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Thought To Ponder The healthy state of industry and wealth is the state of absolute liberty, in which each interest is left to take care of itself. The only useful protection authority can afford them is that against fraud and violence. Taxes and restrictive measures never can be a benefit: they are at best a necessary evil; to suppose them useful to the subjects at large is to mistake the foundation of national prosperity... |
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The "Iron Chancellor," Otto von Bismarck-s (German Chancellor) had a paternalistic desire to help his fellow countrymen in Germany in the 1880-s with social security that offered insurance against accident, sickness and old age. More recent examples of this would be the Labour Party in Britain and President Roosevelt-s New Deal in the US. We seem to have picked up the same theme here in recent months with governments pronouncement to introduce more policies like this. Have we begun the journey further down the road of Socialism?... A path we can ill afford. Milton and Rose Friedman pointed out some of the pitfalls of this all encompassing compassion in their 1980 "personal statement" titled "Free To Choose:"
Why Did The War On Poverty Fail? It is estimated that America has spent over $5 trillion dollars in an attempt to solve the problems of the poor. After all of this, the richest and most resourceful country in the world is having to admit defeat in the war on poverty. James Payne, author of Overcoming Welfare, leads us through the reasons for welfare-s failure. He submits that the "Ideology of Handouts" is the major contributor. He suggests that:
Mr. Payne went on to state that:
Quite astonishingly Mr. Harrington reported on these tragic lives and their many problems and it would appear made no attempt to rehabilitate them. These problems included "alcoholics, degradation, exposure, disease, theft and violence." In summarising his experience it is reported he concluded "that alcoholic poverty was not an economic problem but deeply a matter of personality." Apparently he added that "One hardly knows where to begin." With all this Mr. Payne hits the nail on the head about handouts:
So What Should We Do? First of all I don-t agree that any government including ours can solve the inequities of society with handouts and continually increasing the welfare state as many countries have found out. And unfortunately government programs, no matter how well intentioned, become black holes for the taxpayers hard earned money. Government agencies tend to get increased budgets each year to simply expand their bureaucracy and the cycle of poverty continues. Second, we need to expand free market principles. I think Paul Poirot put this rather succinctly in his essay Private Enterprise, Government Spending and Welfare:
We must find ways to continue to increase capitalistic behaviour. If that comes with more foreign investment or reducing the tax burden on the rich to continue to expand business enterprises, so be it. Maybe the powers that be ought to provide some moral persuasion with the less productive of our society. If we find ways to "pay" people who do not wish to make a contribution, the war on poverty will not be necessary - there won-t be anything left for the rich or the poor. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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