From: http://www.lewrockwell.com/fischer/fischer11.html


Heartless
by Andrew S. Fischer
        

About twenty years ago, I had occasion to work with a computer 
programmer named Carl. One day, for some reason, we discussed a 
lawsuit which had been brought against a national toy company. The 
toy involved was a plastic "sprinkler head," which was attached to 
the business end of a garden hose and, when the water was turned on, 
transformed the hose into a kind of whirling dervish, which spun 
around in the air, spraying water all over the place to the delight 
of summer children everywhere. Unfortunately, it seemed that some 
kid somewhere decided to place the device in his mouth, turn on the 
water and, predictably, the child drowned.

Carl had no sympathy. "Culling," he called it. Nature's way of 
weeding out inferior designs. While I was shocked at Carl's lack of 
compassion, deep down I had a gnawing feeling that perhaps he might 
be right. A single kid, among hundreds of thousands, and among 
perhaps millions of uses of this toy, was tragically killed because 
he thought it would be fun to jam it down his throat and open the 
spigot. The thought that this must have been an inordinately 
reckless, or inordinately dimwitted child, nagged at me for days. It 
did sound pretty stupid to do what he did, after all. On the other 
hand, kids do stupid things. Should the penalty for that be death? 
In any case, we agreed that the lawsuit brought by his parents was 
absurd. Hundreds of thousands of kids used that toy without a 
problem; one kid did something stupid with it and died, so that 
meant the toy should be taken off the market and its manufacturers 
should pay millions in damages? Obviously not; the fact that one 
individual out of so many suffered a negative result due to his own 
misuse of a product hardly rendered that product dangerous, despite 
the assertions of government and its legal system.

Over the years, we've all witnessed scores of cases such as the one 
noted above. Million-dollar settlements, products removed from the 
marketplace, idiotic warning labels on everything from Silly Putty 
to cattle prods. All of this to prevent people from doing stupid 
things and making foolish choices. Yet people continue acting 
stupidly, not just in regard to consumer items, but in all aspects 
of their lives. They smoke (sucking a solid into their lungs), 
damaging their health. They overeat, and don't exercise, ditto. They 
spend too much money and have more children than they can afford. 
This is all called freedom, and people can do whatever they want to 
do to themselves, as far as I'm concerned (but they shouldn't go 
begging to the state when they find they've screwed up, of course).

Culling, he called it. Social Darwinism at its most brutal. It's not 
that I don't have sympathy for people in dire straits, or even those 
in simple need. When I encounter a homeless person on the street, 
for example, I recognize that under different circumstances that 
could be me. I typically feel a ripple of sorrow, and sometimes hand 
over a dollar (although I fully suspect it will be used for alcohol, 
or worse). At the mall a few years ago while waiting for the 
elevator, I found myself standing across from a boy in his late 
teens in a wheelchair. He wasn't a bad-looking kid, but from his 
speech and mannerisms I realized he'd never have a normal life. 
Somehow this brought tears to my eyes and I had to walk away. This 
kind of thing doesn't happen to me often, but it's necessary that I 
mention that little story because of what I must write next.

You see, I've reached the point where I have to agree with Carl. 
This is an unpopular position, to be sure. When discussing it with 
friends, it always ends up with my being labeled a hard-hearted 
hater of poor people. With me supposedly caring not a whit about all 
the children who never had the advantages I had. I'll admit I was 
fortunate enough to have had good parents, a husband and wife who 
loved each other, worked hard together, and tried their best to 
provide my brother and me with a decent lower-middle class 
existence. They made sure I did my homework and do as well as I 
could in school. Yes, they scraped together enough dollars and paid 
my tuition at an unexceptional, mid-city "commuter college" (in an 
era when, fortunately, it cost just $300 per semester), and they 
were supportive in many ways when I foundered in my career and my 
life. 

While these don't seem to me to be extraordinary advantages, this is 
obviously better than having parents who are alcoholics, who are 
constantly fighting, who don't care about their kids, who berate 
them or beat them, who let them run around unsupervised so they can 
get in trouble, do poorly in school and fail to develop basic common 
sense or an ethical system, or the ability to solve the slightest of 
problems, or gain any skills for earning a living. Certainly most 
kids from such an environment will have more trouble than I did in 
attaining a modest, middle-class existence. 

Not that it is impossible, however. As the book The Great Reckoning 
notes (quoting Economist magazine), poverty can be overcome fairly 
effectively if teenagers do just a few things: finish high school, 
don't have babies, and find a job and keep it. Two people working 
full time, each earning just $7.50 per hour, should have over 
$24,000 a year after income taxes. They could spend a third of that 
on rent and have enough left over to live decently, couldn't they? 
There could be some savings, too, if they shunned the X-box, cell 
phone, widescreen TV and the new car, right? They might not be 
living high on the hog, but they could live in a dignified way, and 
would be stable enough to improve their work skills, and get ahead, 
however slowly, wouldn't they? It seems to me that people need to 
live within their limitations; it's simple: just don't spend what 
you don't have. Yet, "can I afford it?" is a question no one asks 
themselves anymore. "Do I really need this?" is another.

Like it or not, those groups who do not or cannot live within their 
means, act responsibly, perform useful work, provide for their 
offspring, save money for their future, etc. are supposed to wither 
away; their bloodlines are supposed to peter out. This is Nature's 
way. Survival of the fittest. Culling. Yes, it sounds heartless, but 
it is inherent in life. The effective and competent members of a 
species survive and multiply and, furthermore, they instinctively 
limit the size of their families to match the availability of 
resources; those who cannot do so vanish, and the species as a whole 
becomes stronger. At least this is how it happens in all of the 
animal kingdom – except in a single case. Somehow, civilization 
(specifically its subset "government") has altered this state of 
affairs where human beings are concerned, and has turned Mother 
Nature on her head. 

By providing for and otherwise mollycoddling the incompetent, the 
state has ensured the survival of bloodlines that were not supposed 
to continue. It has given rise to "welfare queens" and unstable 
families, abused and forgotten children, illiteracy, crime, and all 
the rest. Groups whose "survival shortcomings" Nature did not intend 
to embrace are instead nurtured by the state, and these groups may 
even have birth rates higher than average. At the same time, the 
state taxes its competent citizens so painfully, that they are ill-
disposed to help the less fortunate – especially since much of this 
taxation is already supposed to be doing just that. 

While adults can, and should, be held accountable for their actions, 
innocent children can hardly be blamed, since their plight is due to 
the shortcomings of their ancestors, their families – in short, 
their bloodline. As a civilized people, we don't want to see them 
suffer; we have empathy. I believe that most people in our society, 
if not taxed as heavily as they are now, would give a lot more money 
to various charities to help the poor, the less fortunate, all the 
down-on-their-luck folks. (I know I would annually donate twenty 
times what I do now.) Some might even "adopt a family," not only 
giving money, but also providing guidance and education. The 
difference is that it would be voluntary and specific, not mandatory 
and expansive as it is now, and that makes all the difference in the 
world.

So, when I argue that government social programs and handouts should 
be scrapped, that it's not my problem if some people don't have 
health insurance, that it's "tough luck" if the elderly reach 
retirement without having provided for themselves, that all of us 
are responsible for our own actions, for our own choices, and our 
own lives... I'm branded as heartless. The question is: do I deserve 
this label? 


February 11, 2006

Andrew S. Fischer [send him mail] is a controller for an investment 
advisory firm in Pennsylvania.

Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com








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