Sometimes, when I hear about "disparities" and "inequities," I think of a
disparity that applied directly to me-- the disparity in basketball ability
between myself and Michael Jordan.
When I was in school, I was so awful in
basketball that the class coach wouldn't even let me try out for softball, at
which I was actually pretty good.
I was more than forty years old before I ever got the ball through the
basket. It wasn't during a game. The basket was in my brother's backyard and I
was just shooting-- unopposed-- from practically right under the basket. The
only pressure on me was that my little nephew was watching.
After making that one basket, I never took a basketball in my hands again.
I retired at my peak.
Think about it: Michael Jordan made millions of dollars because of having a
talent that was totally denied to me. Through no fault of my own, I had to
spend years studying economics, in order to make a living.
Economics is not nearly as much fun as basketball and doesn't pay nearly as
much money either. We are talking inequity big time.
Most discussions of "disparities" and "inequities" are a prelude to coming
up with some "solution" that the government can impose, winning politicians
some votes in the process. How could the disparity between Michael Jordan and
me be solved?
We could change the rules of basketball, in order to try to equalize the
outcomes. Michael Jordan could be required to make all his two-point shots
from beyond the three-point line, with five players opposing him and no one on
his side. A three-point shot could require him to stand under the basket on
the opposite side of the court and shoot from there.
Meanwhile, I could make two-point shots from a spot half the distance from
the foul line to the basket, and of course without any other players on the
court to distract me. Any shots I might make from back at the foul line would
count as three-pointers.
Even under these conditions, you would be better off betting your money on
Michael Jordan. But, conceivably at least, we might change the rules some more
to make the results come out less lopsided, in order to create "social
justice."
The problem with trying to equalize is that you can usually only equalize
downward. If the government were to spend some of its stimulus money trying to
raise my basketball ability level to that of Michael Jordan, it would be an
even bigger waste of money than most of the other things that Washington does.
So the only way to try to equalize that has any chance at all would be to
try to bring Michael Jordan down to my level, whether by drastic rule changes
or by making him play with one hand tied behind his back, or whatever.
The problem with this approach, as with many other attempts at
equalization, is that it undermines the very activity involved. Basketball
would be a much less interesting game if it was played under rules designed to
produce equality of outcomes.
Attendance would fall off to the point where neither Michael Jordan nor
anyone else could make a living playing the game.
The same principle applies elsewhere. If you are going to try to equalize
the chances of women getting jobs as firefighters, for example, then you are
going to have to lower the physical requirements of height, weight and upper
body strength.
That means that you are going to have more firefighters who are not capable
of carrying an unconscious person out of a burning building.
If you are going to have these lower physical requirements be the same for
both women and men, that means that you are not only going to have women who
are not capable of carrying someone out of a burning building, you are also
going to have men who are likewise incapable of carrying someone to safety.
Most activities do not exist for the sake of equality. They exist to serve
their own purposes-- and those purposes are undermined, sometimes fatally,
when equality becomes the goal.
Nor would a politician encouraging me to feel resentful toward Michael
Jordan do any good. If I had such resentments, they would do me more harm than
they would do Michael Jordan. They would make me feel bad-- and could make me
miss seeing some great basketball.
Copyright 2009, Creators Syndicate Inc.