Ask HN: Is it just me or does the US look really broken?
However, I've been finding it more and more depressing lately. Is it just me, or does it seem like America is getting worse and worse?
I'm a US citizen currently in Shanghai and it's been almost a year since I've been home so I don't know how bad it is on the ground, but from the news it looks horrible and only going downhill...
From the TSA http://www.reddit.com/r/reddit.com/comments/fngfo/why_i_stopped_travelling_to_the_us_and_i_largely/
To the VC world http://www.pehub.com/96111/its-not-a-bubble-people-its-a-pyramid-scheme/
To the government shutting down sites http://torrentfreak.com/u-s-government-shuts-down-84000-websites-by-mistake-110216/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+Torrentfreak+(Torrentfreak)
To IP laws http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=2011021108493059
To academia http://blog.devicerandom.org/2011/02/18/getting-a-life/
More importantly, there doesn't seem to be anyone doing anything about these issues. Khan Academy and the Nissan Leaf seem to be the only positive posts. Just wondering what other people think.
17 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 49.3 ms ] threadThings are pretty awesome in the U.S. of A as far as I'm concerned.
Oh and last year I attended John Stewart's Restore Sanity gathering at the mall (and I wasn't shot at!)
Last year, 2010, 3 million homes received a note that they were in some stage of foreclosure. 1 million homes were repossessed by lenders.
Granted all those homes may not be occupied, but most likely were. Think about what a million families actually look like... homeless, in motels, in cars, at in-laws.
US citizens need to start addressing some of these issues.
I didn't buy a house because I educated myself about the 3X rule. You should only buy a house that is worth 3X your income.
Did Wall Street screw a lot of vulnerable people? Yes. But people like Elizabeth Warren, who leads the new Consumer Protection Bureau are making substantive improvements to the system.
If you're actually getting depressed by this (and you wouldn't be the first) then you need to stop and take stock of the real world through your real senses and think about how much of your life you want to burn up on things that don't actually involve you or that you can't or won't do anything about. You have to ask yourself how many of those things you actually care about personally vs. how many are just sensory input you're just reacting to because it's been put in front of you. If you care, you can do something. If you don't, you can turn off the input.
I'm not saying that everything on that list isn't a problem, but at least they're getting attention and people are looking at them. We still have a free (if somewhat immature) media, and we shouldn't forget that there's a huge selection bias in what makes it to the news.
Doubt things are going too badly for you in Shanghai though?
I also found that when I was in China for a while in 2009, the 12 hour time different made America feel very, very far away, and things seemed even stranger and weirder as a result - but maybe that was just me. It made things seem feel out of touch not only by distance, but time as well.
These caveats aside, there are plenty of awful things going on in the USA right now, and huge systemic problems which are unfortunately not being approached in serious fashions. This being said, it's level of 'broken-ness' is probably not particularly greater than it was, say, last year, or the year before.
When I want to sigh and get depressed about America, I look at the news that I see about Japan and that reminds me that people only really want to report/read about the worst/weirdest of a country, really. Japan isn't all herbivorous otaku, whale killers, and child molesters. America isn't all idiocracy, TSA gropers, and embezzlers.
Another way to look at it is that every single American startup post or Ask HN you see here is a positive post -- these are people trying to live the American dream and pull themselves up by their bootstraps. Idealized? Maybe. But it's certainly not negative.
Why am I telling you this? As long as "the little guy" believes that if you're intelligent and willing to work hard, you can achieve great things in America (in many places around the world this is not always the case), this country has a future. I for one, believe in the American dream and am willing to work hard to live it and preserve it for generations to come.