by r101958 » Tue 21 Oct 2008, 18:47:57
I thought this would be a good place to post an article I read about 5 years ago. In my opinion it pretty much hits the nail on the head. Also, one thing I think it points out quite well is that although empires and society might change in some ways, human nature remains the same. I'll be interested in hearing your thoughts and reactions to it. Here it is, enjoy:
By Dennis Todd/Amelia Island
A recent radio program jolted me into recalling university history courses I had always considered somewhat tedious because I was more interested in Freud than Rome. I appreciate history now and I'm becoming convinced that it is not unidirectional, but circular, certain to replicate destiny for all who find themselves in similar circumstances.
The program's topic was about the great historical novel by Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. It's quite interesting to note that the first of three volumes was published in 1776, the same year that began the American Revolution. It's even more fascinating that
Gibbon's work seems to describe our circumstances today.
Gibbon assigns Rome's decline in part to its increasing vulnerability to barbarians who gained power by infiltrating the country and terrorizing the people, eventually decimating traditions, authority and the military.
Gibbon faults divisive beliefs; melting the spiritual glue that had held the empire together and separating Rome into two polarized political and social camps. Rome eventually became so divisive and bureaucratically paralyzed that it was unable to defend itself from its enemies.
Gibbon's historical work is massive and the causes for demise of the empire are way too complex for any brief summary.
However, he lists five primary reasons for the fall of Rome. They sound eerily familiar.
--Rapid increase of divorce, with the undermining of the sanctity of the home, which is the basis of society.
--Higher and higher taxes; the spending of money for bread and celebrations.
--The mad craze for pleasure, sports becoming every year more exciting and more brutal.
--The building of gigantic armaments, when the real enemy was within; the decadence of the people.
--The decay of religion, faith fading into mere form, losing touch with life, and becoming impotent to guide it.
We may disagree with one or more of Gibbon's reasons but it's difficult to deny how well they apply to modern America. The structure of the family has radically changed.
Marriage is being re-defined to mean anything anyone wants it to mean. Children are no longer the primary responsibility or purpose for marriage.
Government taxation divides our nation so that one half of our citizens pay little or nothing while the other half shoulders the majority of the burden. Decadence has now become cool.Pleasure and entertainment dominate our lives, corrupting the morals of our young. Terrorist barbarians build nuclear armaments while the spiritual glue holding America together gives way to relativism and value-free tolerance for things antithetical to our survival.
America's freedom and democracy have depended upon the transfer of traditions and values to our children. That role is changing. Gibbon's work is an alarming description of a how the most powerful society in the world discarded religion, values and tradition until all that was left were barbarians. Sound familiar to you too?
Dennis Todd is a licensed school psychologist who lives on Amelia Island.