US1.me
The
War Against Achievement
by
Thomas Sowell
A
friend recently sent me a link to an inspiring video about an upbeat
young black man who was born without arms. It showed him going to
work -- unlike the record number of people living on government
payments for "disabilities" that are far less serious, if
not fictitious.
How
is this young man getting to work? He gets into his car and drives
there -- using controls set up so that he can operate the car with
his feet.
What
kind of work does he do, and how does he do it? He is involved in the
design of racing cars. He sits at his computer, looking at the
screen, with the keyboard on the floor, where he uses his toes as
others use their fingers.
His
story recalls the story of Helen Keller, who went to an elite college
and on to a career, despite being both deaf and blind. Her story was
celebrated in books, in television documentaries and in an inspiring
movie, "The Miracle Worker."
But
our culture has changed so much over the years that the young man
with no arms is unlikely to get comparable publicity. Helen Keller's
achievement was seen as an inspiration for others, but this young
man's achievement is more like a threat to the prevailing ideology of
our times.
The
vision on which the all-encompassing and all-controlling welfare
state was built is a vision of widespread helplessness, requiring
ever more expanding big government. Our "compassionate"
statists would probably have wanted to take this young man without
arms, early on, and put him in some government institution.
But
to celebrate him in the mainstream media today would undermine a
whole ideological vision of the world -- and of the vast government
bureaucracies built on that vision. It might even cause people to
think twice about giving money to able-bodied men who are standing on
street corners, begging.
The
last thing the political left needs, or can even afford, are
self-reliant individuals. If such people became the norm, that would
destroy not only the agenda and the careers of those on the left, but
even their flattering image of themselves as saviors of the less
fortunate.
Victimhood
is where it's at. If there are not enough real victims, then
fictitious victims must be created -- as with the claim that there is
"a war on women." Why anyone would have an incentive or a
motivation to create a war on women in the first place is just one of
the questions that should be asked of those who promote this
political slogan, obviously designed for the gullible.
The
real war -- which is being waged in our schools, in the media and
among the intelligentsia -- is the war on achievement. When President
Obama told business owners, "You didn't build that!" this
was just one passing skirmish in the war on achievement.
The
very word "achievement" has been replaced by the word
"privilege" in many writings of our times. Individuals or
groups that have achieved more than others are called "privileged"
individuals or groups, who are to be resented rather than emulated.
The
length to which this kind of thinking -- or lack of thinking -- can
be carried was shown in a report on various ethnic groups in Toronto.
It said that people of Japanese ancestry in that city were the most
"privileged" group there, because they had the highest
average income.
What
made this claim of "privilege" grotesque was a history of
anti-Japanese discrimination in Canada, climaxed by people of
Japanese ancestry being interned during World War II longer than
Japanese Americans.
If
the concept of achievement threatens the prevailing ideology, the
reality of achievement despite having obstacles to overcome is a
deadly threat. That is why the achievements of Asians in general --
and of people like the young black man with no arms -- make those on
the left uneasy. And why the achievements of people who created their
own businesses have to be undermined by the President of the United
States.
What
would happen if Americans in general, or blacks in particular,
started celebrating people like this armless young man, instead of
trying to make heroes out of hoodlums? Many of us would find that
promising and inspiring. But it would be a political disaster for the
left -- which is why it is not likely to happen.
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