American
Paradise Lost
by
Jack D. Douglas
Recently
by Jack D. Douglas: Will
Obama Keep Power By Any Means Necessary?
I'm 75 years
old now and can identify completely with an old man watching in
despair as his once great nation crumbles down around him. It's
happening faster and faster to us every day. The diaries of people
in nations like Nazi Germany are the precedents for those of us
writing for private audiences about the awful truths about America
today.
I was born
in Paradise and have lived through a very long, slow motion Paradise
Lost and the birth of Dystopian America.
I was born
in Miami, Florida, Jan. 14, 1937. That was the nadir of Depression
1, but in Miami we lived largely outdoors in the shade of mango
and avocado and many other trees, with the balmy Gulf breezes blowing
gently around us to soothe us. There was fruit growing in the fields
and yards, especially sweet, pink-yellow guavas which I loved and
sumptuous Hayden mangoes with their entrancing bouquet and Caribbean
papayas and avocados. The air was pure and sweetly scented. We could
catch and eat delicious ocean fish in Biscayne Bay, which was sparkling
clear. We had no "freeways" or traffic jams.
We had Gulf
air conditioning in our small homes made of wonderfully strong,
slatted Key pine, with overhanging shutters and awnings to block
the mid day sun while letting the Gulf breezes flow through the
screens around us. We were at peace with the world with lovely music
on the radio, such as my mother and father's song – "As Time Goes
By" – and no shrill war reports about U.S. forces invading the Middle
East, Asia, or anywhere else. We did not hear daily reports of police
shootouts with narco lords and gangs. We ate delicious vegetables
and fruits out of the fields and yards without getting cancers from
toxic pesticides. I was born in a very small hospital, Jackson Memorial,
with Spanish tiles on the roof, and even when I was about four and
had to spend a night there, it was tiny and friendly with screens
on the windows and I left through one of those windows when my grandfather
came to get me, without any doctor's permission. My first school
was a very small and lovely school where every day was a delight
without metal detectors. And the teachers were gentle and loving,
almost like our mothers at home, and did not go out on strike or
march in gay parades or any others.
Of course,
if you write that today in a children's Little Golden Book on "I
Was Born In Paradise," everyone would laugh at you as if you were
insane and telling them a crazy, utopian fairy tale.
But it was
all true, just as I write about it now. I even had close touch with
my ancient relatives, including Mama Knox who visited us in late
1942 from the Old South, She was 102 years old and was born in the
Old South in 1840 when America was still young and hopeful. We still
had ancient, strong roots that helped give meaning to our happy
lives amid the conflicts and worries of everyday life common to
all human societies.
My Paradise
all began to crumble away with the sudden arrival of WWII. I don't
remember the beginning of the far away war, but it soon led my father
to march off into the Army and disappear across the Pacific for
the next several years. My mother, who had so lovingly taught me
all the basics of life and reading and writing and numbers, apparently
ran off to hitchhike in the West and I and my brother were put in
a foster home that was like a prison for a year or two.
As the end
of the war drew near, my mother returned, got us out of prison and
we lived with her on South Beach just across the Bay from Miami.
It was a cauldron of military training from which we could not escape
day or night. It was exciting but scary. Almost every day the soldiers
marched in long columns down the ocean boulevard past "The Circus
Bar" right on the beach where my mother was a friendly bar maid.
Many of them seemed to be her boy friends and sang a popular serenade
to her as they marched by, substituting her name in "Wait 'til the
sun shines, Marion, and the clouds go drifting by." Finally, the
glorious day of Victory came and the soldiers disappeared and my
father came home. But he and my mother were not the same and soon
divorced. My Paradise had become my Paradise Lost.
America would
never be the same again. We lost our Paradise in a mad rush to victories
in wars around the world and "security" in atomic and hydrogen bombs
and in a paroxysm of modernity which swept away much of our ancient
cultural wisdom and family and social foundations. We lost our American
Paradise and gave birth to Dystopian America which would soon lead
to MAD [Mutual Assured Destruction].
October
2, 2012
Jack
D. Douglas [send him mail]
is a retired professor of sociology from the University of California
at San Diego. He has published widely on all major aspects of human
beings, most notably The
Myth of the Welfare State.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
The
Best of Jack D. Douglas
|