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think about
1. Why have so many Americans traded liberty for government control?
The federal tax code is 17,000 pages and involves more than 700 different
forms. According to the IRS, Americans spend something like 5.1 billion hours
each year preparing their taxes, and tax preparation drains an estimated
$194 billion annually from the U.S. economy, according to the Tax
Foundation.
Should government decide the kind of light bulbs we can use, or the kind of
toilets we can own, or the kind of sheets hotels put on their beds, or be able
to tell us we have to buy a particular item? Now that the feds have taken
over General Motors, is it okay that they require us to buy a Chevy instead of
a Ford or a Dodge or a VW or a Subaru? (Chevy dealers may not participate in
this poll.)
The answers to those questions are: “No, no, no, no, and absolutely not.”
In 2009 there were 37.2 million food stamp recipients, 4.1 million on welfare
and 9.1 million receiving unemployment support. In 2010 Medicaid had 58
million participants. Allowing for duplications of aid for some Americans, it is
likely that more than one-fourth of the people living in the U.S. receive one or
more forms of financial assistance from the federal government, not including
Medicare.
In 2007 nearly 40 percent of babies born in the United States were born to
unwed females, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. The 1.7
million out-of-wedlock births represent an increase of more than 25 percent
over five years. The Guttmacher Institute estimates that nearly half of
pregnancies among American women are unintended, and 40 percent of
them end with abortion.
Heritage Foundation senior researcher Robert Rector wrote last year, “The
principal cause of child poverty in the U.S. is the absence of married fathers
in the home,” yet marriage continues to decline.
Columnist Cal Thomas wrote recently about Robert Woodson, president of the
Center for Neighborhood Enterprise, an organization helping people rise out
of poverty. He suggests that Mr. Woodson “would probably wince if you called
him a ‘community organizer.’ That's because for the last 30 years … he has
not spent time organizing the poor around ineffective government programs
and other addictions, he has been helping them become self-sufficient.”
Mr. Woodson subscribes to the idea that life is 10 percent what happens to us
and 90 percent how we respond to it, and says unlike other approaches,
"takes time-tested principles and virtues and applies them to addictions,
homelessness and other conditions. We have moral consistency," he
believes. He also believes that "you can't learn anything by studying failure.
If you want to learn anything, you must study the successful."
Robert Woodson shows that what many, perhaps most, of the poor need in
order to improve their lot in life is some good, old fashioned, traditional
American values, personal liberty, and self-reliance. What they don’t need,
and what has failed to help them, is more expensive government programs
funded by high taxation and operated by a huge inefficient bureaucracy.