Friday, July 11, 2014

Income Inequality

In early January 2014, Bob Lonsberry, a controversial Rochester, NY, talk radio personality had a response to President Obama’s December 4, 2013, speech on Economic Mobility. I’ve used almost all of Mr. Lonsberry’s ideas, and a lot of his original text, making changes where I wanted to, and adding some of my own ideas and thoughts as well. 

“We’ve never begrudged success in America.  We aspire to it.  We admire folks who start new businesses, create jobs, and invent the products that enrich our lives.  And we expect them to be rewarded handsomely for it.  In fact, we've often accepted more income inequality than many other nations for one big reason -- because we were convinced that America is a place where even if you’re born with nothing, with a little hard work you can improve your own situation over time and build something better to leave your kids.  As Lincoln once said, “While we do not propose any war upon capital, we do wish to allow the humblest man an equal chance to get rich with everybody else.” 

The problem is that alongside increased inequality, we’ve seen diminished levels of upward mobility in recent years.  A child born in the top 20 percent has about a 66% chance of staying at or near the top.  A child born into the bottom 20 percent has a less than 5% shot at making it to the top. The idea that a child may never be able to escape that poverty because she lacks a decent education or health care, or a community that views her future as their own, that should offend all of us and it should compel us to action.  We are a better country than this.”  -- Barack Obama 

Yes Mr. President, we are a better country than this, but only because of the original American dream, our work ethic, and our dogged determination and persistence. Calvin Coolidge is credited with saying “Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not: nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not: the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.” 

So when you say that “a child may never escape poverty because she lacks a decent education or healthcare,” I don’t buy it. People who want to succeed, do succeed, because it’s in their DNA and upbringing; they ALWAYS find a way. If you and your party continue to tell them they can’t, they won’t. Your message to them should be “get out there and make it happen for yourself. Dig in and never, never quit.” Your statement that you can be “born with nothing...but with a little hard work you can improve your own situation over time,” is incorrect. It takes a lot of hard work sir, a lot. 

My paternal grandparents were immigrants, making my father the first generation of his family born in the U.S. My grandfather knew that many doors to opportunity were closed to him because he was an immigrant, but he knew that his hard work and sacrifice would open many, if not all, of those doors for his children. The American dream has been perverted from “I want to insure my children have opportunities to succeed that were not available to me” to “I want my children to have it easier that I had it.” 

It’s not about income inequality, it’s about civic irresponsibility. It’s about a political party telling poor people that it’s not their fault and making them into victims to win elective office. The rationale is to vote Democrat because they are the party that will take from those who make more and give to those who make less. It is a philosophy that deviates from American values and common sense because it ends up benefiting the people who support it, but don’t contribute to it. You have not empowered your followers and supporters; you have enslaved them in a culture of dependence and entitlement, of victim-hood and anger instead of ability and hope. 

Your premise on income seeks to deny the successful the consequences of their choices and spare the unsuccessful the consequences of theirs.  Because, by and large, income variations in society are the result of different choices leading to different consequences.  Those who choose wisely and responsibility have a far greater likelihood of success, while those who choose foolishly and irresponsibly have a far greater likelihood of failure.  Success and failure usually manifest themselves in personal and family income. 

If you choose to drop out of high school or to skip college then you are apt to have a different outcome than someone who gets a diploma and pushes on with purposeful education and/or employment. If you have your children when you are too young to support them, your life, and the lives of your children, are apt to take one course; if you wait until you have the financial stability to have children, your life is apt to take another course. Most often in life our destination is determined by the choices we make which determines the course we take. 

My oldest son and his wife are both doctors, and both of them make far more than I do so there is significant income inequality between us.  Our lives have had an inequality of outcome, but, our lives also have had an inequality of effort.  While my son and daughter-in-law both invested 12 years of their lives to undergraduate studies, medical school and internships and waited to have children. I joined the military at 18, and had my children very young. Neither choice was “right” or “wrong”, they were simply choices with different paths and outcomes. 

They made a choice, I made a choice, and our choices led us to different outcomes. And, while I am doing well financially, their outcome still pays a lot better than mine. Does that mean they cheated and it is your job to take away their wealth?  No, it means we are all free people in a free society where free choices lead to different outcomes. 

The motivation to work hard is being bred out of our society because you either a) work hard and enjoy success, but face the punitive hand of government if your pursuit brings you more happiness than others, or b) do little or nothing and make a lifetime of shortsighted decisions, in which case the government will take from others to give you what you need. 

Equality of outcome is not a right, because it completely ignores inequality of effort.  The simple Law of the Harvest – as ye sow, so shall ye reap – is sometimes applied as, “The harder you work, the more you get.”  You and your party would turn that upside down; those who achieve are to be punished as enemies of society and those who fail are to be rewarded as wards of society. 

You are seeking to replace effort as the key to upward mobility in American society by treating the symptoms, but not dealing with the root cause of the illness. You are continuing down the path of your predecessors, both Democrat and Republican, in creating government programs that address the exceptions, or squeaky wheels, rather than the majority. In doing so, you are killing off their desire to work as hard as needed, for as long as needed, to join the rest of us in the meaty portion of the bell curve. 

America is not divided by the differences in our outcomes, it is divided by the differences in our efforts.  It is a false philosophy to say one man’s success comes about unavoidably as the result of another man’s victimization. The Democrats do not offer a fair solution, only separatism. They foment division and strife, pitting one set of Americans against another for their own political benefit. 

Two Americas, coming closer each day to proving the truth to Lincoln’s maxim that a house divided against itself cannot stand.