Why
We're a Divided Nation
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: What
Our Constitution Permits
Some Americans
have strong, sometimes unyielding preferences for Mac computers,
while most others have similarly strong preferences for PCs and
wouldn't be caught dead using a Mac. Some Americans love classical
music and hate rock and roll. Others have opposite preferences,
loving rock and roll and consider classical music as hoity-toity
junk. Then there are those among us who love football and Western
movies, and find golf and cooking shows to be less than manly. Despite
these, and many other strong preferences, there's little or no conflict.
When's the last time you heard of rock and roll lovers in conflict
with classical music lovers, or Mac lovers in conflict with PC lovers,
or football lovers in conflict with golf lovers? It seldom if ever
happens. When there's market allocation of resources and peaceable,
voluntary exchange, people have their preferences satisfied and
are able to live in peace with one another.
Think what
might be the case if it were a political decision of whether there'd
be football or golf watched on TV, whether we used Macs or PCs and
whether we listened to classical music or rock and roll. Everyone
had to comply with the politically made decision or suffer the pain
of fines or imprisonment. Football lovers would be lined up against
golf lovers, Mac lovers against PC lovers and rock and rollers against
classical music lovers. People who previously lived in peace with
one another would now be in conflict.
Why? If, for
example, classical music lovers got what they wanted, rock and rollers
wouldn't. Conflict would emerge solely because the decision was
made in the political arena.
The lesson
here is that the prime feature of political decision-making is that
it's a zero-sum game. One person's gain is of necessity another
person's loss. As such, political allocation of resources is conflict-enhancing,
while market allocation is conflict-reducing. The greater the number
of decisions made in the political arena, the greater the potential
for conflict. It would not be unreasonable to predict that if Mac
lovers won, and only Macs could be legally used, there would be
considerable PC-lover hate toward Mac lovers.
Most of
the issues that divide our nation, and give rise to conflict, are
those best described as a zero-sum game where one person's or group's
gain is of necessity another's loss. Examples are: racial preferences,
school prayers, trade restrictions, welfare, Obamacare and a host
of other government policies that benefit one American at the expense
of another American. That's why political action committees, private
donors and companies spend billions of dollars lobbying. Their goal
is to get politicians and government officials to use the coercive
power of their offices to take what belongs to one American and
give it to another or create a favor or special privilege for one
American that comes at the expense of some other American.
You
might be tempted to think that the brutal domestic conflict seen
in other countries can't happen here. That's nonsense. Americans
are not super-humans; we possess the same frailties of other people.
If there were a catastrophic economic calamity, I can imagine a
political hustler exploiting those frailties, as have other tyrants,
blaming it on the Jews, the blacks, the conservatives, the liberals,
the Catholics or free trade.
The best
thing the president and Congress can do to reduce the potential
for conflict and violence is reduce the impact of government on
our lives. Doing so will not only produce a less-divided country
and greater economic efficiency, but bear greater faith and allegiance
to the vision of America held by our founders a country of limited
government. Our founders, in the words of Thomas Paine, recognized
that, "Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil;
in its worst state, an intolerable one."
January
18, 2011
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
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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