How Times Have Changed
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Stubborn
Ignorance
Having been
born in 1936 has allowed me to witness both societal progress and
retrogression. High on the list of things made better in our society
are the great gains in civil liberties and economic opportunities,
especially for racial minorities and women. People who are now deemed
poor have a level of material wealth that would have been a pipe
dream to yesteryear's poor. But despite the fact that today's Americans
have achieved an unprecedented level of prosperity, we have become
spiritually and morally impoverished compared with our ancestors.
Years ago,
spending beyond one's means was considered a character defect. Today
not only do people spend beyond their means but also there are companies
that advertise on radio and TV to eliminate or reduce your credit
card and mortgage debt. Students saddled with college loans have
called for student loan forgiveness. Yesterday's Americans would
have viewed it as morally corrupt and reprehensible to accumulate
debt and then seek to avoid paying it. It's nothing less than theft.
What's worse is there's little condemnation of it by the rest of
us.
Earlier this
year, as a result of a budget crunch, the Philadelphia School District
had to lay off 91 school police officers. During the 1940s and '50s,
I attended Philadelphia schools in poor neighborhoods. The only
time we saw a policeman in school was during an assembly period
when we had to listen to a boring lecture about safety. Because
teacher assaults are tolerated – 4,000 over the past five years
in Philadelphia – school police are needed. Prior to the '60s, few
students would have thought of talking back to a teacher, and no
one would have cursed, much less assaulted, a teacher.
I couldn't
have been more than 8-, 9- or 10-years-old when one time, on the
way home from school, my cousin and I were having a stone fight
with some other youngsters. An elderly black lady walked up to my
cousin and me and asked, "Does your mother know you're out here
throwing stones?" We replied, "No, ma'am," praying that the matter
rested there. Today an adult doing the same thing risks being cursed
and possibly assaulted. Fearing retaliation, adults sit in silence
as young people use vile language to one another on public conveyances,
in school corridors and on the streets.
Yesteryear
there was little tolerance for the kinds of crude behavior and language
that are accepted today. To see a man sitting on a bus or trolley
car while a woman is standing used to be unthinkable. Children didn't
address adults by their first name. By the way, over the course
of my nearly 45 years of teaching, on several occasions, students
have addressed me by my first name. I have told them that I don't
mind their addressing me by my first name but that my first name
is Professor.
Much
of what's accepted today would have been seen as bizarre and lowdown
yesteryear. Out-of-wedlock childbirth was a disgrace and surely
wouldn't have occasioned a baby shower. Popular TV shows such as
"The Jerry Springer Show" and "Maury" feature guests who openly
discuss despicable acts in their personal lives, often to the applause
of the audience. Shame is going the way of the dinosaur.
You say, "Williams,
you're just old-fashioned and out of touch with modern society."
Maybe so, but I think that a society's first line of defense is
not the law but customs, traditions and moral values. These behavioral
norms – transmitted by example, word of mouth, religious teachings,
rules of etiquette and manners – represent a body of wisdom distilled
over the ages through experience and trial and error. They include
important legal thou-shalt-nots – such as shalt not murder, steal,
lie or cheat – but they also include all those civilities one might
call ladylike or gentlemanly behavior. Police officers and courts
can never replace these social restraints on personal conduct. At
best, laws, police and the criminal justice system are a society's
last desperate line of defense.
July
31, 2012
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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