If you are a constitutional conservative, you believe freedom works. You believe in free
enterprise. This is simply the notion that people have the right to
their own stuff - be they part of the 99% or the 1%. You believe that
unless they are forced, defrauded or victimized by a monopoly, free
people do not give up their stuff unless someone provides them value in return.
If you want to get rich in a society of free people, you spend a great
deal of time figuring out how to provide other people with value. You don't
really care about their pigment, their genital configuration, their
accent or what they do behind closed doors. If you want to be rich, you
need to get their stuff. In the form of money. In exchange for
value. Lots of value.
In such a world, consequently, we admire the 1%. We do not envy them, hate them, or try to get their stuff. Nor do we make ridiculous statements such as Mr. Obama did when he said "I do think at a certain point, you've made enough money."
If I make my money by selling a free people something valuable at a
good price such as a computer that helps them learn and grow, at what
point, Mr. Obama, have I made enough money? To whom should I not sell a
computer? Maybe that inner city kid. After all, I've made enough
money.
If I make my money by hiring people who would
otherwise not be employed, enabling them to provide for their families
and send their children to college, at what point, Mr. Obama, have I
made enough money? Whom should I not hire? Maybe that inner city
father. After all, I've made enough money.
If I make
my money by providing investors with a just return that enables them to
stay retired, to provide their children with an inheritance, to live
with dignity in their elder years, at what point, Mr. Obama, have I made
enough money? Whom should I deprive of a return on their hard earned
investment capital? Maybe that grandmother who inched her way out of
the inner city through a lifetime of hard work. After all, I've made enough
money.
People who believe freedom works and see the
government's key role as a conservator of that freedom do not make such
statements. Mr. Obama did. It is not an American statement. It is not
a statement that a free people should expect from their president and
it should disturb them. How much we make isn't his business. Neither
is it his money.
Monday, June 4, 2012
5. Does Freedom Work (Part I)?
I'd ask you to consider the premise that sums up my thinking in these first few entries: Freedom works. The reason why we as a nation have made this amazing leap in a such a short time is that we developed a system of political economy that respects the dignity, liberty, and autonomy of the individual. Only in so doing do we create a climate in which individuals thrive, express their creativity and passion, and create the kind of abundance and opportunity that we enjoy. It is a society in which irrespective of our parents, our neighborhood, our gender, or our ethnicity, the greatest obstacle to success is ourselves.
If you believe freedom works, you naturally fall into the camp of the constitutional conservative. You believe that government's primary role is to protect God-given rights, not invent new rights such as a right to healthcare or a right to free condoms. In fact, in the classic American view (borrowing from Locke's Second Treatise on Civil Government), government is not even a party to the social contract. Rather that is a contract struck between free citizens who agree to divide up the physical, intellectual, and emotional labor of being human in order to derive mutual benefit. Rights are God's to ordain through creation, not government's to invent in order to garner popular support and win elections.
Government is a derivative mechanism rendered necessary by the fact that men are not angels and just might not keep their contracts. Government does not exist to provide a vision for a better future of hope and change, it is a necessary evil that should be viewed with suspicion because it holds a monopoly on the exercise of legitimate violence. Government at its best provides a context in which 300 million Americans can conceive and pursue 300 million unique visions. Free people do not look to Barney Frank, Anthony Weiner or Richard Nixon for their meaning in life. They find their own. They expect their government to let them.
If you believe freedom works, you naturally fall into the camp of the constitutional conservative. You believe that government's primary role is to protect God-given rights, not invent new rights such as a right to healthcare or a right to free condoms. In fact, in the classic American view (borrowing from Locke's Second Treatise on Civil Government), government is not even a party to the social contract. Rather that is a contract struck between free citizens who agree to divide up the physical, intellectual, and emotional labor of being human in order to derive mutual benefit. Rights are God's to ordain through creation, not government's to invent in order to garner popular support and win elections.
Government is a derivative mechanism rendered necessary by the fact that men are not angels and just might not keep their contracts. Government does not exist to provide a vision for a better future of hope and change, it is a necessary evil that should be viewed with suspicion because it holds a monopoly on the exercise of legitimate violence. Government at its best provides a context in which 300 million Americans can conceive and pursue 300 million unique visions. Free people do not look to Barney Frank, Anthony Weiner or Richard Nixon for their meaning in life. They find their own. They expect their government to let them.
