Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
The American Paradox
The American Paradox
Dec 20, 2025 12:23 PM

In one sense, this is a book that would make any economist happy. In describing the material and spiritual “state of the union,” Myers uses a framework of “on one hand” and “on the other hand.” Harry Truman once remarked that he wanted a one-armed economist to avoid hearing bination. But here, it is a pleasing characteristic, as Myers provides a thorough and mostly balanced survey of the relevant research on an array of topics that are crucial to the health of our country.

Myers opens with a question to frame the dilemma: Are we better off than we were forty years ago? In brief, he answers “yes” in terms of material well-being and “no” in terms of moral and emotional well-beingwhat he describes as a seeming paradox. “Never has a culture experienced such bined with such psychological misery,” he writes. Even casual observers of current events can see bination Myers documentsmost people are experiencing increasing wealth and opportunity, while some are stuck in economic poverty and many have descended into spiritual poverty.

Christians will find reason to enjoy and respect Myers's book, given that his religious faith informs his worldview. This is most evident in his passion for the vulnerable in our society, paired with his unwillingness to downplay personal responsibilitysadly, a bination. Both optimists and pessimists will find anecdotal and statistical fodder to bolster their views. (Myers is guardedly optimistic in view of what he sees as improvements since the early 1990s and an increase in efforts to address society's social problems.) Careful thinkers will be impressed by the way he understands and explains statistics (carefully distinguishing between correlation and causation) and the attempts of social scientists to determine cause and effect.

Myers's topics are widely variedsexuality, marriage and family, crime, materialism, individualism, entertainment and the media, education and its impact on values, and the role of faith. He documents familiar and not-so-familiar indicators, and he quotes a wide range of people. The book is eminently readable and scrupulously documented.

But all that said, Myers's effort is unnecessarily annoying at times, especially when the author submits to mon fallacy that everyone is an economist. His understanding of cause and effect outside of his discipline is standard but limitedmuch as if I were to write a book on some aspect of social psychology after reading a few books on the topic. The result: At times, the economic analysis is lacking, and the political analysis is naive or too hopeful. Of course, it would be difcult for him to write well about this subject without passionate personal views, but, unfortunately, those views are not as well informed as his understanding of the academic literature.

The book is sprinkled with examples of this lack of economic analysis, but in this context, a brief list will have to sufce. From the realm of economics, he mon confusions about ceo salaries; the impact of the minimum wage and other mandated benets; rms looking for the cheapest labor independently of productivity concerns; spread-the-work proposals; and overpopulation and natural resource depletion. From the realm of political economy, he assumes that taxes typically “advance mon good”; he ignores the possibility that government can munity by taking the place of local and voluntary arrangements; and he argues that a deciency of virtue is a greater problem for democracy and capitalism than it is for statism, when, in fact, the lack of virtue is surely more problematic when larger governments dictate that some people have more power over others.

There are also a few notable omissions, especially for such prehensive book. For example, he ignores the budding school-choice movement, although those reforms would solve the problems he cites and avoid other problems likely to follow from his proposals for curricula change. More generally, he calls for an end to “politics without principle,” but then does not discuss the contexts under which government is a legitimate means even to agreed-upon ends. The most egregious example of this is his apology for China's one-child policy, where he concludes that “where there is cultural will, there is a way.”

Finally, a few plaints about some of Myers's terminology. He refers to the moral crisis as a “social recession”a nice label, except it implies the need for national and governmental solutions. Elsewhere, he takes issue with “libertarian values,” but he is referring only to an individualism that is often libertine, rather than to libertarianism as a political philosophy. In fact, the individualism he decries, when manifested in political markets, is one of the chief reasons our economy deviates so signicantly from the libertarian ideal. He argues instead munitarianism as a “third way,” but even this is left fuzzy, munitarians disagree over the extent to which munity” should be sought through coercive versus voluntary means.

