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Nine Ways Our World Changed During the ‘00s
Corporations get still more powerful. A middle-class living slips away from millions. Climate change becomes deadly. War, and more war. Looking back on the '00s (uh ohs) and the nine trends that changed our world.
What was the decade of the '00s about? What trends showed up in the last 10 years that will set the stage for the '10s? The following nine trends are a snapshot of some of the driving forces we're dealing with now at the turn of the decade. In my next column, I write about the 12 innovations from the '00s that we can build on for a more just and sustainable decade.
1. The rich got really, really rich, and then got a spanking. During the irrational exuberance of the ‘90s and early ‘00s, it seemed like anybody should be able to get rich betting on bubbles. Pundits predicted there would be no end to the expansion of wealth and that we had transcended the business cycle. But the dot com bubble burst, then the housing bubble, and the financial bubble. Most of the rich are still rich—the bailouts made sure of that. But driving a Bentley is now considered poor taste, and populist anger is growing. The gap between rich and poor is growing, too, while the ladder out of poverty is splintering.
2. Middle class existence went from steadily stagnant to downright precarious. Necessities like housing, energy, food, education, and medical care all climbed, while incomes stagnated. Families survived by working increasing hours, and by going into debt, using their homes as collateral. When the Great Recession hit, we learned that being middle class had been a bubble, too. And the billions that Wall Street took in bailouts hasn’t “trickled down” to ordinary people or to the real economy.
3. Mother Earth came up to bat. At the beginning of the decade, it was just the environmentalists, scientists, and some very forward-looking elected officials talking about the hazards of climate change, along with the insurance companies that have to pay for the increasing rates of wild fires, floods, and other climate-related disasters. Today, Pentagon brass, business owners, religious leaders, farmers, foresters, and people at all levels of government are seeing the danger and looking for ways to stop the disruption of the climate. The global leaders at Copenhagen struck out, but Mother Earth bats last.
4. We found a new enemy. We called the enemy “terror,” and we made war on it. Rather than use proven counter-terrorism strategies of sophisticated police work plus intelligence, the Bush administration used the shock of 9/11 to justify ultimately futile invasions and occupations. Then they added torture and a crack-down on civil liberties abroad and at home. It’s hard to measure the costs in traumatized civilians and soldiers, the dead and dying, refugees and broken societies, billions of added national debt, and the tarnished reputation of the United States. But here’s one gauge: Invading Afghanistan has already helped bring down one superpower. The ‘00s set the stage for us to follow the Soviet Union’s example.
5. First we hated government. Later, we loved it. Government was revealed at its worst during Hurricane Katrina, when sheriff deputies blocked fleeing citizens from crossing a bridge to safety and the federal government offered little more than black booted Blackwater guards to maintain “security” and a morale-boosting “Good job, Brownie!” from the commander in chief. Maybe it’s to be expected that a president who hates government would turn over emergency preparedness to cronies and crooks. On the other hand, when the uber-greed of Wall Street threatened to bring the global economy to its knees, it turned out government could act quickly and effectively to keep the money flowing.
6. The Republican Party collapsed as a trusted force for reasoned governance, driven into the ground by the incompetence of its president, by unjustifiable and devastating military campaigns, and by policies that turned the economy over to corporate powers, who took it over a cliff. Economic fundamentalism and neoconservativism are now understood to be dystopian fantasies, and all that’s left for those who remain in the party is to flail around with tea bagging, climate denial, and attempts to kill anything that doesn’t bolster the military-industrial complex, the wealthy, and big business.
7. The Democratic Party collapsed as a trusted force for reasoned governance when, in spite of having an overwhelming mandate from the American people for real change, elected officials allowed corporations and their lobbyists to call the shots on health care reform, regulation of Wall Street speculation, and climate legislation. The resulting policies shored up the stock market but did little to help ordinary people, who became increasingly alienated from the party.
8. China continued its rapid ascent, moving quietly into position to become the next superpower. The U.S. debt to China, coupled with the transfer of most manufacturing capacity abroad—especially to China—hampered efforts to rebuild the U.S. economy, and weakened our global position. (This is one more outcome of corporate power, to add to 1-7 above.)
9. We began to hear whispers of the End Times, including the best selling post-rapture “Left Behind” series, the new disaster flick 2012, and the prophesies related to the Mayan calendar (Google it, and you’ll get over 8 million hits). The real end times might be more straightforward. At the same time Wall Street wealth was soaring (with a short setback in 2008), the ‘00s witnessed a crash in the real wealth that keeps civilizations alive: fresh water, climate stability, trust and solidarity with fellow human beings, reliable public infrastructure, healthy soil and forests, resilient agriculture, sound governance, livelihoods that can meet basic necessities. Our way of life is increasingly precarious as we import much more than our fair share of the world’s declining supply of fossil energy and of other resources, bring the climate to the brink of runaway change. The end times of this consumption lifestyle are, indeed, upon us.
But wait, there are signs, too, that people are pulling out of this downward spiral. In the ‘00s, people around the world turned away from obsolete ways of life, and went to work building the foundations of a world where our families and communities can thrive along with the natural systems that we rely on. The seeds are already planted. In my next column, I’ll list the 12 innovations begun in the ‘00s that we can build on in the 2010s.

23 Comments so far
Show AllEntropy rules. We are headed downward and will not stop until we hit the bottom. This doesn't mean one shouldn't try to do something about it, but it does mean such efforts are ultimately futile.
Only a total overthrow of the current system is going to work. Look outside. See any mass protests? See people banging pots and pans in the streets? See any truckers blocking the routes to the cities? Nope, nope, and nope.
So when will the American people get up and start fighting back? I suspect around the starvation riots coming by the next decades end. But by then, it will hardly matter.
Enjoy the rest of your lives.
