
Keen On America Societies on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Jan 6, 2026
Brink Lindsey, a senior executive at the Niskanen Center and author residing in Thailand, dives deep into the societal effects of abundance versus scarcity. He reflects on Keynes' prediction of modern societies experiencing nervous breakdowns amid prosperity. Lindsey discusses falling birthrates and demographic challenges, and defines human flourishing as realizing one's full potential. He warns against distractions of consumerism while exploring how AI could disrupt job markets. Ultimately, he advocates for pluralistic communities and reforms to make capitalism work for everyone.
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Keynes’s Permanent Problem Is Here
- Keynes predicted abundance would create a 'permanent problem' of meaning rather than material scarcity.
- Brink Lindsey argues today's social malaise fits Keynes's forecast: prosperity can cause a collective nervous breakdown.
Abundance Shifts The Problem To Flourishing
- Rising material wealth shifts challenges from survival to realizing human capacities.
- Lindsey warns translating abundance into genuine flourishing is the central modern task.
Pleasure, Not Fear, Is The Modern Threat
- Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World better captures our current risk from pleasure than Orwell’s fear-based dystopia.
- Lindsey says consumerist distractions and cheap pleasures degrade pursuits that produce real human flourishing.











