For a story about hope in America, this is 
extraordinarily discouraging:Mr. Fetterman’s solace is that Braddock has likely fallen as far as it  can: the town’s only remaining large employer, the University of  Pittsburgh Medical Center, closed its hospital here earlier this year,  taking more than 600 jobs with it. (One woman noted sourly that UPMC  even yanked its shrubbery out of the landscaping.) 
This recent article takes the most optomistic view it  can (after years of well-based pessimism at  the same site): 
So take some pleasure in this: our troops are coming home  and you’re going to see it happen.  And in the not so very distant  future it won’t be our job to “police” the world or be the “global  sheriff.” And won’t that be a relief?  We can form actual coalitions of  equals to do things worth doing globally and never have to organize  another “coalition of the billing,” twisting arms and bribing others to do our military bidding. 
Since by the time we get anywhere near such a world, our leaders will have run this country into the ground,  it’s hard to offer the traditional three cheers for such a future.  But  how about at least one-and-a-half prospective cheers for the possible  return of perspective to our American world, for a significant  lessening, even if not the decisive ending, of an American imperial role  and of the massive military “footprint” that goes with it.
It’s going to happen.  Put your money on it.
And thank you, George W. Bush (though I never thought I’d say that),  you’ve given an old guy a shot at seeing the fruits of American decline  myself.  I’m looking forward.
 
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