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Contarini's avatar

This is beautiful. Who knew that a lyrical meditation on generational change could be the vehicle to discuss contemporary foreign policy! The interesting question may be not why these massive shifts are occurring, but why a system built to wage the Cold War, which ended a third of century ago, continued under its own momentum for so long. A big rethink of America’s role in the world should have occurred during the first Clinton administration, but instead the supposed “global hegemon” just lurched, reactively, from crisis to crisis, decade after decade. When it finally settled on a new alternative mission, it was to plant rainbow flags in desperately poor places that didn’t want them. The victorious Taliban painting over the George Floyd mural in Kabul captures the vacuity and incompetence of the current elite. The institutions decayed into bureaucratic stasis, and the quality of the elites that managed them decayed even more. Your call to the rising generation of policy makers and officials is worthwhile, and I hope that their thinking will be more deeply historically informed, and less shaped by contemporary ideological deformations. Eager to read the second and third installments.

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F. Ichiro Gifford's avatar

As one of the mentioned “bastard children of the lockdowns” (perhaps older by a few years), the possibility space excites and scares me in equal measure.

I am *not* ready to lead, or to provide real scaffolding for what comes next. And yet I question the old presuppositions anyway. I hope I learn quickly enough to be of value…and I fear not enough people know enough to be of value themselves.

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