David :
 
Nice article, will save for my files.  However, as right as much of the 
thrust
of Lowry's, piece is, there are, in fact,  de facto social Darwinist 
economic policy advocates
in the Republican Party, like Gilder, and  like the late Milton Friedman. 
Hence everyone who still follows  Friedman's ideas today.
 
What critics of the Ryan plan are upset  about is that the blame for 
problems
which that plan seems to assume, should  fall on average citizens and not on
the finance capital wealthy, viz, Wall  Street speculators.
 
My position is directly derivative of  Kevin Philips,  if you want to know.
Since ca 1980 if not before, he has been  more-or-less politically 
independent
but, as you also know, at one time  he  was a conservative theorist of the
first order. But along the way he became  disillusioned with finance capital
and certainly since ca 1990 has been at  war with that wing of the
Republican Party.  This hardly means  that he is pro-Democratic Party
even if, here and there, he may go along  with Democratic ideas. Basically
he rejects the Washington Consensus,  which, in practice, is a bi-partisan
supply side theory of economics. 
 
My opposition to supply side thinking is  near absolute.
 
My contempt for finance capital  economics  --to a whole class of Wall 
Streeters--
is also near absolute.  Hence my  comment about "conservative" economists
who "can be" worse than the  Left.   This, BTW, is not exactly a ringing
endorsement of the Left, just a  comparison, as if someone said that
"if anything Communism is worse than  Fascism." Clearly NEITHER
alternative is worth a damn, its just that  one is worse than the other.
 
My humble opinion
 
Billy
 
===============================================
 
 
4/10/2012 10:36:15 P.M. Pacific Daylight  Time, [email protected] 
writes:

_NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE_ (http://www.nationalreview.com/)            
_www.nationalreview.com_ (http://www.nationalreview.com/)          
_The Social-Darwinist  Smear_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/295621/social-darwinist-smear-rich-lowry)
  
 
By _Rich Lowry_ (http://www.nationalreview.com/author/56473) 
_April 10, 2012 12:00 A.M._ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/295621/social-darwinist-smear-rich-lowry)
  

 
 
 
Social Darwinism isn’t what  it used to be. 
President Barack Obama lambasted the Paul  Ryan budget as “thinly veiled 
social Darwinism” in a scorching budget speech  last week. The charge 
displayed the same care as his contention that it would  be unprecedented for 
the 
Supreme Court to overturn legislation passed by  Congress — in other words, 
another verbal temper tantrum substituting  petulance for reason. 
Social Darwinism is the 19th-century creed  that, drawing on biology, 
supposedly held that a laissez-faire economy should  operate on the basis of “
survival of the fittest.” The strong rise, while the  weak fall, unaided and 
deserving their pitiable fate. 
What are the telltale signs of social  Darwinism in the Ryan budget? Total 
federal spending will only increase from  $3.6 trillion this year to $4.8 
trillion in ten years. If you can’t already  hear the cries of children 
relegated to the poorhouse and of old people pushed  out onto ice floes, you 
must 
be a 21st-century robber baron. Ryan wants to  spend 19.8 percent of GDP as 
of 2022, a greater share of the economy than when  President Bill Clinton 
left office — that infamous advocate of private-sector  predation at the 
expense of the worthless poor. 
Doesn’t Ryan want to cut taxes for the  rich? He would reduce tax rates, 
while making the revenue up by closing  loopholes and deductions. This 
Darwinistic notion was endorsed by President  Obama’s own fiscal commission, 
chaired by men the president fulsomely praised  without ever once mentioning 
that 
they were a danger to the weak and the  vulnerable on account of their 
unhinged belief in a society run by and for the  evolutionarily superior. 
But Ryan wants to end Medicare, doesn’t  he? Ten years from now, Ryan 
proposes introducing an element of choice into  Medicare while limiting the 
program’s growth to the GDP growth rate plus 0.5  percent, the same spending 
goal 
that the president sets out in his own budget.  If Ryan is “red in tooth 
and claw” on Medicare, so is the president. The  difference is that President 
Obama prefers a price-setting bureaucratic panel  to competition as his 
Darwinistic tool to weed out the maladapted  elderly. 
If the president were asked to enunciate a  line between heartless social 
Darwinism and prudent budgeting, he surely  couldn’t do it. What he means by 
a social Darwinist is someone who wants to  spend less money than he does. 
By this standard, the president is a damnable  social Darwinist compared with 
the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which  wants to spend $1.5 trillion 
more than he does over the next ten years and  raise taxes by several 
trillion more. 
If social Darwinism is merely the belief  that the market is the best 
system for allocating capital and wealth, and that  a free society will 
necessarily be an unequal one, then almost everyone in  America is a social 
Darwinist. Even the president constantly pledges fealty to  the market and 
doesn’t 
want to confiscate all of Mark Zuckerberg’s income. He  is using social 
Darwinism as a free-floating pejorative for people whose  policy preferences he 
doesn’t like, which is entirely appropriate. 
The liberal historian Richard Hofstadter  popularized the label in a book 
he wrote in the 1940s. He applied it to  supporters of the free market in the 
19th century who never applied it to  themselves. As Princeton professor 
Thomas Leonard points out, American  businessmen in the Gilded Age rarely 
leaned on Darwin: “Their defenses of  laissez faire much more commonly invoked 
religion, the common good, Horatio  Alger mythology, the American republican 
tradition.” Even the two alleged  theorists of social Darwinism, Herbert 
Spencer and William Graham Sumner, were  complex figures and awkward fits for 
the term. Hofstadter used social  Darwinist, Leonard writes, “in the 
traditional way: as an epithet to discredit  views he opposed.” 
In this respect, liberalism hasn’t evolved  at all down through the 
decades: Seventy years later, it’s still the same  witless insult, for the same 
reason. 
— Rich Lowry is  the editor of National Review. He  can be reached via 
e-mail: [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) .  © 2012 by King Features Syndicate


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