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Long-term success in the West has made its citizens forget the competitive, resource-scarce realities that created their prosperity. This has led to a cultural dismantling of the very engines of that success, fueled by guilt and zero-sum thinking, without understanding the harsh consequences.
For generations, increasing wealth allowed Western society to discard essential cultural norms like social trust and shared values. Now that economic growth is faltering, the catastrophic consequences of this "death of culture" are becoming fully visible.
The core issue behind America's economic and educational struggles is a cultural shift away from valuing ambition, hard work, and the pursuit of excellence. Society no longer shames mediocrity or celebrates the relentless pursuit of goals, creating a population unprepared to compete on a global stage.
The widening GDP gap between the U.S. and Europe since 2007 is attributed not just to policy but a cultural shift. The speaker argues Europe has lost its collective "hunger" and lacks the ambitious, unifying national projects that historically drove its innovation and attracted top talent.
When a country is successful for too long, its citizens forget the difficult and often violent actions required to achieve that prosperity. This ignorance leads to guilt, a weakened national identity, and an inability to make tough decisions for self-preservation.
The foundation of 80 years of global prosperity under Western influence wasn't just capitalism, but a core belief: since truth is advantageous but hard to find, society must protect individual sovereignty and free inquiry. This allows for innovation and progress by letting people be free to explore and even be wrong.
Unprecedented global prosperity creates a vacuum of real adversity, leading people to invent anxieties and fixate on trivial problems. Lacking the perspective from genuine struggle, many complain about first-world issues while ignoring their immense privilege, leading to a state where things are 'so good, it's bad.'
Countries in Eastern Europe, Asia, and Latin America that endured communism and hyperinflation learned hard lessons, creating a societal immunity to these failed ideologies. In contrast, prosperous Western nations grew complacent, believing prosperity was a birthright, and began to degenerate.
Long-term societal success can create a generation that takes prosperity for granted. Lacking real existential threats, people may lose historical context and begin to entertain destructive ideologies, forgetting the "tooth and nail" fight required to maintain a stable society.
Long-term peace and prosperity can breed "privilege guilt," an existential unease about inequitable outcomes. This guilt drives societies to self-flagellate through policies that undermine their own success, a process Gad Saad calls "civilizational seppuku"—a form of societal self-disembowelment born from shame.
When a society attempts to eliminate all risk and shame aggressive competition, it stifles the very forces that drive innovation and growth. This cultural shift from valuing freedom to prioritizing safety makes people docile and anxious, leading to economic stagnation and a loss of competitive edge.