Re: Strands in the Tapestry: the Business, Economics, and Tax Policy Thread
But don't call him rightwing, folks.
Mookie at least figured it out. Most of my criticisms of the "progressives" come from the left, not from the right.
While you might think that anyone who criticizes something so noble as "the progressive" must
automatically be from the "right" in this case you would be wrong.
There is a "practical" left and a "naively ideological" left. The latter thinks that it is sufficient merely to
mean well (i.e., to have "good intentions"), while the former insists that the only thing that actually matters is whether you
do well (i.e., "how do the policies actually affect the lives of real people"?)
I think that in a civil society, the most fortunate have a moral obligation to help those whose lives and efforts helped make that good fortune possible (i.e., while you did build that, you didn't build that on your own). I also notice that progressive government has resulted in more poor people, more unemployment, and more misery in the lives of people it purports to help; while economic growth and opportunity have helped more people out of poverty.
Karl Marx said it best (paraphrase): "Government is run by rich people in order to preserve their privileges. The people who work in government always have their own self-interest first." Applying Marx's insight, we notice that "progressive" programs are designed primarily to give lots of people government jobs, and if the programs actually did work as "intended" then all those people would be out of a job (suppose we actually "won" the "war on poverty" for example. That's a lot of bureaucrats who'd have nothing left to do, no??).
"Anti-poverty" programs depend upon the existence of plenty of poor people. Any government-run "anti-poverty" program perpetuates poverty, it does not address its root causes.
Either you believe in progressive ideals or you believe in progressive government, which is anti-thetical to progressive ideals.
Keep trying to comfort yourself by pretending that I'm "right-wing"; my scathing criticism actually comes from the left.
It is similar to why Thomas Sowell and Clarence Thomas provide such scathing criticisms of affirmative action: they see very clearly the "soft bigotry of low expectations" and are unstinting in their criticisms: programs that in theory are supposed to help people advance wind up in practice undermining the efforts of the very same people that are supposed to be helped. The results belie the intention.