TEXT D The decline in moral
standards—which has long concerned social analysts—has at last captured the
attention of average Americans. And Jean Bethke Elshtain, for one, is
glad. The fact that ordinary citizens are now starting to think
seriously about the nation’s moral climate, says this ethics professor at the
University of Chicago, is reason to hope that new ideas will come forward to
improve it. But the challenge is not to be underestimated.
Materialism and individualism in American society are the biggest obstacles.
"The thought that ’Urn in it for me’ has become deeply rooted in the national
consciousness." Ms. Elshtain says. Some of this can be
attributed to the disintegration of traditional communities, in which neighbors
looked out for one another, she says. With today’s greater mobility and with so
many couples working, those bonds have been weakened, replaced by a greater
emphasis on self. In a 1996 poll of Americans, loss of morality
topped the list of the biggest problems facing the U.S. And Elshtain says the
public is correct to sense that: Data show that Americans are struggling with
problems unheard of in the 1950s, such as classroom violence and a high rate of
births to unmarried mothers. The desire for a higher moral
standard is not a lament for some nonexistent "golden age," Elshtain says, nor
is it a wishful longing for a time that denied opportunities to women and
minorities. Most people, in fact, favor the lessening of prejudice.
Moral decline will not be reversed until people find ways to counter the
materialism in society, she says, "Slowly, you recognize that the things that
matter are those that can’t be bought." In the 1950s, classroom violence ______.
A.was something unheard of B.was by no means a rare occurrence C.attracted a lot of public attention D.began to appear in analysts’ data