Entropy requies a closed system, and is Earth really that? We have to capacity to alter our environment not only for the worst. I hope.
Maybe we need to create a new universe (theorically possible) and start all over? Hmmm.
Gary
Take those away and who do you think they'll revolt against? Republicans?
Whomever is "in power" as stalking horses for their Corporate Masters (unless you want to believe in the Grand Conspiracy of a New World Order). That's why we have elections -- to have people to blame. Or shoot...
Gary
Man we can't worry about such trivial shit. Get a grip people. We have to focus our attention on important things! Some crazy terrorist tried to blow his nuts off on an air plane. Never mind that health care bullshit. We're gonna need all that money to fight terrorism and launch a new war in Yemen. Oh man and all this is happening when the new season of Merican Idol is starting. What a fucking disaster!!!!!!!
Of the seven points elucidated by Sarah van Gelder, the ones with the most dramatic impact (and which are sort of intertwined) is global warming and the rise of China. The others are merely signs of the USA continuing along its' "Great Lurch Backwards" to a repeat of the Robber Baron era with Third World dressing.
All of what has happened so far in this darkening century will be trumped by the Dying oceans that are right ahead. ACIDIFICATION of the Oceans will take us to the world predicted in the 70's B-sci fi movie Soylent Green. Blieve it, its already happening and its going to ake a thousand yrs. to even begin to repair the massive damage it will cause to the life systems on this Planet.
I think you have the title for this decade - the Uh Oh's have my vote.
It has been a really bad ten years, and I don't think it is going to turn on a dime(no pun intended, well maybe)this next decade.
I'll sit with my 6-year-old granddaughter tonight and try to imagine what life is going to be like for her when she is 16 for the next turning decade. What's it going to be like? Am I going to be around to see it? What will her prospects be? Barefoot and pregnant or a satisfying career? The choices we continue to make these next few years will tell the tale.
I agree with egospark, hunger will tell the tale. We will either pull together to gain some respect from our government or we will all be serfs in the New World Order.
She neglected to mention the population growth of 750,000,000 during the decade.
You know, you're right. How about I hold them all down, while you shoot them?
"zmann December 31st, 2009 6:44 pm"
"You know, you're right. How about I hold them all down, while you shoot them?"
Nuanced solution with a classy delivery.
You are absolutely right. Even progressives like Sarah Van Gelder no longer mention population growth among their chief concerns. The present world population probably cannot be fed without reliance on artificial fertilizers, produced with natural gas, which cannot last forever. When it's gone or priced out of reach, mass famine is likely. In the meantime US politicians cave to right-to-life fanatics and Muslim crazies want to keep their women folks barefoot and pregnant in a burka. Only China has an official policy on population restriction, harsh as it is.
Hopefully the twelve innovations won't be more 1984 mirrorspeak; since we're already memory-holing Oceania's war with Eurasia and morphing it into one with Eastasia: Barry Crusades and DEMcrappy health "care"! Uh Ohs, indeed!!
I don't know if you'll see this, boysgramps, but I can't help wishing my first early "Happy New Year" to a fellow cynic.
I had the same thought. I understand that our trying times naturally cause a spike in the production of manufactured optimism, but there is no corresponding spike in my tolerance for the abundance of happy horseshit served up to meet the demand.
I didn't say anything right away, because in spite of the generally cynical and caustic tenor of my comments, I really DO fight with myself to try and be NICE once in a while, and not always so MEAN and MISERABLE.
Hmm, I'm probably in too precarious a position with that to risk checking out the twelve innovations, though. Maybe when the time comes, I'll check for your review in the comments first.
· Yr Obd't Servant
YES! Magazine usually has great stuff...it helps keep me optimistic.
and worst of all, we got stuck with Obama to drag us into the next decade.
She left out expanding warfare as one aspect of Democratic misgovernance.
As we live and breathe the Extravagance Era is coming to a close. All our woes are symptoms of unbridled human growth and behavior.
Misunderstood struggles of contolling the diversity of life on our planet "earth" have run it's course. More and more people see the folly of supporting selfish corporate doctrine and deviations of religious beliefs.
Enlightenment will peacefully bring humanity back on course. We will evolve past the bling and learn to harmonize.
"when humans willingly decide to do good it far outstrips when we do bad"
r-evolution
b l a c k l a b
The decade where things change but really remain the same. Wars, violence, destruction- nothing changes. Singular acts of courage and mass acts of cowardice- Fear and occasional compassion. And as always a predilection for lies over the truth- illusion over reality and a growing inability to peal the words away and recognize what is in the heart. The inability to see what is beautiful. A mass narcosis leading to death and destruction... Deep repressed anger- ready to spring into action at any moment. Endless generations of violence and perpetuated fear. Mass projection of ego. Mass victimization.
Nuclear destruction has been avoided and environmental destruction becomes irreversible-possibly leading to the former.
All of this inviting compassion from the Gods and endless pain for those that see- see into themselves and see into others. Those that bear the full weight of our cruelty- our genocides.
Perhaps if you recognized the illusion of change you would begin to awaken. Otherwise you are more victims than awakened beings.
Go back to sleep or awaken. There is a choice- and therein lies the hope.
Reagan declared a "war on terror" while his wife declared her "war on drugs," proving to advertisers that one could sell Americans most anything by calling it "war."
Reagan's "war on terror" was a rhetorical device to claim moral high ground while killing women and children to rule other nations, just like Bush or 0bama.
So the rhetorical twist was an invention of the 1980's. The general method has precedents written in hieroglyphics.
Likewise "whispers of the end times" started before Nostradamus. Admittedly, they're starting to make more sense.
The two big lollipops the rich got seem a bit much for their spanking, but I will withhold judgement. We may have another session coming out by the shed.