State Representative Josh Elliot, a progressive Democrat
from Hamden, views the state budget as “a moral document that can be used to
create a more equitable and fair society,” the Hartford Courant tells us. The
paper quotes Elliot on the point: “Are you taking an economic frame and saying ‘what
can we do to grow GDP at all costs?’ … Or are you taking a moral and ethical
frame and saying ‘what can we do to build up a just society?’ And I think those
two questions are at loggerheads right now.”
There is a welter of confusion here. The point Elliot
appears to be making is that progressives like himself view the economy as having
a moral dimension lost to free-marketers, i.e. redundantly rich capitalists
concerned only – note the devil word “only” -- with growing the Gross Domestic
Product (GDP). It would not be possible in Elliot’s view for a free-marketer
like, say, Fredrick Hayek, author of “The Road To Serfdom” -- a ruthless attack
against the collectivist ethos that informs socialism, communism, progressivism
and fascism -- to be a moralist.
In “The Constitution Of Liberty,” Hayek identifies one
indispensable “moral rule for collective action… The most important among the
principles of this kind that we have developed is individual freedom, which it
is most appropriate to regard as a moral principle of political action. Like
all moral principles, it demands that it be accepted as a value in itself, as a
principle that must be respected without our asking whether the consequences in
the particular instance will be beneficial.”
This is how a true moral philosopher addresses morality. In
Elliot’s progressive universe Hayek’s overriding moral principle of political
action – the sustenance of individual liberty – is subservient to his own
undisclosed overriding moral principle, which is antagonistic to the liberty of
the subject. Under the progressive scheme of things, individual liberty is sacrificed
on the altar of an “equitable and fair society” created without regard to
real-world circumstances by modernist super-moralists like Elliot, who know better than
the little people who participate in a free market what services and goods
should be provided to them. To Elliot, the liberty of the subject celebrated by
moral philosophers such as Hayek is immoral.
Elliot’s framing permits only two possibilities: an economic
frame that allows only the growth of products “at all costs” and an economic
frame, moral and ethical, that is concerned primarily with building up a “just
society.” There is no via media in Elliot’s view. His is a stark and merciless
either-or: either an immoral free market society or an ethical
progressive-socialist society. In communist governments, the governed are not
permitted to choose between the two.
Progressivism is the shadow of socialism, which is why so
many progressives here in the United States, still a free market country, support
the candidacy for president of faux Democrat Bernie Sanders, a socialist wolf
in wolf’s clothing. Progressivism
differs from socialism only in degree, not in kind. And, of course, socialism
historically has been the nursery bed of both communism and fascism. Mussolini
and Hitler both were socialists before they became fascists, and Stalin
embraced the Marxism of the Communist Manifesto because he correctly recognized
a visionary communist scheme of “property ownership by the proletariat” as a
perfection of socialism. There is another reason as well: Only under a communist
government is the ruling elite powerful enough to suppress the liberty of the
people, which Hayek and other classical liberals such as Adam Smith characterized
as the indispensable “moral rule of collective action.”
Communists, socialists and progressives – three peas in the
same liberty denying pod – care little for the real-world consequences of their
theoretical utopias.
When Alice objects to Humpty Dumpty’s use of words to signify
opposing meanings, he offers her a lesson in tyrannical government. Humpty
Dumpty has misused the word “glory” to signify “a nice knock-down argument.”
Alice protests, “But ‘glory’ doesn't mean ‘a nice knock-down
argument.’"
Humpty Dumpty snarls scornfully, “When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to
mean -- neither more nor less.'
“The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”
“The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master -- that's all.”
Elliot may make the word “moral” mean whatever he wishes it
to mean. After all, Democrats are now masters of Connecticut governance; they
hold commanding positions in the General Assembly, the state’s constitutional
offices, and the governor’s office as well. And nearly half of the Democrat
ruling majority is composed of quasi socialist progressives like Elliot. Still, the real meanings of words are stubborn
things.
According to a Yankee
Institute piece published in May of 2018, “The Tax Foundation’s annual
ranking of states based on state and local income tax collection
placed Connecticut second in the nation, trailing only New York, for the most
money collected per resident. Connecticut collected $2,279 per person through
both local and state income taxes. Massachusetts ranked fourth and Rhode Island
20th. The national average per capita tax rate was $1,144, meaning Connecticut
has almost doubled the average tax burden.” Is there a connection between the
loss of assets – salaries are assets too – and the loss of liberty?
Depressing figures such as these will increase under Governor Ned
Lamont’s recent revenue expansions. In what sense is it “moral” for Connecticut’s
government to increase the burden of taxation further, when we know that excessive
taxation, a great deal of which is used to enhance the salaries of tax
consuming public employees, tends to drive to other states both Connecticut’s
rich and middle class taxpayers, thus depriving those in need of dwindling tax
resources?
Indeed, in what sense is it moral to support a government now
engaged in encouraging infanticide? Connecticut is contiguous to New York, which
now winks at infanticide; and, one may be certain that socially progressive governments
– New York and Connecticut – sooner or later will swap their social-justice
DNA, without mentioning the outsized proportion of African American women
obtaining abortions relative to white women. The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention’s 2016 report points out that black babies made up a whopping 35
percent of the total abortions reported in 2013, although blacks represent only
13 percent of the U.S. population.
Moral? To what cleverly invented Decalogue do progressives
point to justify such a disparity in abortion between black and white women?
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