mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-27 00:09:39 -05:00
153 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
153 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
|
<conspiracyFile>CHRISTIANITY AND FREEDOM
|
||
|
By JACOB G. HORNBERGER
|
||
|
Many Americans believe that by supporting the Welfare State,
|
||
|
they are fulfilling God's great commandment to "love thy
|
||
|
neighbor as thyself." Having been taught in public schools
|
||
|
since childhood that the Welfare State helps needy people,
|
||
|
Americans usually are filled with a deep sense of guilt and
|
||
|
embarrassment whenever they object to any aspect of
|
||
|
governmental assistance for others.
|
||
|
Of course, government officials foster these feelings in order
|
||
|
to minimize resistance to the Welfare State. For whenever a
|
||
|
citizen objects to any part of the welfare system in America,
|
||
|
he inevitably is assaulted by political officials with such
|
||
|
accusations as: "You hate the poor!"; "You are a racist!"; and
|
||
|
"You hate God!" These tactics usually are quite effective in
|
||
|
breaking down resistance to welfare programs. And the usual
|
||
|
result is that Americans call for reform, rather than
|
||
|
elimination, of the Welfare State.
|
||
|
But, in actuality, the Welfare State is founded on absolutely
|
||
|
immoral principles. And not only does a person not further
|
||
|
God's work by advocating or defending the Welfare State, he
|
||
|
instead denigrates it.
|
||
|
One can imagine the following scenario when a new arrival gets
|
||
|
to the pearly gates:
|
||
|
St. Peter: What did you do to fulfill God's commandment
|
||
|
to love thy neighbor as thyself?
|
||
|
Applicant: I have here my income tax returns, the
|
||
|
Internal Revenue Code, and the Federal Register.
|
||
|
St. Peter: What meaning do these items have?
|
||
|
Applicant: St. Peter, you obviously are not familiar with
|
||
|
the Welfare State of the United States of America. These
|
||
|
items show how much of my tax money was used by the
|
||
|
government to help others in need. So, please step aside
|
||
|
and let me in.
|
||
|
St. Peter: You were participating in a way of life which
|
||
|
constituted a wilful violation of God's sacred
|
||
|
commandment against stealing?
|
||
|
Applicant: Stealing? What are you talking about? Through
|
||
|
my tax payments, people were helped.
|
||
|
St. Peter: Was not the political process used to take
|
||
|
money from people against their will in order to
|
||
|
redistribute to others? Were you not supporting and
|
||
|
participating in this evil way of life?
|
||
|
Applicant: Oh! No, that wasn't me. That was the
|
||
|
politicians and bureaucrats. I just voted for them, just
|
||
|
like other patriotic Americans. Don't blame me for the
|
||
|
stealing. Just give me credit for all the good that was
|
||
|
done with the loot.
|
||
|
If I held a gun to a person's head, and demanded "Your money
|
||
|
or your life!," most people would believe that I had committed
|
||
|
an immoral (and illegal) act. Suppose I needed the money for
|
||
|
my (or someone else's) education. Would this change the
|
||
|
immoral (and illegal) nature of my act? Most people would
|
||
|
respond in the negative. While punishment might be mitigated
|
||
|
due to extenuating circumstances, it remains morally (and
|
||
|
legally) wrong to steal, no matter how great the need for
|
||
|
another person's money.
|
||
|
But the interesting phenomenon about the Welfare State is that
|
||
|
many people believe that by making the exact same act legal--
|
||
|
that is, by enshrining it into their political system--it
|
||
|
somehow is converted into a moral act. In other words, in the
|
||
|
Welfare State, people vote for someone who is given the legal
|
||
|
power to take a person's money in order to give it to someone
|
||
|
else; then, it is believed that this political act, immoral if
|
||
|
committed by a private individual, somehow becomes moral
|
||
|
because it is now performed by a democratically elected public
|
||
|
official.
|
||
|
We must also consider the matter of free will--one of the
|
||
|
greatest gifts which God bestowed on human beings. He
|
||
|
obviously loved us so much that we have been given the freedom
|
||
|
even to deny Him (and our neighbor). In other words, while we
|
||
|
are told to love Him and others, we are not compelled by Him
|
||
|
to do so.
