Chicken Little?
Is the sky really falling?
We’ve imagined threats like peak oil and a national debt crunch before.
Senator Joe McCarthy helped us see Communist treason among our friends. The Science and Math Gap with the Soviet Union alarmed us. The Missile Gap seemed even more threatening. A generation of school children sat in basement corridors contemplating nuclear annihilation. Cuban revolutionaries, Dominos in Southeast Asia, WMD’s in the Middle East – all were billed as existential threats.
But each was a non-threat in the end (or from the outset). So why should today’s threats seem more plausible? Shouldn’t we see exaggerations, faulty logic, self-serving bias? For every discouraging view I hear, I can find a don’t-worry-be-happy response. Doesn’t history suggest that most threats on the horizon will prove ephemeral?
Boy, I certainly hope so.
But I’m not ready to let hope replace thought, or confidence discourage preparation. The stakes for my family are too high.