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Once upon a time there was a country that was very small and, on the whole, very good.
Its  citizens were proud and independent and self-reliant and generally  prosperous. They believed in freedom and justice and equality. But,  above all, they had faith. They had faith in their religion, their  leaders, their country and themselves.
And, of course, they were  ambitious. Being proud of their country, they wanted to make it bigger.  First they conquered the savage tribes that hemmed them in. Then they  fought innumerable wars on land and sea with foreign powers to the east  and west and south. They won almost all the battles they fought and  conquered foreign lands.
It took many generations, but at last the good, little country was  the richest, mightiest nation in the whole, wide world -- admired,  respected, envied and feared by one and all.
"We must remain the  mightiest nation," said its leaders, "so that we can insure universal  peace and make everyone as prosperous and decent and civilized as we  are."
At first, the mightiest nation was as good as its word. It  constructed highways and buildings and pipelines and hygienic facilities  all over the world. And for awhile, it even kept the peace.
But being the mightiest nation in the world, its leader was the mightiest man in the world. And, naturally, he acted like it.
He  surrounded himself with a palace guard of men chosen solely for their  personal loyalty. He usurped the powers of the Senate, signing treaties,  waging wars and spending public funds as he saw fit.
When little  countries far away rebelled, he sent troops without so much as a  by-your-leave. And the mightiest nation became engaged in a series of  long, costly, inconclusive campaigns in far away lands. So some  disillusioned soldiers refused to obey orders and some sailors mutinied,  even though the leader raised their pay. And in some places the  mightiest nation hired mercenaries to do its fighting.
And because  it was the richest nation, it worshiped wealth and the things wealth  bought. But the rich grew richer and the poor grew poorer through unfair  tax laws. And in the capital 1 in 5 were idle and on welfare.
When  the poor grumbled, they were entertained by highly paid athletes and  the firing of expensive rockets into the air which sometimes fizzled.  But the poor often rioted and looted and burned in their frustrated  rage.
Many citizens lost faith in their old religion and turned to  Oriental mysticism. And the young, wearing long hair and sandals,  became Jesus freaks. Bare-breasted dancers, lewd shows and sex orgies  were increasingly common. And the currency was debased again and again  to meet the mounting debts.
Worst of all, the citizens came to  learn their leaders were corrupt -- that the respected palace guard was  selling favors to the rich and sending spies among the people, creating  fear and distrust.
So it was that the people lost faith. They lost  faith in their leaders, their currency, their rockets, their postal  system, their armies, their religion, their laws, their moral values,  their country and, eventually, themselves.
And, thus, in 476 A.D., Rome fell to the barbarians and the Dark Ages settled over Western civilization.
  
Moral. For what is a nation profited if it shall gain the whole world and lose its own soul.
(This column appeared in The San Francisco Chronicle on May 27, 1973).

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