Tuesday, October 21, 1997
The tools Americans need to succeed
By CAL THOMAS
He's been saying it a lot lately, most recently on his tour
of South America. President Clinton wants to "give people
the tools to succeed."
Growing up, I remember my parents telling me, "You can
do anything you set your mind to," and "If at first
you don't succeed, try, try again." They were teaching me
the importance of persistence. I never recall them saying that
Presidents Eisenhower or Kennedy or Johnson would be giving me
the tools I needed to succeed.
What could Clinton possibly mean? Back in the days when most
graduates of institutions of higher learning were supposed to
be reasonably conversant with philosophy (defined as "a discipline
comprising as its core logic, aesthetics, ethics, metaphysics
and epistemology"), such notions that government held the
tools for success would have been a cause for some derision. Now,
Clinton is taken seriously when he says such things.
In an era in which big government is supposed to be over, it
appears that it is just beginning. Call it the era of the big
tool shed, leading to home improvement.
What do human beings lack that government must give them in
order to succeed? More than anything else it is freedom ("the
absence of necessity, coercion or constraint in choice or action").
Freedom should not be confused with license ("a freedom that
allows or is used with irresponsibility; disregard for rules of
personal conduct").
Freedom is what our Founders gave us with their revolution
that overthrew the tyrannical British monarchy's stranglehold
on our continent. Freedom, not government, has led to inventions
and progress at every level. When government gets out of the way,
the American people take the tools of freedom to build better
lives for themselves and thus an improved nation.
I like the way Rush Limbaugh puts it in his October newsletter:
"Government doesn't give you anything ... unless you are
dependent on government - and then what you're 'getting' is actually
holding you back." It isn't the computer wiring of American
classrooms that will give students the tools they need to learn.
It is the freedom of parents to send their children to the schools
that they, not government, choose.
Government won't determine the future. You and I will, but
only if society remains free, unencumbered by the strangulation
of higher taxes and more oppressive regulations that restrict
freedom. Again, Limbaugh is correct when he says, "Liberalism,
at its heart, is: low expectations, pessimism, an assumption that
ordinary people are helpless. All of American history proves that
false. Every American family proves that false."
What are the tools government plans to give us? The president
doesn't say. But they aren't available just yet. Maybe they're
on the other side of the bridge to the 21st century over which
he'll take us. But how do we get them? Who pays for them? What
will they look like? And why can't we have them now if so many
people are in desperate need?
The tools that built America are strong families, hard work,
self-respect (not self-esteem) and a vision for one's life. Government
can't give anyone these. They come from parents, from church,
from mentors and heroes.
By saying government has the tools for success, Clinton implies
we cannot be whole or complete without the presence of government
in our lives. It isn't true. It never was. Only those who desire
power for themselves want a greater and more powerful government.
The rest of us realize that, as government's influence shrinks,
freedom grows. That's what Somerset Maugham thought when he wrote
in 1941 at a time when freedom was being challenged all over the
world: "If a nation values anything more than freedom, it
will lose its freedom; and the irony of it is that if it is comfort
or money that it values more, it will lose that, too."
The only "tool" we need to succeed is a human spirit
unencumbered by government.
Los Angeles Times Syndicate
Send a Letter to the Editor about This
Article | Start or Join A Discussion about This Article
Send the URL (Address) of This Article to A Friend:
Copyright ©1997,
Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps Publications
|