The Noxious Effects of Entitlements
Long-term observers of American public policy are understandably troubled by the way in which entitlements have become a fiscal juggernaut over the past fifty years. Writing in the New York Times, David Brooks makes a compelling case that the trend is unlikely to change.
Using the SCHIP imbroglio as exhibit A, Mr. Brooks taps a deep cultural vein that is the very life spring of entitlements. As you doubtless know, although its intentions were pure, the State Children's Health Insurance Program has become a pet initiative that is a kind of Valium for lawmakers as it makes them feel wonderful and absolves them of any responsibility.
Brooks provides the detail that effectively nominates this bill for boondoggle of the year but that isn't stopping the legions in Congress in desperate search of a bipartisan program they can anonymously hang their hats on without the slightest chance for a political backlash.
What happened in the past few decades is that our estimation of the proper role of government has profoundly shifted, albeit in degrees that were nearly imperceptible. The result is that our Founding Fathers' concept of limited government was replaced by the twisted notion that every problem is the rightful charge of government. Besides having a socialist cast to it, every time the government grows, our individual freedoms diminish, and along with it the growth that naturally accrues from mistakes.
More specifically, when we have a multi-tiered safety net the notion of risk is dumbed down and our motivation is commensurately inhibited. In places like France where those on unemployment have a disincentive to find work, you have the ultimate civic disaster--unproductive people permanently on the public dole.
Lurking beneath this is a culture steeped in a self-referential homage that is slowly strangling its will to excel. It's a culture that lionizes victimhood while eschewing responsibility, one that has at best a dim understanding of the pain and sacrifice our forebears suffered to sustain this great Republic.
Now, because our leaders are focused only on the next election without any consideration of returning us to civic and fiscal health, we are reduced to arguing about the merits of expanding the SCHIP and balancing it on the backs of smokers.
What a shameful legacy.