An Apology of a Sleeping Generation
We were not the Greatest Generation.
We were the generation that inherited the victory.
We were born into the aftermath of sacrifice. The generation
before us fought fascism, endured the Great Depression, built institutions,
believed in public service, funded education, defeated dictators, and
constructed the strongest middle class the world had ever seen. They handed us
a functioning democracy, a moral framework, and a nation capable of greatness.
And then, little by little, we let it slip away.
Those of us born around 1939 and shortly thereafter grew up
in extraordinary prosperity. We saw the rise of science, medicine, technology,
higher education, labor protections, infrastructure, and constitutional
stability. America stood not merely for power, but for an idea that free
people, educated people, morally responsible people, could govern themselves.
But somewhere along the way, we stopped paying attention.
We became too busy living our own lives. Careers. Mortgages.
Vacations. Status. Consumption. Entertainment. Personal advancement. We
convinced ourselves that democracy could run on autopilot, that the
institutions built by our parents were permanent and indestructible.
They were not.
While we were distracted, aggressive capitalism slowly
transformed from a productive engine into a predatory system. Profit ceased
being a means to build society and became society itself. Corporations grew
more powerful than governments. Wealth is concentrated upward. Citizens became
consumers. Education deteriorated. Critical thinking weakened. Truth itself
became negotiable.
And we watched it happen.
Or worse, we did not watch it happen.
We allowed public education to decline because taxes became
more offensive to us than ignorance. We allowed money to flood politics because
we confused wealth with wisdom. We glorified selfishness and called it freedom.
We abandoned the concept of the common good and replaced it with personal
acquisition.
Then came the political transformation.
What began gradually accelerated under the illusion of
patriotism and “free markets.” Ronald Reagan did not create the movement, but
he legitimized a philosophy that government itself was the enemy, that
regulation was oppression, that greed was virtue, and that public
responsibility was weakness. From there, the nation moved steadily toward
privatization, deregulation, anti-intellectualism, and finally open hostility
toward expertise, science, journalism, and objective reality.
We should have recognized the danger sooner.
Some did. Many did not.
And perhaps the greatest failure of all was moral
complacency. We assumed fascism would arrive dramatically, with uniforms,
marches, and obvious tyranny. Instead, it arrived disguised as entertainment,
grievance, nationalism, celebrity worship, and resentment. It arrived through
media manipulation and manufactured outrage. It fed upon poorly educated
citizens whose anger had been cultivated for decades.
By the time many of us sounded the alarm, especially around The Heritage Foundation’s Project
2025 and the 2024 election, the machinery was already deeply embedded.
And now we face consequences that are no longer merely
political.
We face the possible collapse of democratic norms, the
destruction of objective truth, runaway economic inequality, environmental
instability, technological dangers beyond our control, and perhaps even threats
to the survival of civilization itself. Artificial intelligence, corporate
power, disinformation, and authoritarianism are converging at precisely the
moment human wisdom appears weakest.
That is the bitter irony.
We achieved astonishing technological advancement while
neglecting moral advancement.
And so this is, in part, an apology.
An apology from many in my generation who now understand
that citizenship requires vigilance. That democracy is not self-sustaining.
That freedom without education becomes manipulation. That capitalism without
morality becomes exploitation. That societies collapse not only because evil
people rise, but because good people become distracted.
We were distracted.
Too many of us assumed someone else would protect the
republic.
Too many of us thought the Constitution was immortal.
Too many of us believed intelligence and decency would
inevitably prevail.
History offers no such guarantees.
Still, perhaps there remains one final responsibility for
those of us near the end of life: to tell the truth about what happened. To
admit our failures honestly. To warn younger generations that civilizations,
democracy, truth, and morality are fragile and require active defense.
The purpose of old age should not merely be remembrance. It
should be testimony.
And this is ours.
William James Spriggs