- The US is better off than 50 years ago, yet people feel worse (another version of this recurring story);
- Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto Grosso no. 1.
Yet another story on this general theme. It’s about human nature, not the actual state of the world.

Vox, Bryan Walsh, today: The US is better off than it was in 1976. So why does it feel worse?, subtitled “America’s 250th birthday feels bleak. The numbers tell a different story.”
The current generation does not remember this.
America in the summer of 1976 was not in a good place.
The president who presided over the country’s bicentennial, President Gerald Ford, only had the job because the previous president and vice president had resigned in disgrace, making him the sole US president who was never actually elected. The Vietnam War had ended in defeat and disgrace when Saigon fell the year before, after the deaths of nearly 60,000 American service members. Inflation hit double digits in 1974 and stayed ugly, unemployment sat near 8 percent, and economists had to invent a word — stagflation — for an economy that seemed to encompass the worst of both worlds.












