Playing
Freedom Cheap
by Thomas
Sowell
TownHall.com
If eternal vigilance is the price of freedom, incessant distractions are the
way that politicians take away our freedoms, in order to enhance their own power
and longevity in office. Dire alarms and heady crusades are among the many
distractions of our attention from the ever increasing ways that government
finds to take away more of our money and more of our freedom.
Magicians have long known that distracting an audience is the key to creating
the illusion of magic. It is also the key to political magic.
Alarms ranging from "overpopulation" to "global warming" and crusades ranging
from "affordable housing" to "universal health care" have been among the
distractions of political magicians. But few distractions have had such a long
and impressive political track record as getting people to resent and, if
necessary, hate other people.
The most politically effective totalitarian systems have gotten people to
give up their own freedom in order to vent their resentment or hatred at other
people-- under Communism, the capitalists; under Nazis, the Jews.
Under extremist Islamic regimes today, hatred is directed at the infidels in
general and the "great Satan," the United States, in particular. There some
people have been induced to give up not only their freedom but even their lives,
in order to strike a blow against those they have been taught to hate.
We have not yet reached these levels of hostility, but those who are taking
away our freedoms, bit by bit, on the installment plan, have been incessantly
supplying us with people to resent.
One of the most audacious attempts to take away our freedom to live our lives
as we see fit has been the so-called "health care reform" bills that were being
rushed through Congress before either the public or the members of Congress
themselves had a chance to discover all that was in it.
For this, we were taught to resent doctors, insurance companies and even
people with "Cadillac health insurance plans," who were to be singled out for
special taxes. Meanwhile, our freedom to make our own medical decisions-- on
which life and death can depend-- was to be quietly taken from us and
transferred to our betters in Washington. Only the recent Massachusetts election
results have put that on hold.
Another dangerous power toward which we are moving, bit by bit, on the
installment plan, is the power of politicians to tell people what their incomes
can and cannot be. Here the resentment is being directed against "the rich."
The distracting phrases here include "obscene" wealth and "unconscionable"
profits. But, if we stop and think about it-- which politicians don't expect us
to-- what is obscene about wealth? Wouldn't we consider it great if every human
being on earth had a billion dollars and lived in a place that could rival the
Taj Mahal?
Poverty is obscene. It is poverty that needs to be reduced--and increasing a
country's productivity has done that far more widely than redistributing income
by targeting "the rich."
You can see the agenda behind the rhetoric when profits are called
"unconscionable" but taxes never are, even when taxes take more than half of
what someone has earned, or add much more to the prices we have to pay than
profits do.
The assumption that what A pays B is any business of C is an assumption that
means a dangerous power being transferred to politicians to tell us all what
incomes we can and cannot receive. It will not apply to everyone all at once.
Like the income tax, which at first applied only to the truly rich, and then
slowly but steadily moved down the income scale to hit the rest of us, the power
to say what incomes people can be allowed to make will inevitably move down the
income scale to make us all dependents and supplicants of politicians.
The phrase "public servants" is increasingly misleading. They are well on
their way to becoming public masters-- like aptly named White House "czars." The
more they can get us all to resent those they designate, the more they can
distract us from their increasing control of our own lives-- but only if we sell
our freedom cheap. We can sell our birthright and not even get the mess of
pottage.
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