Coming Apart: The Growing Cultural Divide

· Wednesday, February 22, 2012

A new book offers surprising evidence of a cultural and religious decline in working class communities.

Charles Murray, whose book Losing Ground redefined the debate about welfare and the underclass thirty years ago, has a new book, Coming Apart. The book is about the increasingly cultural divide among white Americans.

Coming Apart is controversial and has many critics, both on the left and on the right. But it has ignited a long-overdue discussion about the link between cultural decline and the American Dream.

Murray shows clearly the growing cultural divide between white middle-to-upper class communities and white working-class communities. In 1960, the two communities, despite differences in income and educational attainment, were statistically similar when it came to marriage, out-of-wedlock births, and religion. Around 1970, the gap widened, and by 2010 it was better described as a "chasm."

Whereas 83 percent of those in upper-class communities are married, only 48 percent of those in working-class communities are. While six percent of births among upper-class communities are to unmarried mothers, 44 percent of those in working communities are. And most surprisingly of all, middle-to-upper-middle class Americans are more likely to attend religious services on a regular basis than working-class Americans.

In Murray's words, "these divergences" put upper and working-class communities "into different cultures."

These "different cultures," in turn, augur very different futures: the kind of social decay on display in working-class communities makes social mobility and prosperity far less likely and will only further aggravate the gap between the "haves" and "have-nots."

While Murray does a good job documenting the problem, he offers few solutions. That's unfortunate because, as Ross Douthat of the New York Times points out, Coming Apart makes a "very convincing case ... for the power of so-called 'traditional values' to foster human flourishing." This is true even in "economic landscapes that aren't as favorable to less-educated workers" as in the heyday of industrial America, the decades following World War II.

As Douthat reminds us, the "challenges ... that have beset blue collar America over the last thirty years" haven't changed some important cultural facts: marrying "the mother or father of your children," taking "work when you can find it," attending church, and "[striving] to conduct yourself with honesty and integrity" greatly increase your chances of escaping poverty and finding happiness.

Likewise, not doing these things only reinforces the downward spiral. None of this is a secret. The link between personal behavior and personal advancement is well-known.

Nor do we have to look far to glimpse what the future holds if the cultural trajectory holds: the white working-class communities Murray documents are at the same place inner-city African-American communities were when Murray was writing "Losing Ground." What's happened since should concern every American.

Today on my "Two-Minute Warning," which I urge you to go and watch at ColsonCenter.org, I talk more about Murray's book and the growing cultural divide in American life -- and about how government policies since the 1960s have created an entitlement mentality among Americans. Please, go to ColsonCenter.org and watch the "Two-Minute Warning."


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Comments

Saint Peter

Chuck,

You do well to point out Murray’s accurate analysis of a culture in decline, but then chide him for offering no solutions.

Do you know of any? I don't.

The American people, more than any other, have been exposed to the Gospel. They have even, embraced it, in generations past. They have tasted what is good. They have know what is required of them and they have rejected it!

We Bible students should not be surprised. We are told that the path to destruction is easy and wide and many go on it. But, the path to righteousness is difficult and narrow and few enter in thereby.

The moral decline of America will continue, led by the trumpet of moral relativism.

Look up. Our Savior draws near!

Posted February 22, 2012 at 2:23:41 PM


JJ

When did it become culturally popular to be stupid and white? (Remember dumb and dumber?) Making the jump between the cultural levels in white society has always been difficult because of the difference in behavioral modes. Language is different, actions are different, manners are different and expectations are different. My wife and I both came from Working class families - both fathers were Carpenters - my mother was a nurse and my wife's mother was a stay at home mom. It was hard for me and my parents wanted me to go upward. My wife's parents didn't think girls should go to college - but she went anyway. Now we are both engineers - I work in Industry and she teaches in a junior college. If you believe - and have bought into the "do your own thing" and "Take me as I am" you will end up staying exactly where you start - And what has been the media and liberal college messages for the last 20 years? Exactly that - people need to adjust their thinking to you - not you adapt to the modes of the social circle you need to operate in. The "ME" generation is going nowhere because everything is supposed to be focused on "ME".

Posted February 22, 2012 at 9:00:52 PM


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