These initial
reflections in posts 1-6 have lead me to confront a central truth and a central
lie and the political/moral implications that flow therefrom. Judge for yourself whether or not you agree
with me.
The essential truth
at the heart of constitutional conservatism is that imperfect and inequitable
though it might be, our society provides abundant opportunity for anyone to
enjoy a satisfying lifestyle assuming that they make reasonable decisions and
are of sound mind and body. The reason
this opportunity exists is because we have a system of political economy that
emphasizes the dignity, autonomy, liberty, and property of the individual. By jealously guarding these principles, we
have unleashed individual creativity and initiative on an historically
unprecedented scale. This is how
abundance is created. This is how
economies grow. In fact, it is the only
way.
In this view, the
primary moral obligation of the government is to continually protect these
God-bestowed rights, the day-by-day execution of which by a functional
citizenry produces this abundance and opportunity. Conversely, the primary moral obligation of
the citizenry is -- after having established a sound personal scaffolding for
themselves by studying hard, working hard, marrying well, and saving money --
to use their personal abundance in order
to provide for individuals who truly cannot provide for themselves (the safety
net) and to teach those who are missing out on an abundant life because of a
skills deficit (mentorship). As Bill Bennett once said succinctly: learn,
earn, serve.
If I were to
interview 1,000 individuals who truly were the downtrodden, the least of my
brothers, I believe I would discover two tribes. Tribe one would consist of people who were in their
situations because they were part of the tragic tenth -- the mentally or
physically wounded individuals who cannot fend for themselves -- or the temporarily unlucky. This is the safety net tribe. It is the tribe that the functional and fortunate 90% are capable and happy to take care of from their abundance. But then, I would also discover another tribe. A tribe equally in need of support and compassion, but a tribe that need not be. A tribe that can grow large enough to overwhelm the functional, productive members of society. This is the tribe that exists because its members have made poor decisions.
Not evil decisions. Not
intentionally self-destructive decisions.
But poor decisions, consistently, throughout the course of their
lives.
Moreover, I would
find that in most cases, they made poor decisions because they simply had not
been given the cultural wherewithal to make good ones. I would find that overwhelmingly the culprit
lay with their families of origin. I
would find that they had parents who did not see parenting as their primary
moral responsibility, who did not themselves possess the skills to pass on to
their children no matter how much they loved them, or both. I would encounter a tragic litany of the
dispossessed:
- I would see adult children who had grown up in homes without a functional mother and father who loved them and each other
- I would see adult children who grew up in homes where their parents were not professionally successfully, who did not know how to develop professional skills, did not possess a work ethic, did not know how to find a job, to keep a job, to relate to their coworkers, to impress their bosses, and to move up the economic ladder
- I would find adult children who grew up in homes where their parents knew nothing about money: about its importance, how to save it, how to invest it, how to budget, how to make wise purchasing decisions.
- I would find adult children who grew up in homes where their parents did not know how to deal with intense human emotions like anger, fear, disappointment, and sadness; who did not know how to manage human appetites for food, for mood and mind altering substances, for romance and sexuality
- I would find adult children who grew up in homes where their parents did not value and know how to achieve education, how to study, how to savor ideas and their expression, how to cultivate the life of the mind, how to apply for college and financial assistance, how to exploit the tremendous resources that colleges provide
- I would find children who grew up in homes where their parents did not know how to maturely love and cherish other people, where a mother and father did not look at each other with an abiding love in their eyes, where a mother and father did not convey to their children that those children were a source of delight and that their parents, along with the universe, was glad to have their company
In short, I would
find a wounded tribe that was forever beyond the reach of government succor and
largesse. It is a tribe whose pain Bill
Clinton cannot possibly feel, let alone redress. And given that Mr. Clinton was many times the
politician that Mr. Obama ever will be, it is certainly a pain that our
community organizer cannot heal.
It is, however,
precisely the kind of pain and need that poses the core questions at the heart
of all the world's great religions. It
is the tribe that, in the Christian faith, Jesus died for and whose pain he did feel as his life dwindled on the
cross. And in feeling that pain, he did
not seek to organize them. He died for
them. And he expected his followers to care for them. It is the tribe whose pain that
only a just and good community of 300 million or so free and functional people
- whatever their faith - might just be able to do something about. If they retain the liberty to do so.
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