"The wicked envy and hate; it is their way of
admiring." ~ Victor Hugo
Equality is a term much bantered about in connection with
race, gender, and income. But the term is purposely misused by the many who
sling around “the poor” like Tom Sawyer’s rat on a string. The true measure of
poverty in American can only be had in measuring it against other places.
For many years I lived looking up at the poverty line.
During those years, Bill Gates had a car, but you know what? So did I. His was more
expensive and had fewer dents, but we were both driving around on the same
roads. Meanwhile in Mogadishu, the poor not only didn’t have a car, they
probably didn’t have shoes. Hell, no need to go that extreme. In the UK, many
people were not driving cars. (In 2014, 57% reported using a car on a typical
day.) I had a color television—Bill probably had one in every room in multiple
residences, but we both watched one.
I’m rather an odd sort of person, but I don’t believe I’m that different. I don’t care that Bill
Gates has billions of dollars. My needs are met by what I make. If I’m
oppressed, I don’t feel it driving my car, while texting on my phone on the way
home from the supermarket trying to beat the rush so I can watch hockey on
television.
The reason for that is because, until recently, I had the
same opportunity to make billions as did Mr. Gates. Now, societal envy has substituted
equal outcomes for equal opportunity. There are wicked people living among us
who from envy have convinced us that because we are not billionaires, the rich
have somehow cheated or are privileged in some way because they look different.
And here’s a truth that is hard for some to swallow. The
poor in a free market economy are better off than the poor in centrally managed
economies and that being poor in America is a darned sight better than being
poor in much of the world.
I know next to nothing about business and it shows. I do know something about people and human
nature. I look around town and in almost every business there are help wanted
signs. One reason for this is that we have adopted the notion that we all have
the right to be wealthy and if we are not, the system is rigged to make us
fail.
We believe it is our right to have it all without effort or
we are being mistreated and oppressed. We have traded working for the greenback
into clinging to the green-eyed monster and called it progress. We’re all
sitting here on Biden’s payroll waiting for someone to stand up next to us and
make us rich.
Maranatha
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