
I want to begin by posting a few quick follow-ups to some previous pieces.
The Omnicause: Recently, I did a Symposium podcast with writer Alysia Ames about the left-wing phenomenon of the “Omnicause,” and I was surprised to see it get a prominent mention in The Free Press within days.
The Trough of Disillusionment: I mentioned recently how artificial intelligence has entered the Trough of Disillusionment. I forgot to include a little snippet I had cut from a previous article: Perhaps the most amusing misuse of AI is highlighted in a recent study which indicates that a significant percentage of academic peer review responses might by AI-generated. This is less an indictment of AI than of academics, some of whom apparently view peer review less as a sacred obligation to maintain the intellectual standards of the field and more as a bit of drudgery to be given the least possible effort.
The Paradox of Heterodox Orthodoxy: I wrote about the late stage of the Intellectual Dark Web, in which heterodoxy is turning into an orthodoxy of its own. I want to point you to a subsequent piece by Cathy Young exploring this “paradox of heterodox orthodoxy”—man, I wish I had written that phrase—and particularly how its grave concerns about threats to freedom from the left contrast with its “‘no enemies on the right’ blind spot.”
“Somebody Offered Me Something”: I’ve been looking around at coverage of Donald Trump’s speech at the Libertarian convention. I sometimes think maybe I should write a work of political satire or parody, but then I think: Why bother? What could I come up with that could compete with the absurdity of real life? Trump’s speech at the Libertarian Party convention had everything. He asked for the party’s nomination but hadn’t filed the paperwork. He declared, “I sure as hell am a Libertarian now” specifically because he has been indicted on multiple felonies. Libertarians leaned into that part of their reputation by choosing, as one of their top demands, that he free Ross Ulbricht, who ran a “dark web” drug market. And to stay on brand, one of the Libertarian candidates, Michael Rectenwald, admitted that the reason he bailed out of a candidates’ forum, declaring that the questions were “boring,” is because he had taken a dose of edible marijuana. “I’m at a Libertarian Party convention. Somebody offered me something.” This really sums up the directionlessness of the party, doesn’t it?
The Worm in the Brain: All of that pales in comparison to a story I haven’t had a chance to comment on yet, partly because I’m not really sure what more there is to say about it: the news that Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., had a worm eat part of his brain. My only question is: Are we sure he’s the only one?
O Tempora, O Mores!
All of this might have you throwing up your hands and exclaiming, “O tempora, o mores!” Yet I just came across an absolutely brilliant bit of analysis in the Washington Post that warns against the dangers of false nostalgia.
Pollsters from YouGov set out to find which era was “the good old days,” so they “asked 2,000 adults which decade had the best and worst music, movies, economy and so forth, across 20 measures.” They found no consensus.
We did spot some peaks: When asked which decade had the most moral society, the happiest families, or the closest-knit communities, white people and Republicans were about twice as likely as black people and Democrats to point to the 1950s. The difference probably depends on whether you remember that particular decade for “Leave it to Beaver,” drive-in theaters, and 12 Angry Men—or the Red Scare, the murder of Emmett Till, and massive resistance to school integration.
As one expert puts it, “nostalgia is colored by political preferences. Surprise, surprise.”
But any political, racial or gender divides were dwarfed by what happened when we charted the data by generation. Age, more than anything, determines when you think America peaked.
So, we looked at the data another way, measuring the gap between each person’s birth year and their ideal decade. The consistency of the resulting pattern delighted us: It shows that Americans feel nostalgia not for a specific era, but for a specific age.
The good old days when America was “great” aren’t the 1950s. They’re whatever decade you were 11, your parents knew the correct answer to any question, and you’d never heard of war crimes tribunals, microplastics, or improvised explosive devices. Or when you were 15 and athletes and musicians still played hard and hadn’t sold out.
This is not a big surprise. This article mentions another study a few years ago indicating that nostalgia for music tends to center around whatever was popular when you were 17. After that, you become convinced that our music was so much better than that noise the kids are listening to these days.
It’s revealing how much nostalgia about economics and politics, not to mention the tempora and the mores, is formed at a very young age, often under the age of 10. This implies that everything looked better when we were surrounded by protective adults who shielded us from everything bad in the world—and when we weren’t responsible for anything.
The flipside of this is that for everyone, things are the worst in the present.
[A]lmost without exception, if you ask an American when times were worst, the most common response will be “right now!”
This holds true even when “now” is clearly not the right answer. For example, when we ask which decade had the worst economy, the most common answer is today. The Great Depression—when, for much of a decade, unemployment exceeded what we saw in the worst month of pandemic shutdowns—comes in a grudging second.
What follows is a discussion of “declinism” and the tendency of the past to always look better in retrospect than it felt at the time. We remember the good parts and tend to forget the bad parts. Their conclusion? Wait long enough and “the 2020s will be the good old days.”
The Good Old Days
I am fascinated by the idea that when we feel nostalgia, we are not feeling nostalgia for the way things were back then. We are feeling nostalgia for the way we were back then.
