1) capitalism and globalization come with corruption, inequity, and environmental and social costs;
2) same with the military-industrial complex and all the "forever wars" we are fighting;
3) the rest of the world doesn't think American autonomy and freedom are the bee's knees
and so Bacevich whips through the recent presidents-- Clinton, Bush, Obama, and Trump-- and explains how they were all deficient to varying degrees . . . but he also points out how the first Trump term wasn't nearly as impactful and catastrophic as the pundits predicted . . . and so the book concludes with the question from the start: "What does it mean to be an American?" and we wonder if being an American has to be different than being a Canadian (or a Belgian or a Malaysian or any other country that doesn't profess to be a shining example of exceptionalism, a City on a Hill) and this may not be a question that is answered in my lifetime . . we shall see.
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