WASHINGTON If youve got a business you didnt build that. Somebody else made that happen.
Barack Obama, Roanoke, Va., July 13
And who might that somebody else be? Government, says Obama. It built the roads you drive on. It provided the teacher who inspired you. It created the Internet. It represents the embodiment of were in this together social solidarity that, in Obamas view, is the essential origin of individual and national achievement.
To say all individuals are embedded in and the product of society is banal. Obama rises above banality by means of fallacy: equating society with government, the collectivity with the state. Of course we are shaped by our milieu. But the most formative, most important influence on the individual is not government. It is civil society, those elements of the collectivity that lie outside government: family, neighborhood, church, Rotary club, PTA, the voluntary associations that Tocqueville understood to be the genius of America and source of its energy and freedom.
Moreover, the greatest threat to a robust, autonomous civil society is the ever-growing Leviathan state and those like Obama who see it as the ultimate expression of the collective. Obama compounds the fallacy by declaring the state to be the font of entrepreneurial success. How so? It created the infrastructure roads, bridges, schools, Internet off which we all thrive.
Absurd. We dont credit the Swiss postal service with the Special Theory of Relativity because it transmitted Einsteins manuscript to the Annalen der Physik. Everyone drives the roads, goes to school, uses the mails. So did Steve Jobs. Yet only he conceived and built the Mac and the iPad.
Obamas infrastructure argument is easily refuted by what is essentially a controlled social experiment. Roads and schools are the constant. Whats variable is the energy, enterprise, risk-taking, hard work and genius of the individual. It is therefore precisely those individual characteristics, not the communal utilities, that account for the different outcomes.
The ultimate Obama fallacy, however, is the conceit that belief in the value of infrastructure and willingness to invest in its creation and maintenance is what divides liberals from conservatives.
More nonsense. Infrastructure is not a liberal idea, nor is it particularly new. The Via Appia was built 2,300 years ago.
The argument between left and right is about what you do beyond infrastructure. Its about transfer payments and redistributionist taxation, about geometrically expanding entitlements, about tax breaks and subsidies to induce actions pleasing to central planners. Its about free contraceptives for privileged students and welfare without work. Its about endless government handouts that, ironically, are crowding out necessary spending on, yes, infrastructure.
What divides liberals and conservatives is not roads and bridges but Julias world, an Obama campaign creation that may be the most self-revealing parody of liberalism ever conceived. Its a series of cartoon illustrations in which a fictional Julia is swaddled and subsidized throughout her life by an all-giving government of bottomless pockets and Queen for a Day magnanimity. The only time shes on her own is at her gravesite.
Julias world is totally atomized. It contains no friends, no community and, of course, no spouse. Who needs one? Shes married to the provider state. Or to put it slightly differently, the Life of Julia represents the paradigmatic Obama political philosophy: citizen as orphan child.
The conservative sees the proper role of government as providing not European-style universal entitlements but a firm safety net, meaning Julia-like treatment for those who really cannot make it on their own those too young or too old, too mentally or physically impaired, to provide for themselves.
Limited government so conceived has two indispensable advantages. It avoids inexorable European-style national insolvency. And it avoids breeding debilitating individual dependency. It encourages and celebrates character, independence, energy, hard work as the foundations of a free society and a thriving economy precisely the virtues Obama discounts and devalues in his accounting of the wealth of nations.














