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Walter Williams
Walter E. Williams
23 May 2012
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Understanding Liberals

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The liberal vision of government is easily understood and makes perfect sense if one acknowledges their misunderstanding and implied assumptions about the sources of income. Their vision helps explain the language they use and policies they support, such as income redistribution and calls for the rich to give something back.

Suppose the true source of income was a gigantic pile of money meant to be shared equally amongst Americans. The reason some people have more money than others is because they got to the pile first and greedily took an unfair share. That being the case, justice requires that the rich give something back, and if they won't do so voluntarily, Congress should confiscate their ill-gotten gains and return them to their rightful owners.

A competing liberal implied assumption about the sources of income is that income is distributed, as in distribution of income. There might be a dealer of dollars. The reason why some people have more dollars than others is because the dollar dealer is a racist, a sexist, a multinationalist or a conservative. The only right thing to do, for those to whom the dollar dealer unfairly dealt too many dollars, is to give back their ill-gotten gains. If they refuse to do so, then it's the job of Congress to use their agents at the IRS to confiscate their ill-gotten gains and return them to their rightful owners. In a word, there must be a re-dealing of the dollars or what some people call income redistribution.

The sane among us recognize that in a free society, income is neither taken nor distributed; for the most part, it is earned. Income is earned by pleasing one's fellow man. The greater one's ability to please his fellow man, the greater is his claim on what his fellow man produces. Those claims are represented by the number of dollars received from his fellow man.

Say I mow your lawn.

For doing so, you pay me $20. I go to my grocer and demand, "Give me 2 pounds of steak and a six-pack of beer that my fellow man produced." In effect, the grocer asks, "Williams, you're asking your fellow man to serve you. Did you serve him?" I reply, "Yes." The grocer says, "Prove it."

That's when I pull out the $20 I earned from serving my fellow man. We can think of that $20 as "certificates of performance." They stand as proof that I served my fellow man. It would be no different if I were an orthopedic doctor, with a large clientele, earning $500,000 per year by serving my fellow man. By the way, having mowed my fellow man's lawn or set his fractured fibula, what else do I owe him or anyone else? What's the case for being forced to give anything back? If one wishes to be charitable, that's an entirely different matter.

Contrast the morality of having to serve one's fellow man in order to have a claim on what he produces with congressional handouts. In effect, Congress says, "You don't have to serve your fellow man in order to have a claim on what he produces. We'll take what he produces and give it to you. Just vote for me."

Who should give back? Sam Walton founded Wal-Mart, Bill Gates founded Microsoft, Steve Jobs founded Apple Computer. Which one of these billionaires acquired their wealth by coercing us to purchase their product? Which has taken the property of anyone?

Each of these examples, and thousands more, is a person who served hia fellow men by producing products and services that made life easier. What else do they owe? They've already given.

If anyone is obliged to give something back, they are the thieves and recipients of legalized theft, namely people who've used Congress, including America's corporate welfare queens, to live at the expense of others. When a nation vilifies the productive and makes mascots of the unproductive, it doesn't bode well for its future.

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
well they had their chance when obama took office he could have taken the money that taxpayer's pay in, and use it to bail out the tax payer instead of banks, crooks and everyone but the little guy. now come 2012 its the little guys time to say your ass is out of here
Comment: #1
Posted by: Geo4America
Wed May 18, 2011 5:53 AM
Three cheers for Walter Williams' clear, uncompromising exposure of the dynamics of the entitlement industry. If only more people understood that the redistribution mentality is immoral because it caters to the breaking of a fundamental commandment: Thou shalt not covet. The unproductive covet what the producers have, and they've managed to get government to be their henchmen in extorting from those who have. For how long do you think the producers will allow themselves to be kept in such indentured servitude?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Kate Jones
Wed May 18, 2011 2:08 PM
Dr. Williams is so very right. I constantly hear people make the claim that wealthy people owe the society that allowed them to become wealthy. What they owe they already provided-thus they are wealthy. Bill Gates gave you his product, Steven Spielberg gave you his film, the oil company gave you the oil. The mutual trade has taken place and after that neither party owes the other any more. Bill Gates has just as much right to say we should pay more for Windows after we have purchased the operating system as we have to say he owes us more money through the tax system. If someone is literally forcing you to participate in a contract you have legal recourse. Otherwise you are entering into it mutually and that is the end of your claim.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Zack
Thu May 19, 2011 8:19 PM
Dr. Williams is a brilliant man and I love to listen to him when he sits-in for Rush. His insight into the nations problems is clear and concise and always has a sensible solution. Thank you for your contribution to us Dr. Williams and keep it coming !
Comment: #4
Posted by: Jaybo
Thu Jul 7, 2011 8:29 PM
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