Similarly, I suspect that when we feel dissatisfaction with our current time, we are actually expressing dissatisfaction with our current stage of life (which we will later look back on with hazy nostalgia). So the Boomer conservatives who think the culture has gone down the tubes are to some extent just expressing the frustration of old age and the sense that they are no longer the ones shaping events in a world that is passing them by. Similarly, young conservative men who flirt with the alt-right and complain that feminism has ruined everything are often just complaining that they can’t get a date. It has become a cliché for them to report on moderating their views after they begin to get their lives together.
Among young people on the left, the version of this you hear most often is that the older generations have ruined the world for young people, who are unable to afford anything or live a decent life because everything is outside their reach. What they are actually complaining about is that they are in their 20s, an age at which they are no longer supported by the higher level of wealth accumulated by their parents, yet they are still in relatively low-paying entry level jobs. They have entered an adult world where they see all sorts of enticing things they would like to own or enjoy, but they can’t afford very much of it yet.
This is not an economic condition caused by capitalism or even (necessarily) by any particular outside events or economic upheaval. It is merely one of the conditions of youth.
And this is why we need to rely on data rather than vibes to understand what is going on in the world. It turns out that even as every generation complains that the world was ruined by the generations before it, every generation is actually better off and wealthier at each stage of life than their forerunners. And that includes the latest generation to whine about their fate, Generation Z, according to an article in The Economist with the delightful title, “Gen Z Is Unprecedentedly Rich.”
In America hourly pay growth among 16- to 24-year-olds recently hit 13% year on year, compared with 6% for workers aged 25 to 54. This was the highest ‘young person premium’ since reliable data began (see chart 3). In Britain, where youth pay is measured differently, the average hourly pay of people aged 18-21 rose by an astonishing 15% last year, outstripping pay rises among other age groups by an unusually wide margin. In New Zealand the average hourly pay of people aged 20-24 increased by 10%, compared with an average of 6%.
Strong wage growth boosts family incomes. A new paper by Kevin Corinth of the American Enterprise Institute, a think-tank, and Jeff Larrimore of the Federal Reserve assesses Americans’ household income by generation, after accounting for taxes, government transfers and inflation. Millennials were somewhat better off than Gen X—those born between 1965 and 1980—when they were the same age. Zoomers, however, are much better off than millennials were at the same age. The typical 25-year-old Gen Z-er has an annual household income of over $40,000, more than 50% above baby-boomers at the same age.
None of this is a surprise, because that is exactly what we should expect in a functioning, dynamic economy—constant growth that ensures every generation will be better off than the one before.
As I pointed out a while back, we are becoming an upper-middle-class country. But we will get there while constantly complaining.
For related ideas, see my comments about sense of life, the blue dots of outrage, and the message of Groundhog Day. I have a feeling I am going to have to integrate all of these observations into a wider theory at some point.
Tomorrow, as a further case for optimism and against false nostalgia, I’ll send out a note with a few links to stories about crises averted and new scientific innovations—the essential activities of human life that we don’t always spend enough time focusing on.
Except for the fact that I am still recovering from a lung transplant, and my 69 year old body is wearing out, this is by far the best time of my life. When I think back on how my life was growing up, I was very happy, but the quality of life was primitive compared to today. The technological, medical, information, entertainment and on and on improvements from that time to this are staggering. My life is infinitely more interesting and enjoyable with many, many, many more choices available to me than my parents ever had in the 60's and 70's. And from where I sit this applies to almost everyone. Regardless of all the grievance-mongers out there, people of all different colors, ethnic persuasions and economic circumstances have far, far greater opportunities to live wonderful, successful lives than they ever have in history. Now, if we could do something about our politicians and our universities, we would truly be in a utopia.
Neil Young was wrong…Rock and Roll has died, but the old geezeris still shaking his money maker guitar and riding the gravy train on his Crazy Horse…all the while having lost his tripping mind railing about the world’s biggest podcaster MDMA, I mean MMA fighter having the audacity of dope to express a political opinion!…about something that is happening here, that the anti Vietnam war guitar hero’s big ears and drug addled mind did not like the sound of…Spotify this kids these dayz….We the people of the United States have never had more disposable income….so much so, if you don’t pimp your own ride to high school today it is because the kid’s parents are immigrants that just got here. In my college freshman dorm in the late 80’s there were only three kids in the hall that had a car! And going out for dinner was a big freaking deal, not to mention rarity. Kids these dayz
Anywho, speaking of the good ole80’s dayz…I can’t believe the so called Libertarian party animals invited Morton Downey , Jr. to give their commencement speech and I have become a true believer Idiocracy is based on a true story… So when it comes to mass entertainment Happy Days are not here again and a fabulist that was rightfully run out of the 88’ Presidential race is now running for reelection against a deuce, as in the grapper, impeached reality tv porn star….who woulda thaught such a thing could happen in civilized society! Oh, and China and Russia are besties boyz trying to take over their worlds. And wannabe 7th century Mohammedans who actually still truly believe the Hadith is non fiction and all jooozes should be….Oh, wait, maybe these were not the good old days. Pray to end Trumpism or get ready for Kamala. God help U.S. Gotta run on. Thanks for taking my rant An Atheist that still reads the Holy Bible. Peace through superior mental firepower