The Era of Procrustes
Tibor R. Machan
But a good dosage of common sense alone should serve to repel that kind of support for egalitarianism. After all, the egalitarians who want to make changes in our institutions are clearly not buying it. They think they can certainly make a big difference. But if they can, so can we all.
Tibor R. Machan
It
used to be an ugly trait to be envious. Envy is when one holds that it
would be best if everyone were equally badly off. If you are better
off than I am, envy will incline me to want you to give up whatever it
is that is advantageous and accept burdens up to the point where you are
no better off than is anyone else. Makes little sense but there you
go.
When
I came to the USA I managed to get admitted to a college that mostly
well to do students attended. For example, during the Christmas break a
good many of them went off to St. Moritz and Veil to do some skiing,
something I couldn’t do as a first generation immigrant. I took some
job during the break while my mates were off doing all kinds of fun
stuff.
Although
I noticed this, I never felt even a smidgen of envy. Indeed, my
feeling tended toward delight, knowing that in time I may well take
similar vacations or, at least, my own offspring will be able to do so.
And while I lived in a room in a house owned by a lady near the
college, most of my classmates had far more impressive accommodations.
And I thought, “Good for them--there is where I want to be in the
future!” Not, “What horrors, they are doing better than I am,” at least
in some basic respects.
Later
in my education I ran across the myth of Procrustes. He was the fellow
who invited guests to his abode only to cut them all down to one size
so they could fit his bed. Over the years I found that Procrustes’
solution to differences among his guests was the same as that of a great
many political theorists, including many who are now in charge of
public policies in America and across the globe. One size needs to fit
all! Anytime someone is a bit better off than others, this must be
remedied by eliminating the difference. Equality is the operative ideal
these days. Just watch all the fuss about Mitt Romney’s wealth.
Not
everyone falls in line with this and here and there are some very
formidable dissidents, among them George Orwell whose story Animal Farm
teaches very valuable lessons about this destructive social philosophy.
Making everyone equal, in economic or other matters, is mostly a
failed mission and invites the worst of all inequalities, namely,
inequality of political power. Those imposing the ideal of equality
will be anything but equal to those on whom they impose their
misconceived idealistic policies. Just think of the old Soviet Union.
Yet,
despite his education, President Obama and his pals tend to be an avid
egalitarians. They don’t even allow that some people may have worked
hard enough to get ahead of others in wealth creation. For him no one
could have achieved the advantages he or she enjoys.
Luckily
we have reminders aplenty that this fanaticism about equality is
totally misguided and dangerous to boot. The recent Olympic Games helps
to see just how crazy egalitarianism is. And anyone who teaches in the
various schools where young people are attempting to gain knowledge and
are tested for how well their efforts have paid off cannot miss the
fact that those who study hard tend to get farther than those who just
hang out at school.
Sadly
egalitarianism gains support from some pseudo science in our day,
especially the kind that insists that no one has any power over his or
her life, that our actions are all driven by impersonal forces. Despite
the paradox involved in this kind of thinking--which, if true, would
allow for no remedies of anything at all--a lot of people jump on the
bandwagon and it gains enormous institutional support around the
educational, psychological community.
But a good dosage of common sense alone should serve to repel that kind of support for egalitarianism. After all, the egalitarians who want to make changes in our institutions are clearly not buying it. They think they can certainly make a big difference. But if they can, so can we all.
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