
Purchase
The Untied States of America
Juan Enriquez
Polarization, Fracturing, and Our Future
Crown
November 2005
368 pages ISBN: 0307237524 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction
Can a country be like a marriage that has run out of cash
and steam, resulting in the inevitable frank discussions
about just who is pulling his or her own weight?
Eventually, even those who love each other sometimes
conclude they cannot stay together. Juan Enriquez’s unique insights into the financial,
political, and cultural issues we face will provoke shock
and surprise and lead you to ask the question no one has
yet put on the table: Could “becoming untied” ever happen
here? It’s a question made especially relevant when we are
faced with such unpromising facts as: • At no other time have we had the unwelcome convergence in
which the three key sectors of business, government, and
consumers are so tapped out due to debt that each lacks the
financial wherewithal to come to the rescue of the others. • Most assets are not being used for productive purposes
but for speculation, resulting in people lacking incentives
to create real wealth, focusing instead on buying, selling,
and flipping real estate. • As religion starts to mix with politics, we have a
culture that allows us to fall behind what were previously
third world nations, because we are now treating science
the way we did sex in the 1950s, banning or burying
evolution theories and research into promising lifesaving
areas such as stem-cell research. When the enemy was outside—for example, the threat
perceived when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik and people
feared America would lose the brain race—we rallied. Now
the enemy is within, and we polarize. Defaming the
legitimacy of people on the “other” side becomes the
currency of the day, where people in blue states are seen
as godless liberal elitists and those in red states are
seen as, well, rednecks. Citizenship, Enriquez says, is like buying into a national
brand. If the brand promises one thing and delivers
another, could it then have the same fate as a tired
product on a supermarket shelf, eroding, losing support,
even disappearing? Countries, even one as powerful and
successful as America, live on fault lines. When a fault
line splits, it’s near impossible to put things back
together again. What America will look like in fifty years
depends on what we do today to act on the issues raised in
The Untied States of America.
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