Bob Schwartz

Month: May, 2025

It is time to start rebuilding American life NOW

There are various estimates of how long it will take to rebuild American life—its economy, its culture, its society—following the ongoing attempts to tear it down and throw it back to 1913, or the Gilded Age, or whatever era is thought by some to be better (meaning: better for them). The rebuilding estimates range from a few years to a generation or more.

Those of us who believe that America is not perfect—what nation is?—but that America has generally been on the right track toward a better future, based on its core principles, shouldn’t wait.

We shouldn’t wait and don’t have to. For example, if books are banned and removed from public libraries and schools, we start our own non-public libraries and start giving away books that contain a broad view. And speaking of schools, if universities are being told by the government what to teach and what not to teach, we start our own schools, not dependent on federal funding, not to promote any particular ideology except the philosophy of openness. And so on.

Where will the resource for these initiatives come from? It might come from ordinary citizens. But it is an open secret that there are Americans with progressive leanings and vast fortunes. Let them help with the rebuilding, not later when it will be that much harder, but now when a rebuilding effort will inspire and encourage, reminding us not that there will be light at the end of a tunnel but that we are only in the tunnel if we allow ourselves to believe it.

The American Cultural Revolution is underway


The Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) was a sociopolitical campaign launched by Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong aimed at preserving “true” Communist ideology and purging remnants of capitalist and traditional elements from Chinese society.

Key features included:

  • Mass mobilization of urban youth (“Red Guards”) to attack political enemies
  • Widespread persecution of intellectuals and officials deemed “counter-revolutionary”
  • Destruction of historical artifacts, temples, and cultural sites
  • Public humiliation and violence against “class enemies”
  • Forced relocation of urban intellectuals to rural areas for “re-education”
  • Significant economic disruption and educational collapse

The movement resulted in millions of deaths, destroyed countless cultural artifacts, and severely damaged China’s economy and education system. It ended shortly after Mao’s death in 1976, with Deng Xiaoping later implementing reforms that moved China away from radical Maoism.

Claude


Mao’s Cultural Revolution was a brutal setback for China, one that took them decades to recover from. As the name says, it was much more than a political initiative. Every aspect of life in China—social, cultural, educational, economic—was to be upended, so that communism could prevail eternally and so that every remnant of Western and capitalist “wrong thinking” could be eliminated—along with those who carried the infection.

For a while, American analysts have understandably focused on the political, governmental and legal aspects of the current administration. But there are elements so obviously social and cultural that the centrality of those aspects is unavoidable. Among these, there have been express demands that universities tow the line on issues far beyond DEI and antisemitism—or else.

An American Cultural Revolution is underway. Will it look anything like Mao’s version, with “wrong thinkers” killed, imprisoned, re-educated or otherwise isolated, punished and corrected? Will it succeed here, in whole or in part?

Yesterday, the long-serving Librarian of Congress was summarily dismissed without warning or reason, apparently for making one of the world’s great cultural repositories too “woke”. What do you think?

Why polls don’t matter in slowing the trajectory of tyranny

There are two benefits of the polls showing increased dislike of Trump and his policies.

It is a benefit to news media, who always need something tantalizing to talk about.

It is a benefit to those who oppose Trump, inspiring and encouraging that opposition, with hope that Republicans who have to run in two years will see the signs.

But in practical terms, even as polls seem to indicate dissatisfaction, these polls mean little.

Tyranny is a power game, not a game of numbers, but of power strategically grabbed, held and exercised.

History says that authoritarians don’t need widespread support to succeed, or even majority support. Modern history’s most glaring example is Nazi Germany. In the last democratic election, before democracy was ended, the Nazi party won only 23% of the vote for the legislature. In one of the most fateful mistakes ever, “clever” leaders thought that by bringing Hitler into government, he could be controlled and his potential power diluted and diminished. That is not what happened.

Be inspired and encouraged by the polls. But know that even if two-thirds of America rejects the policies, many or most of those policies will still be pursued. This is a juggernaut on a mission, an opportunity to literally remake America. Polls will not stop that.

Democracy Awakens 2016

President wants Britain to pay for U.S. defending Europe against Hitler. How about those Crown Jewels?

British Prime Minister: Mr. President, as you know, Europe is in dire shape. It may be a matter of days before Britain is defeated by Hitler. We need your help.

U.S. President: Sure. How much are you willing to pay?

PM: Mr. President?

President: We can’t just give you things without getting something back. So let’s make a deal. The treasures in Europe mostly aren’t available right now. But you still have your own British treasures. Your Crown Jewels are worth a few billion dollars. Let us have those now and we will give you all the defense you need. And when we win, I know that France and Italy also have treasures. We can negotiate for those. A lot of gold there. That Vatican has plenty.

PM: Mr. President?

President: Let me know how it’s going in the war. If you want to make a deal, you know where to find me.

Moses and the three coyotes

Who are you and what are you doing here, the three coyotes asked.

They call me Moses, because as an infant I was set afloat and was picked out of the water by a princess, and then…it’s a long story. I wandered in a desert for a long time and I got used to it. So I’m trying out other deserts.

This is the Sonoran Desert, the three coyotes said. What are you carrying? It looks like a stick and a stone.

The stick is a magic staff. It can turn into a snake. The stone is a bunch of sayings. Do you want to hear them?

No we don’t, the three coyotes said. We don’t need a stick that turns into a snake. We’ve got plenty of snakes of our own.

Well, I guess I’ll be moving on, Moses said. I’m sure I’ll see you again.

Not if we see you first, the three coyotes said.

© 2025 by Bob Schwartz