Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Was 2012 the Best Year Ever?
Was 2012 the Best Year Ever?
Oct 30, 2025 9:52 PM

An article in the Christmas issue of The Spectator make a surprising and bold claim:

It may not feel like it, but 2012 has been the greatest year in the history of the world. That sounds like an extravagant claim, but it is borne out by evidence. Never has there been less hunger, less disease or more prosperity. The West remains in the economic doldrums, but most developing countries are charging ahead, and people are being lifted out of poverty at the fastest rate ever recorded. The death toll inflicted by war and natural disasters is also mercifully low. We are living in a golden age.

To listen to politicians is to be given the opposite impression — of a dangerous, cruel world where things are bad and getting worse. This, in a way, is the politicians’ job: to highlight problems and to try their best to offer solutions. But the great advances of e about not from statesmen, but from ordinary people. Governments across the world appear stuck in what Michael Lind, on page 30, describes as an era of ‘turboparalysis’ — all motion, no progress. But outside government, progress has been nothing short of spectacular.

While it’s tempting to dismiss the article as the typical hyperbolic contrarianism magazines and websites tend to churn out to pump up pageviews, I think there may be something to the claim.

Global poverty is down. Energy is abundant. Fewer people are dying from AIDS, malaria, war, and the cold of winter. And even in the aftermath of a global recession, most people in the West have accesses to medicines, luxuries, and amenities (e.g., air-conditioning) that our grandparents could only dream about.

Focusing solely on the material can admittedly distort the underlying rot of our culture. There were enough intractable problems and disturbing trends in 2012 to make any sane observer lose a year’s worth of sleep. But like the poor, cultural and spiritual decline seems to always be with us. We shouldn’t let that stand in the way of acknowledging the benefits that economic prosperity and technological innovation can have on the human condition.

As we say when reciting the Doxology, “Praise God, from whom all blessings flow / Praise him, all creatures here below.” Whether 2012 was the best year ever is debatable, but we certainly should be thankful for a year in which blessings flowed on mankind in abundance.

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 ONLINE
St. Philip Neri on the Covington Catholic boys
The sinister and irreparable nature of gossip is memorably illustrated in the penance St. Philip Neri once gave to a woman who had confessed it to him. He told her to walk through the streets of Rome plucking a chicken. Humbled, the woman accepted the penance. When she returned to him and reported she pleted the penance the saint told her to now go and collect all the feathers she had plucked. “But Father Philip,” the woman is reported to...
What you need to know about Elizabeth Warren’s wealth tax
On Thursday, Senator Elizabeth Warren announced on Twitter that she will institute a wealth tax if she is elected president in 2020. Here are the facts you need to know: Warren tweeted her plan on Thursday afternoon. We need structural change. That’s why I’m proposing something brand new – an annual tax on the wealth of the richest Americans. I’m calling it the “Ultra-Millionaire Tax” & it applies to that tippy top 0.1% – those with a net worth of...
Social science and the evidence for virtue
“Christians have nothing to fear and everything to gain from good social science,” says Paul D. Miller. “It provides a way to talk normatively about human flourishing in terms that are intelligible, legitimate, and persuasive to those outside munity of faith.” How can Christians make arguments that are persuasive to those who do not share their most basic presuppositions? That is the quandary in which Christians—and Jews and Muslims—find themselves as public discourse is increasingly framed, mediated, and policed by...
When red tape hits the homeless: San Diego charity closes due to new restrictions
For the past four years, Deliverance San Diego has been delivering hot meals to the city’s homeless population every Friday, averaging 200 donated meals on any given evening. Now, due to new guidelines passed by the State Legislature of California, the non-profit is ceasing operations and will dissolve by the end of the month. Through their existing model, hot meals were prepared in volunteer homes and distributed on the streets. “Volunteers from various churches gather at 17th and Commercial downtown...
People who are religiously active are happier, more civically engaged
People who are active in religious congregations tend to be happier and more civically engaged than either religiously unaffiliated adults or inactive members of religious groups, according to a new study by Pew Research Center. The findings were taken from survey data from the United States and more than two dozen other Christian-majority nations. Pew finds that in the U.S. and many other countries around the world, regular participation in a munity clearly is linked with higher levels of happiness...
From the streets of Caracas, Venezuela
Perhaps nothing sums up the situation in socialist Venezuela quite like the photo below. Within just a few feet of a grocery store, people dig through a garbage truck in desperation looking for food. We’ve written quite a bit about the crisis in Venezuela over the past year and today, we’re pleased to bring you a report straight from Caracas. Acton co-founder and president Rev. Robert Sirico interviewed Ricardo Ball, an entrepreneur and financial advisor about what is happening on...
Climate change: Regulations vs. results
Christians believe we should be good stewards of the earth, and for some the issue has taken on apocalyptic dimensions. Yet faith leaders, including the leaders of multiple worldwide munions, have ignored the most effective method for reducing carbon emissions while praising counterproductive policies. There is no doubt about the extent of concern. A recent Gallup poll found that 70 percentof young Americans worry about climate change, and people aged 18 to 34 are the first generation in which a...
The Christian’s foundation for all knowledge
Note:This article is part of the ‘Principles Project,’ a list of principles, axioms, and beliefs that undergirda Christian view of economics, liberty, and virtue. Clickhereto read the introduction and other posts in this series. The Principle:#2 — God’s Word is the foundation for all knowledge. The Explanation:“Christianity,” as Charles Colson once claimed, “is the explanation for everything.” As Tom Gilson explains, “Of course [Colson] did not mean that everything is explained in the Bible, but that the Bible reveals the...
Trust in employers and CEOs is soaring, but can they really ‘save the world’?
Our cultural environment has e increasingly defined by social isolation and public distrust, aggravated by a number of factors and features, from declines in church munity participation to concentrations of political power to the rise of online conformity mobs to the corresponding hog-piling among the media and various leaders. Yet as public trust continues to fragment and diminish across society, there’s one institution that appears to be making eback: private employers. According to the Edelman Trust Barometer, an annual study...
Why governments create inflation
Note: This is post #108 in a weekly video series on basic economics. Most people do not like when prices rise so most people do not like inflation. But there is one sector that sometimes finds inflation beneficial: government. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Alex Tabarrok explains why governments sometimes use inflation to their benefit—and how inflation can e like a drug. (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d mend watching them at 1.5...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved