SIGforum
Where is the USA in the 9 stages of civiliztion?

This topic can be found at:
https://sigforum.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/320601935/m/6560092034

September 13, 2017, 02:26 PM
Elk Hunter
Where is the USA in the 9 stages of civiliztion?
quote:
Originally posted by Scoutmaster:
quote:
Originally posted by 46and2:
3.5

We have a ways to go before we're done with the liberty phase. Obviously, each phase has some elements of the others, and there are many messed up things happening these days, but just the same - we're nowhere near stages 8 or so.


If/when we are hit with a debt/unfunded liability tsunami, #8 and #9 could hit quite quickly. I hope you are correct, but think you are wrong.


The actual unfunded liabilities of this country are about 220 TRILLION ALREADY


Elk

There has never been an occasion where a people gave up their weapons in the interest of peace that didn't end in their massacre. (Louis L'Amour)

"To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical. "
-Thomas Jefferson

"America is great because she is good. If America ceases to be good, America will cease to be great." Alexis de Tocqueville

FBHO!!!



The Idaho Elk Hunter
September 13, 2017, 02:28 PM
SBrooks
Based on that list - I'd say 8 or 9.


------------------
SBrooks
September 13, 2017, 02:39 PM
MNSIG
I've certainly seen this list before and would say it has about the same predictive value as the Doomsday Clock they used to have stuck at 3 minutes to midnight throughout most of my youth and Al Gore's climate assessments.
September 13, 2017, 02:42 PM
arfmel
'Bout treefiddy.
September 13, 2017, 03:09 PM
Scoutmaster
quote:
Originally posted by MNSIG:
I've certainly seen this list before and would say it has about the same predictive value as the Doomsday Clock they used to have stuck at 3 minutes to midnight throughout most of my youth and Al Gore's climate assessments.


The list indicates the cycle of past civilizations, not the calendar of that cycle. If you believe we will always be a nation of abundance, peace, prosperity, I hope you are correct.




"Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women. When it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it....While it lies there, it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it"
- Judge Learned Hand, May 1944
September 13, 2017, 03:28 PM
MNSIG
quote:
Originally posted by Scoutmaster:The list indicates the cycle of past civilizations, not the calendar of that cycle. If you believe we will always be a nation of abundance, peace, prosperity, I hope you are correct.


It's doubtful we will. However, retrospective studies tend to find ways to pigeon hole events into the paradigm that fits. I really question the assertion that those stages are one directional. There was a quote in the article bemoaning the state of apathy in 1922, which would imply that we were already at 7-8. WWII and "The Greatest Generation" are often celebrated as the height of American ascendency. Not really consistent with the notion we were already so far along in our decay.
September 13, 2017, 03:30 PM
chellim1
quote:
The list indicates the cycle of past civilizations, not the calendar of that cycle.

Right.
Sure, I also agree with MNSIG that it has no predictive value as to the time frame.

But.... there is an identifiable pattern.
We are a country founded on the protection of INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY.
As we add entitlements and debt we leave behind the rugged individualism that made us strong. We are approaching dependency, maybe not all of us, but enough of us that it has led us to unsustainable debt.

$20 trillion dollars: It's all good.... until it's not.

The real story behind America’s new $20 trillion debt:
https://sigforum.com/eve/forums...0601935/m/3210072034



"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible."
-- Justice Janice Rogers Brown

"The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth."
-rduckwor
September 13, 2017, 03:38 PM
Russ59
6-7.

Makes me want to move to Switzerland.


P229
September 13, 2017, 03:43 PM
MNSIG
quote:
Originally posted by Russ59:
6-7.

Makes me want to move to Switzerland.


Mandatory health insurance, subsidized college education, four official languages.

Aren't those several of the very things some are convinced have brought (or will bring us) to 8-9?
September 13, 2017, 04:19 PM
sigcrazy7
The article you linked from HighExistence.com seemed familiar, and is an unattributed plagiarism of an article from commensensegovernment.com written by John Eberhard on 3/14/09. See The Tytler Cycle Revisited

I remember reading about this cycle back in college. The philosopher was a Scott named Alexander Tytler, and he identified these nine stages of modern societies back in 1787, two years before this country's founding.

HighExistence should have at least identified Alexander Tytler as the originator of the theory, and should have attributed the verbatim lifting of paragraphs from John Eberhard's piece. This is the problem with the WWW, IMO.



Demand not that events should happen as you wish; but wish them to happen as they do happen, and you will go on well. -Epictetus
September 13, 2017, 04:39 PM
Scoutmaster
quote:
Originally posted by chellim1:
quote:
The list indicates the cycle of past civilizations, not the calendar of that cycle.

Right.
Sure, I also agree with MNSIG that it has no predictive value as to the time frame.

But.... there is an identifiable pattern.
We are a country founded on the protection of INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY.
As we add entitlements and debt we leave behind the rugged individualism that made us strong. We are approaching dependency, maybe not all of us, but enough of us that it has led us to unsustainable debt.

$20 trillion dollars: It's all good.... until it's not....


For me, QED. Seems to me there is significant momentum in this nation toward entitlements and socialism, including the related debts and bureaucracies that pile up; that continuing on the present course will burn us, and changing course will crating mounting friction with the beneficiaries of entitlements and bureaucracies.




"Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women. When it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it....While it lies there, it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it"
- Judge Learned Hand, May 1944
September 14, 2017, 07:44 AM
Sir Guy
This excerpt from Byron comes to mind for me:

There is the moral of all human tales;
'Tis but the same rehearsal of the past.
First Freedom and then Glory——when that fails,
Wealth, vice, corruption——barbarism at last.
And History, with all her volumes vast,
Hath but one page...

September 14, 2017, 08:24 AM
fpuhan
quote:
Originally posted by sigcrazy7:
The article you linked from HighExistence.com seemed familiar, and is an unattributed plagiarism of an article from commensensegovernment.com written by John Eberhard on 3/14/09. See The Tytler Cycle Revisited

I remember reading about this cycle back in college. The philosopher was a Scott named Alexander Tytler, and he identified these nine stages of modern societies back in 1787, two years before this country's founding.

HighExistence should have at least identified Alexander Tytler as the originator of the theory, and should have attributed the verbatim lifting of paragraphs from John Eberhard's piece. This is the problem with the WWW, IMO.


I am in absolute agreement.

One of the specious arguments still being made regarding the Tytler Cycle is the blatant assertion that "The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations has been two hundred years." The Roman Empire lasted for nearly 1,500 years (27BC - 1453AD). (If you want to consider only the Holy Roman Empire, then it's 844 years). The Empire of Japan, still extant today after 1,743 years. The Ottoman Empire for 623 (1299 - 1922). The Byzantine Empire: 874 years. On the other end, just in the past century: The Third Reich lasted 12 years. The Bolshevik (Communist) Revolution, 72 years.

So we now have this "magical" 200 years figure, which no one has defined, or shown any evidence that it has any significant meaning, and we're off to the races, speculating, arguing and justifying.

Makes for fun reading, though.




You can't truly call yourself "peaceful" unless you are capable of great violence. If you're not capable of great violence, you're not peaceful, you're harmless.

NRA Benefactor/Patriot Member
September 14, 2017, 08:37 AM
Georgeair
quote:
Originally posted by Lord Vaalic:
I would say 7.5

Due mainly to our inability to make a clear decision of distinction? Razz



You only have integrity once. - imprezaguy02

September 14, 2017, 09:00 AM
joel9507
quote:
Originally posted by fpuhan:
quote:
Originally posted by sigcrazy7:
The article you linked from HighExistence.com seemed familiar, and is an unattributed plagiarism of an article from commensensegovernment.com written by John Eberhard on 3/14/09. See The Tytler Cycle Revisited

I remember reading about this cycle back in college. The philosopher was a Scott named Alexander Tytler, and he identified these nine stages of modern societies back in 1787, two years before this country's founding.

HighExistence should have at least identified Alexander Tytler as the originator of the theory, and should have attributed the verbatim lifting of paragraphs from John Eberhard's piece. This is the problem with the WWW, IMO.


I am in absolute agreement.

One of the specious arguments still being made regarding the Tytler Cycle is the blatant assertion that "The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations has been two hundred years." The Roman Empire lasted for nearly 1,500 years (27BC - 1453AD). (If you want to consider only the Holy Roman Empire, then it's 844 years). The Empire of Japan, still extant today after 1,743 years. The Ottoman Empire for 623 (1299 - 1922). The Byzantine Empire: 874 years. On the other end, just in the past century: The Third Reich lasted 12 years. The Bolshevik (Communist) Revolution, 72 years.

So we now have this "magical" 200 years figure, which no one has defined, or shown any evidence that it has any significant meaning, and we're off to the races, speculating, arguing and justifying.

Makes for fun reading, though.

Yeah, if one is conversant at all in history, the assertions, timelines, attributes all are hooey, let alone the claim of universality. In fact, I can't think of one 'greatest civilization' that has followed that specific process or timeline.

Anyone want to take the challenge? Provide even one example that, in 200 years has shown all these attributes in order and gone back to bondage. Hell, I'll grant double that and go 400 years.

Remember, the 'great civilization' has to show bondage, spiritual faith, great courage, liberty, abundance, selfishness, complacency, apathy, dependence in that order and then go straight back again into bondage. In 400 years.

Never had spiritual faith, or have liberty or abundance? DQ
Went straight from abundance to apathy? DQ
Showed great courage right after bondage? DQ.

The point of the piece (if there is one) may be to get people upset about dependence as the last step before bondage. And I don't even think that one specific claim is valid.

I don't know that there are unbreakable general rules in history, but I'd probably argue what brings a 'great civilization' into bondage would be something like:

horrific military defeats, and/or
epidemics, famines, or other demographic decline, and/or
economic collapse.

In other words, it gets depopulated and/or weakened militarily and/or weakened economically and someone stronger comes in. What would bring a 'great civilization' to a state where those could happen?

Yes, American dominance of the planet is not written into stone. But we are in a good position geopolitically, militarily, economically, have defensible borders with good natural resources inside them, friendly and militarily weak neighbors and a great trading location (closer to both Europe and Asia to trade, than they are with one another).

Bad as the political trend of reducing individual responsibility for one's own situation is (i.e. growth of the welfare state), remember that Rome didn't fall because they gave bread to their poor. It fell because it wasn't strong when neighbors came calling.
September 14, 2017, 09:34 AM
MNSIG
quote:
Originally posted by fpuhan:So we now have this "magical" 200 years figure, which no one has defined, or shown any evidence that it has any significant meaning, and we're off to the races, speculating, arguing and justifying.

Makes for fun reading, though.


It has significance only because people can panic and say "Holy shit, we're on borrowed time!"
September 14, 2017, 09:36 AM
Fdan
I'd say "5."


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