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-Great Cultural Revolution
No, We Don't Actually Need to Be More Like Europe
2021-11-16
[National Review] t Bloomberg, Allison Schrager hopes that our current supply-chain issues serve to alter Americans’ behavior. "Suddenly," Schrager writes, "Americans can’t spend like they used to. Store shelves are emptying, and it can take months to find a car, refrigerator or sofa. If this continues, we may need to learn to do without — and, horrors, live more like the Europeans. That actually might not be a bad thing."

Counterpoint: Yes, it would.

I don’t want to live in Europe, or to "live more like the Europeans do." This is not because I am inflexibly "anti-European." There are many wonderful things about Europe, and I will happily wax lyrical about them when asked. But, having spent a great deal of time in both places, I can assure you that it is considerably easier to live in America than it is to live in Europe, and that one of the main reasons for that — beyond Americans’ being so stonkingly rich — is that Americans are far, far more demanding of their marketplaces. For Americans to look at their temporarily broken supply-chain system and to conclude, "Oh well, I suppose it is for the best, let’s leave it there," would be both profoundly out of character and profoundly destructive to our way of life. We do not, under any circumstances, need to "learn to do without."

It is fashionable in certain circles to deride American "consumerism" as being in some way gauche. Indeed, Schrager herself comes close to this when she complains that Americans have a bad habit of buying "stuff we don’t really need." But this is an argument that makes sense only if we accept that other people — be they academics, politicians, or columnists for Bloomberg — are in a better position to determine what constitutes "stuff we don’t really need" than are individual American citizens. In a free market, there is no such thing as "need"; there is demand, and there is supply. Schrager praises America’s tendency to "come up with new products and better ways of doing things," but she implicitly narrows her praise to those "products" and "things" of which she personally approves, as if there exists a list somewhere at Harvard on which the iPhone has been marked "Worthy" and Hot Pockets have been marked "Uncouth." Certainly, I am baffled by the way in which many Americans choose to spend their money, just as I am baffled by people who have musical or gastronomical tastes that are completely at odds with my own. But it’s a free country, and providing that they aren’t hurting anyone, the private choices of other American consumers are precisely none of my business. You have a buyer and a seller? Good luck to you.
Posted by:Besoeker

#5  And don't let them forget the Euros brought us Marxism - 100M dead and counting.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2021-11-16 13:02  

#4  Europe should be a bit more like America.
Posted by: ruprecht   2021-11-16 10:41  

#3  But, but, Europe is so sophistimacated and such
Posted by: Frank G   2021-11-16 09:49  

#2  Look at how much good "being like Europe" has done for Europe.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2021-11-16 08:57  

#1  Some people forget all too easily, there were fundamental reasons we broke off from Europe over two hundred years ago. Got to remember they dragged us into their wars twice in the last century.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2021-11-16 07:57  

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