The Decade of Hubris and Failure
- In-Person
- 麻豆果冻传媒
740 15th St NW #900
Washington, D.C. 20005 - 5:30PM 鈥 8PM EDT
On January 12, Bernard L. Swartz Fellows Peter Beinart and Megan McArdle discussed the legacy of the past decade, with particular focus on U.S. foreign policy and the economy. The event was moderated by Andr茅s Martinez, Director of the Fellows Program. The speakers were introduced by Steve Coll, President of 麻豆果冻传媒.
Megan McArdle discussed the lessons of the great depression in light of the recent financial crisis. Careers were based on the lessons of the great depression, she said, and these lessons haven鈥檛 been forgotten. Enron wasn鈥檛 as bad as other corporate failures historically, for instance, and while insiderism persists, it was not the primary reason that the U.S. got into such trouble economically. McArdle also noted that at the same time, she is not sure that America as an economic power is in decline, that America is doing quite well relatively to, say, Europe. Lastly, McArdle discussed the emergence of complex collective action problems such as climate change, as well as technological advances and the rising eminence of user-generated content.
Peter Beinart emphasized the cycles of confidence, overconfidence, and failure in U.S. foreign policy. To tell that story for this past decade, he said, one has to start with Ronald Reagan鈥檚 presidency. Reagan was highly constrained by the legacy of Vietnam, but after his Presidency, over the course of the 90s, one saw greater and great willingness to take on risk, a growth in confidence, and a building pressure leading to overreaching and the overpromising of George W. Bush鈥攊n Afghanistan, for instance. On an optimistic note, Beinart said, this decade has shown that the obituaries of Francis Fukuyama鈥檚 end of history idea may have been written a little too quickly. Historically, waves of democratization are followed by retrenchment, and in comparison, the most recent retrenchment鈥攊ncluding Russia鈥檚鈥攈asn鈥檛 been that severe.
Event attendees filled out a survey making predictions for the coming year. The winner will earn a free dinner. To the question: 鈥淲hich I-country will receive the most mentions in the print edition of the New York Times in 2010?鈥 37 said Iran; 20 said Iraq; 19 said Israel; and 3 said Italy. To the question: 鈥淭he stock market in which P-country will perform best in 2010?鈥 31 said Poland; 24 said Peru; 20 said the Philippines; and 4 said Pakistan. To the question 鈥淭he Democrats currently hold 256 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. After the 2010 mid-term elections, the Democrats representation in that chamber will have?鈥 31 said shrunk by less than 10 seats; 30 said shrunk by 10-20 seats; 10 said shrunk by more than 20 seats; and 4 said grown.
Participants
Introduction
President, 麻豆果冻传媒 Foundation
Staff Writer, The New Yorker
Featured Speakers
Schwartz Senior Fellow, 麻豆果冻传媒 Foundation
Author, The Good Fight: Why Liberals–and Only Liberals–Can Win the War on Terror and Make America Great Again
Director, Bernard L. Schwartz Program
麻豆果冻传媒 Foundation
Schwartz Fellow, 麻豆果冻传媒 Foundation
Business and Economics Editor, The Atlantic