4. Bureaucracy and Justice
I can't wait until the same bureaucratic mindset demonstrated here is in charge of all our health care decisions. Paradise awaits:
http://www.myfoxorlando.com/video?clipId=7331648&autoStart=true
http://www.myfoxorlando.com/video?clipId=7331648&autoStart=true
Saturday, June 2, 2012
3. The Uncomfortable Comforting Truth
There is a fundamental truth I would ask you to consider. To me, it is essential. If I did not believe this, I could not be conservative. Conversely, if you do believe it, then I argue it is inevitable to conclude that not only is a great deal of our current public policy wrong, it is destined to fail, and it is why we are going broke. So you tell me, am I right or am I wrong. Should I switch sides and line up behind Mr. Obama?
This is the core truth I would want my child to embrace. It is what I would teach my students. It is what I would share with someone down on their luck, confronting personal failure. It is what I would tell someone from the inner city facing economic and social obstacles to their success. It is what I would tell someone who had been victimized by the greed, callousness, racism or sexism of others.
I believe that I am stunningly fortunate through an accident of birth to be living in the United States in the early years of the 21st century. I believe I am living in a society that has achieved something rare and magnificent. It is a society in which barring misfortune or infirmity anyone can reasonably succeed and enjoy an historically unprecedented standard of living. That is, one need not make heroic choices, know the right people, or be a winner of life's lottery; one need only make sound moral decisions. Consider this quote from Ron Haskins in his article in National Review, May 3, 2010:
"The fact that personal responsibility plays a major role in mobility and economic well-being can be easily demonstrated. The three basic rules of success in America are that young people should finish their educations (at least high school), get jobs, and get married before having children. Computations based on Census data that my Brookings Institution colleague Isabel Sawhill performed for our recent book, Creating an Opportunity Society, shows that kids who follow these rules have a 74 percent chance of winding up in the middle class (defined as income of $50,000 or more) and a mere 2 percent chance of winding up in poverty ($17,200 for a family of three in 2008). By contrast, young people who violate all three of these rules have only a 7 percent chance of winding up in the middle class and a 76 percent chance of winding up in poverty."
Stunning.
The overwhelming fact is that we are incredibly lucky to be living in a society wherein if you study hard, work hard, treat people fairly, save money, marry intelligently, and have a service orientation, you will most likely succeed. In medieval Europe, most people could not read, lived hungry, cold lives, shared the same physical dwelling with their animals if they were lucky to have any, and died young. Today, the biggest barriers to success are a skills deficit and stupid choices.
It follows that the biggest single contribution we can make to helping people succeed is to provide them with the skills they need to access the abundant opportunity all around them. I would teach anyone struggling to find success and happiness to get up every day and ask a single question: How can I provide value for someone today? It has nothing to do with the 1%, the oil companies, bankers or Wall Street fat cats. People do not need the playing field leveled, they do not need to rely on a philosopher king to take care of them, and they certainly do not need America to be fundamentally transformed, thank you. They simply need to make better choices that unlock their inner, God-given potential.
Will there always been a tragic tenth, the physically and mentally wounded, the unfortunate souls? Of course. And we should take care of them humanely and with love. But the tragic tenth will not drive a wealthy nation into bankruptcy. It is when a significant percentage of the population loses the capacity for self-reliance that you eventually run out of other people's money. This is a problem of character and all the class warfare in the world won't solve it. It will, however, get you one hell of a deficit.
This is the core truth I would want my child to embrace. It is what I would teach my students. It is what I would share with someone down on their luck, confronting personal failure. It is what I would tell someone from the inner city facing economic and social obstacles to their success. It is what I would tell someone who had been victimized by the greed, callousness, racism or sexism of others.
I believe that I am stunningly fortunate through an accident of birth to be living in the United States in the early years of the 21st century. I believe I am living in a society that has achieved something rare and magnificent. It is a society in which barring misfortune or infirmity anyone can reasonably succeed and enjoy an historically unprecedented standard of living. That is, one need not make heroic choices, know the right people, or be a winner of life's lottery; one need only make sound moral decisions. Consider this quote from Ron Haskins in his article in National Review, May 3, 2010:
"The fact that personal responsibility plays a major role in mobility and economic well-being can be easily demonstrated. The three basic rules of success in America are that young people should finish their educations (at least high school), get jobs, and get married before having children. Computations based on Census data that my Brookings Institution colleague Isabel Sawhill performed for our recent book, Creating an Opportunity Society, shows that kids who follow these rules have a 74 percent chance of winding up in the middle class (defined as income of $50,000 or more) and a mere 2 percent chance of winding up in poverty ($17,200 for a family of three in 2008). By contrast, young people who violate all three of these rules have only a 7 percent chance of winding up in the middle class and a 76 percent chance of winding up in poverty."
Stunning.
The overwhelming fact is that we are incredibly lucky to be living in a society wherein if you study hard, work hard, treat people fairly, save money, marry intelligently, and have a service orientation, you will most likely succeed. In medieval Europe, most people could not read, lived hungry, cold lives, shared the same physical dwelling with their animals if they were lucky to have any, and died young. Today, the biggest barriers to success are a skills deficit and stupid choices.
It follows that the biggest single contribution we can make to helping people succeed is to provide them with the skills they need to access the abundant opportunity all around them. I would teach anyone struggling to find success and happiness to get up every day and ask a single question: How can I provide value for someone today? It has nothing to do with the 1%, the oil companies, bankers or Wall Street fat cats. People do not need the playing field leveled, they do not need to rely on a philosopher king to take care of them, and they certainly do not need America to be fundamentally transformed, thank you. They simply need to make better choices that unlock their inner, God-given potential.
Will there always been a tragic tenth, the physically and mentally wounded, the unfortunate souls? Of course. And we should take care of them humanely and with love. But the tragic tenth will not drive a wealthy nation into bankruptcy. It is when a significant percentage of the population loses the capacity for self-reliance that you eventually run out of other people's money. This is a problem of character and all the class warfare in the world won't solve it. It will, however, get you one hell of a deficit.
2. The Pain of Uncomfortable Truth
When I say that
we are on the verge of becoming People of the Lie, I don't mean it in a malicious or insulting
way. By that statement, I mean two
things.
First, as humans, we
are naturally liars. Above all, we are
programmed to lie to ourselves about things that cause us pain. This makes us dysfunctional. The first
step to becoming whole is confronting painful truths about ourselves. Some never do that and spend lives being much
less than they could be. They perpetually find self-congratulatory fault with the universe, society,
western civilization, dead white men, their parents, their bosses, their
ex-spouses, their children, people of a particular color, gender, or status,
corporations, bankers, oil companies, fat-cat bankers, the 1%, the dominant
paradigm, God, anybody but themselves. To
rephrase Mr. Obama, they cling bitterly to their comfortable delusions with
antipathy for the truth that the fault most likely lies not with their stars
but with themselves. This is not helpful.
Second , I have come to the conclusion that there is
something unique about modern liberalism that taps into this natural human propensity to lie
in order to avoid pain, ours or someone else's. However, this well intentioned desire often does damage to people. Time and again, this desire to eliminate pain has harmed the people it
purports to help: Tragically, the most
vulnerable and least among us.
Conversely, I have found that there is something about conservatism that challenges me to
embrace uncomfortable truths - most importantly, about myself. Because of this, although conservatism takes
effort, courage, and maturity, it offers me the opportunity to become more as
an individual. I would argue that as we teeter on the verge of national bankruptcy... for the first time in recent history, confronting the possibility of national insolvency, it is time to start confronting painful truths.
I came to this
conclusion over many years as a consequence of understanding both philosophies
and having at different times in my life embraced both philosophies. As I grew up and gained wisdom, I reflected
on the liberal beliefs of my young adulthood, the beliefs espoused by people
like Mr. Obama. I came to the conclusion
that once one drilled down beneath abstractions about poverty, capitalism,
fundamental fairness, and blood-for-oil, in order to believe what liberals
believe, I usually had to believe things that simply weren't true. In the coming entries, I want to explore such things. I invite you to contradict me if I am wrong.
Nothing exemplifies
this more than those painful and unintentionally embarrassing interviews with
members of the Occupy movement. I don't
like watching them because I don't like seeing (probably nice) people make fools
of themselves. It is uncomfortable. Still, it is instructive. Typically, these interviews reveal a
juxtaposition of sophisticated abstractions straight from Sociology 101 about
corporate greed, exploitation, racism and imperialism mixed with a lack of coherence and concrete understanding of those
things about which they speak. Nice and
well intentioned though these people might be, they are classic fools in the
Socratic sense. Pumped full of bracing
academic knowledge and an impressive vocabulary, they truly do not know what they do not know, much
like Obama himself, and this is dangerous. I argue it is why we are where we are.
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