Townhall...
State
of
Dependency
by Dan
Holler
Jan 23,
2012
The media,
the occupiers, and others engaging in “the bitter politics of envy”
have it all
wrong. If they were concerned with anything other than dividing
Americans and punishing
success, their full attention would be on the 21%, not the 1%.
Who are the
21%? They are the Americans who, according to The Heritage Foundation,
“rely on
government subsidies for their existence.” Read that again: rely on
government
subsidies for their existence. That is a fundamentally un-American
idea. And in
2009 (the last available data), 20.9% of the entire population in
America was
dependent upon government programs for their existence.
Of course,
many of these folks have no desire to be dependent upon government.
They have
become a byproduct of relentless growth in government programs, which
combined
with the rapid growth in the number of Americans not paying federal
income
taxes, has created a dependent class. As Heritage’s Bill Beach notes,
“Dependence on the federal government for life’s many challenges strips
civil
society of its historical and necessary role in providing aid and
renewal
through the intimate relationships of family, community, and local
institutions
and governments.”
For this
dependent class, the American Dream is nothing but a mirage. Life,
Liberty and
the pursuit of Happiness are words without meaning. Individualism and
self-worth are whittled away. Economic growth is the answer, but it
will not
solve the dependency problem entirely; in part because government is
not the
only source of dependency.
Last week,
the president of a Chicago-area International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers
local called a nationally syndicated radio show and expressed his
outrage that
some of his coworkers were open to voting for one of the Republican
candidates
this fall. Look at how this union boss describes his colleagues: “These
people,
whatever wealth they have, whatever affluence they have, and the fact
that they
still have jobs, they owe it to a union.”
Now, you
may be tempted to dismiss this as typical union boss versus evil
employer
rhetoric. (Of course, we all know those jobs would not exist but for
the
employer and the free market economy.) But it is more insidious than
that; it
goes beyond anti-employer rhetoric. The union boss went on to say:
“Some of the
members voted to leave because they thought the reason they had all
these
benefits [was] because they themselves were that good.”
That is not
an argument against employers, but rather an argument against
individualism. It
is an argument in favor of collectivism. The union leader seems to
believe that
his colleagues – most of which are hardworking Americans trying to live
the
American Dream – did not earn anything on their own merit. According to
the
union boss, union workers receive whatever their benevolent union hands
down to
them. He seems to believe, probably to the ire of his members, that
they are
dependent upon him.
In many
respects, this attitude is no different from that of the government.
Their
message is simple: you, as an individual, are nothing without me. And
do not be
surprised if you see this in President Obama’s State of the Union
address
tomorrow night. It will be riddled with populism, government programs
and rants
against the 1%. But it will fall woefully short on how to empower the
21%.
In fact,
that could very well be the dominant theme in the 2012 presidential
contest:
empowerment and individualism versus dependency and collectivism. Just
look at
the rhetoric from the men who finished at the top in South Carolina
this week.
Governor
Mitt Romney warned that President Obama “wants us to become an
entitlement
society where people in this country feel they’re entitled to something
from
government and where government takes from some to give to others.”
Speaker
Newt Gingrich outlined a goal of empowering individuals by “find[ing]
ways to
help poor people learn how to get a job, learn how to get a better job
and
learn some day to own the job.”
It is clear
that both men have a very different vision from President Barack Obama,
not
only on how the economy should function but also on the worth and value
of an
individual. So as you watch the President deliver his State of the
Union
address tomorrow, ask yourself one question: is he planning to increase
the
state of dependency? Sadly, the answer is likely to be yes.
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