul 3rd 2008
42. Nationalism is one of the great evils of our time. But this isn't the weekend or the blog to discuss that topic.
Everyone have a great 4th!
Ryan Anderson at 2:25PM on Jul 3rd 2008
43. I'm having a great 3rd
Mokele Mbembe at 2:57PM on Jul 3rd 2008
44. "Dont lose hope America"
I'm audaciously hoping for change.
Mokele Mbembe at 2:58PM on Jul 3rd 2008
45. Well back from vacation and just in time for a new Dinesh article.
Hmmm...
Hmmmmmmm...
Wow. For once I really don't have much to disagree with. Allow me my take, if you will.
Dinesh must have been feeling oddly liberal when he wrote this piece, but I think the 4th brings the liberal out in all of us. It's a secular holiday where there's not a cross or prayer in sight. It's like thanksgiving, a purely America construction which in particular allows us all to freely wallow in our Americaness for a day and maybe a weekend and for a short time ignore the political disagreements and social arguments and just take pride and enjoyment at being American with other Americans.
And yes, I know some folks will pray for America, about America, or to America but you won't hear an Amen when the fireworks go up.
Of course, when the fireworks go out and the barbeque is digested we'll have to go from looking at the glass as red white and blue to it being half empty and take up all the familiar arguments about why it happens to be that way. But for right now we can just take comfort that today a insolent, rebellious, revolutionary, and quite possibly manically insane country was born and despite all the odds; remains today one of the better places a person can live.
Somber at 3:00PM on Jul 3rd 2008