|
||
|
One of the best examples of this wide ambit of freedom is
|
||
|
found in the story of "The Danger of Riches" in the New
|
||
|
Testament. A rich man approached Jesus and asked, "Teacher,
|
||
|
what good must I do to possess everlasting life?" After the
|
||
|
man advised Jesus that he already kept all of the
|
||
|
commandments, Jesus told him, "If you seek perfection, go,
|
||
|
sell your possessions, and give to the poor. You will then
|
||
|
have treasure in heaven. Afterward, come back and follow me."
|
||
|
Unable to let go of his material wealth, however, the man went
|
||
|
away sad.
|
||
|
The story, of course, is valuable in advising people of the
|
||
|
dangers of spiritual or psychological attachment to material
|
||
|
things. But the lesson it teaches is important in another way:
|
||
|
After the young man chose to reject the suggestion to give
|
||
|
everything he had to the poor, Jesus did not ask the political
|
||
|
authorities to seize the man's possessions and redistribute
|
||
|
them to the poor. In other words, he did not force the man to
|
||
|
comply with the suggestion. Since the man had been given the
|
||
|
freedom to choose, the choice he made, although not the
|
||
|
desired one, was honored.
|
||
|
It is the vital importance of freedom of choice that advocates
|
||
|
of the Welfare State so often forget. They favor "freedom" but
|
||
|
only when the person chooses the "right" way. In other words,
|
||
|
the person is told, "It is morally and ethically correct that
|
||
|
you should share your possessions with others, and you are
|
||
|
free to make this decision in your own way . . . but if you
|
||
|
choose the wrong way, we shall simply take your money from
|
||
|
you, against your will, and do with it what you should have
|
||
|
done with it."
|
||
|
It is the great principles of freedom of choice and individual
|
||
|
responsibity on which the United States was founded. By and
|
||
|
large, our American ancestors were free to engage in a
|
||
|
tremendously wide range of choices as long as they did not
|
||
|
inflict violence or fraud on others. And early Americans
|
||
|
believed that the primary purpose of government was to protect
|
||
|
the exercise of choice rather than interfere with it. Thus,
|
||
|
for the first century of America's history, there was, for
|
||
|
example, neither income taxation nor welfare.
|
||
|
Does this mean that our ancestors were evil and mean for not
|
||
|
providing a Welfare State as their descendants have? Of course
|
||
|
not. It simply means that they believed that each individual
|
||
|
should be free to do what he wants with his own money even
|
||
|
when, and especially when, it is not in accordance with the
|
||
|
wishes of the majority of his fellow citizens. And the irony
|
||
|
was that 19th-century America was not only the most prosperous
|
||
|
nation in history but also the most charitable nation in
|
||
|
history.
|
||
|
But unfortunately, the American people of the 20th century
|
||
|
have rejected and abandoned that philosophy. The idea now is
|
||
|
that people must be forced to be "good" through the political
|
||
|
plunder of the Welfare State. Money is taken from people
|
||
|
against their will so that it can be given to those who need
|
||
|
it. And the taxpayers claim "credit" for all of the "good"
|
||
|
which the political authorities do with their money.
|
||
|
The result, of course, is that the government has become the
|
||
|
means by which everyone is trying to live at the expense of
|
||
|
everyone else. Everyone is trying to get his "fair" share of
|
||
|
the loot while, at the same time, blocking out of his mind
|
||
|
that it is being stolen from his friends, neighbors, and
|
||
|
fellow citizens across the land. And everyone is trying to get
|
||
|
his "fair" share of the "credit" while doing everything he can
|
||
|
to protect his own pocketbook.
|
||
|
At the end of the year, it is important to count our
|
||
|
blessings. Fortunately, we live in a nation in which, by and
|
||
|
large (and with many exceptions), the government is
|
||
|
constitutionally prohibited from interfering with our
|
||
|
religious, intellectual, and political activities. But it is
|
||
|
also important, at the beginning of the new year, to make
|
||
|
resolutions: Let us resolve to dedicate ourselves to ending
|
||
|
the Welfare State by recapturing the vision of freedom,
|
||
|
private property, and limited government which guided our
|
||
|
American ancestors.
|
||
|
Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of
|
||
|
Freedom Foundation, P.O. Box 9752, Denver, CO 80209.
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
From the December 1990 issue of FREEDOM DAILY,
|
||
|
Copyright (c) 1990, The Future of Freedom Foundation,
|
||
|
PO Box 9752, Denver, Colorado 80209, <data type="phoneNumber">303-777-3588</data>.
|
||
|
Permission granted to reprint; please give appropriate credit
|
||
|
and send one copy of reprinted material to the Foundation.</conspiracyFile>
|