My hope would be that Myers's principal concerns are not with the freedom of individualism per se but, rather, with what is done with that freedom. Further, I would hope that he is not as enthusiastic munitarianism (however dened) as he is with what it proxieslove, respect, and concern for others. In the end, we are all individuals created uniquely by God and designed for freedom. As Paul writes, “For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works. It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. You were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the sinful nature; rather, serve one another in love” (Eph. 2:10; Gal. 5:1,13).

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Dunes Moral Unseriousness
  I have written about Denis Villeneuve for some years now, remarking that no other director is given so much money to waste on beautiful spectacles. This might do us honor. Villeneuve is the favored artist of the digital/AI era (Blade Runner 2049 could be a computer game) and yet he cannot make his studios a profit on his blockbusters. Everyone...
A Victorian Frankenstein
  In his 1889–90 fictional portrait of aspiring Victorian artists grasping for success, Henry James observed that novels of the age were “large, loose, baggy monsters, with their queer elements of the accidental and the arbitrary.” Science, technology, and imperial expansion encouraged Enlightenment thinkers and popular broadsides to rhapsodize about the steady march of “progress” and the supposedly rational, modern subjects...
American Counterrevolution
  If one wishes to avoid the horrors of a revolution, one must will it and make it oneself.”   – Antoine deRivarol   The term revolution is one of the most mystified concepts in the modern conceptual lexicon and also one of the most fundamental. The word was originally an astronomical term designating the regular motion of celestial bodies that acquired intellectual...
When Influential Trouble Comes in Waves
  When Influential Trouble Comes in Waves   By Meg Bucher   “Troublemakers have arisen among you and have led the people of their town astray.” - Deuteronomy 13:13 NIV   Much like hard times come in seasons, trouble comes in waves.The tricky part about determining a bad influence is weeding out our assumptions. We may tend to honor older people as wiser, louder...
Affirm NATO’s High Performers
  This month marks 75 years since the founding of the NATO alliance. Celebrations will include two very capable new members of the alliance, Finland and Sweden, who opted to break from neutrality and join the alliance shortly after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Despite NATO’s recent growth and defiant unity as Putin sought to fracture the alliance in the early...
God Knows How Much
  Weekend, April 6, 2024   God Knows How Much   Who then will condemn us? No one—for Christ Jesus died for us and was raised to life for us, and he is sitting in the place of honor at God’s right hand, pleading for us. (Romans 8:34 NLT)   Imagine, for a moment, that you’re Simon Peter. You’re spending time with Jesus and...
Vietnam’s New Religious Decree Further Burdens Local Churches
  Operating a church in Vietnam just became even more difficult thanks to new government regulations that went into effect over the weekend. Under Decree 95, the government will now require religious groups to submit financial records and allow local government officials to suspend religious activities for unspecified serious violations.   Nguyen Ti Dinh of Vietnams religious affairs committee said the guidelines...
Died: Joseph Kayo, the Kenyan Leader Who Revolutionized Worship in East Africa
  Joe Kayo, known by many as the father of the Pentecostal-Charismatic movement in East Africa, died on November 2, 2023. He was 86.   Kayo founded churches in four countries: Deliverance Church Kenya, Deliverance Church Uganda, Juba Pentecostal Church in South Sudan, and Family of God Churches of Zimbabwe. At the time of his death, he was leading the Christian Family...
Is God Your Source of Encouragement?
  Is God Your Source of Encouragement?   By Victoria Riollano   Be strong and courageous. Do not fear or be in dread of them, for it is the LORD your God who goes with you. He will not leave you or forsake you.”- Deuteronomy 31:6   En·cour·age- to give support, confidence, or hope to someone.   Many of us are looking to be encouraged...
Israel’s Transformative Tragedies
  Personal tragedies transform individuals and families. National tragedies transform nations and international systems. Britain was never the same country, nor the same empire, after the Battle of the Somme came to a grim close in November 1916. Across the Atlantic, eighty-five years later, America’s post-Cold War luxury vacation from history ended abruptly on the morning of September 11, 2001. On...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved