I am sending along in this blog post the complete
text of an essay by Thomas Sowell, an American economist, social theorist,
political philosopher, and author. A National Humanities Medal winner, he
advocates laissez-faire economics and writes from a conservative and
libertarian perspective. This essay was posted on the Patriot Post today. Today in America, votes are being bought; this is a disgrace that must be avoided!
The theme that most seemed
to rouse the enthusiasm of delegates to the Democratic National Convention in
Charlotte was that we are all responsible for one another -- and that
Republicans don't want to help the poor, the sick and the helpless.
All of us should be on
guard against beliefs that flatter ourselves. At the very least, we should
check such beliefs against facts.
Yet the notion that people
who prefer economic decisions to be made by individuals in the market are not
as compassionate as people who prefer those decisions to be made collectively
by politicians is seldom even thought of as a belief that should be checked
against facts.
Nor is this notion
confined to Democrats in America today. Belief in the superior compassion of
the political left is a worldwide phenomenon that goes back at least as far as
the 18th century. But in all that time, and in all those places, there has been
little, if any, effort on the left to check this crucial assumption against
facts.
When an empirical study of
the actual behavior of American conservatives and liberals was published in
2006, it turned out that conservatives donated a larger amount of money, and a
higher percentage of their incomes (which were slightly lower than liberal
incomes) to philanthropic activities.
Conservatives also donated
more of their time to philanthropic activities and donated far more blood than
liberals. What is most remarkable about this study are not just its results.
What is even more remarkable is how long it took before anyone even bothered to
ask the questions. It was just assumed, for centuries, that the left was more
compassionate.
Ronald Reagan donated a
higher percentage of his income to charitable activities than did either
Franklin D. Roosevelt or Ted Kennedy. Being willing to donate the taxpayers'
money is not the same as being willing to put your own money where your mouth
is.
Milton Friedman pointed
out that the heyday of free market capitalism in the 19th century was a period
of an unprecedented rise in philanthropic activity. Going even further back in
time, in the 18th century Adam Smith, the patron saint of free market
economics, was discovered from records examined after his death to have
privately made large charitable donations, far beyond what might have been
expected from someone of his income level.
Helping those who have
been struck by unforeseeable misfortunes is fundamentally different from making
dependency a way of life.
Although the big word on
the left is "compassion," the big agenda on the left is dependency.
The more people who are dependent on government handouts, the more votes the
left can depend on for an ever-expanding welfare state.
Optimistic Republicans who
say that widespread unemployment and record numbers of people on food stamps
hurt President Obama's reelection chances are overlooking the fact that people
who are dependent on government are more likely to vote for politicians who are
giving them handouts.
President Franklin D.
Roosevelt understood that, back during the Great Depression of the 1930s. He
was reelected in a landslide after his first term, during which unemployment
was in double digits every single month, and in some months was over 20
percent.
The time is long overdue
for optimistic Republicans to understand what FDR understood long ago, and what
Barack Obama clearly understands today. Dependency pays off in votes -- unless
somebody alerts the taxpayers who get stuck with the bill.
The Obama administration
is shamelessly advertising in the media -- whether on billboards or on
television -- for people to get on food stamps. Welfare state bureaucrats have
been sent into supermarkets to tell shoppers that food stamps are available.
The intelligentsia have
for decades been promoting the idea that there should be no stigma to accepting
government handouts. Living off the taxpayers is portrayed as a
"right" or -- more ponderously -- as part of a "social
contract."
You may not recall signing
any such contract, but it sounds poetic and high-toned. Moreover, it wins votes
among the gullible, and that is the bottom line for welfare state politicians.
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