John Hawkins runs Right Wing News, Linkiest and is the co-owner of The Looking Spoon. He also does weekly appearances on the #1 in it’s market
Jaz McKay show, writes a weekly column for Townhall and his work has
also been published at the Washington Examiner, The Hill, Hot Air,
Pajamas Media, and at Human Events.
“There is only one basic human right, the right to do as you damn
well please. And with it comes the only basic human duty, the duty to
take the consequences.” — P.J. O’Rourke
“We seem to be moving steadily in the direction of a society where no
one is responsible for what he himself did, but we are all responsible
for what somebody else did, either in the present or in the past.” –
Thomas Sowell
It’s truly bizarre how often in Obama’s America that we are being
presented with “victims” we’re supposed to feel sorry for without anyone
even seeming to notice that they created their own dilemma with their
bad behavior.
Just to name one of many examples, while we shouldn’t condone
excessive force by the police, citizens dealing with the cops should
also be expected to behave responsibly. Attacking a police officer or
even resisting arrest is an inherently dangerous activity just like
climbing Mount Everest. If you do any of those things, there is a not
insignificant chance that you will be injured or even killed. Again,
that doesn’t mean the police should have a get-out-of-jail-free card,
but if you fought the law and the law won, MOST people won’t shed a lot
of tears for you, nor should they.
Along similar lines, we already have a way for foreigners to enter
this country legally and become American citizens. Millions have done
exactly that and have been welcomed. On the other hand, millions have
also crossed the border illegally. They did so knowing that the penalty
for coming to this country illegally is deportation. On some level, it
HAS TO BE deportation because if foreigners can cross our borders with
impunity, then in effect, we no longer have borders. Yet, we’re supposed
to feel sorry for people who broke the law and are now faced with a
just penalty for breaking the law because it will disrupt their lives.
If their lives are harder because they chose to break the law, isn’t it
their fault for behaving so irresponsibly in the first place? Why should
anyone expect the welcome mat to be rolled out for him after he’s
entered a foreign country illegally?
Then there are the people making minimum wage who want more money,
but don’t want to earn it. Rather than building their skills so they can
be promoted or moving on to a better job, their solution is to ask the
government to force their employers to pay them more than they’re worth.
Why should someone who can be replaced by a 16 year old with two weeks
of training get $15 an hour for his work? If you’re dirt poor and you
don’t want to do what it takes to earn more money, then you deserve to
stay poor – and no matter what the government does, you will probably
get exactly what you deserve.
The same goes for college loans. If you went $100,000 in debt to get a
degree in philosophy and can’t pay it back, whose fault is that? You
had five kids by five different daddies and now you’re struggling to pay
the rent? You don’t say! You have tattoos all over your forearms and
neck and no one will hire you? Why, who could have guessed that you’d
have such a problem?
What’s the reaction to saying things like this? Shock? Outrage? Accusations that you have no heart or you’re not compassionate?
What’s shocking about common sense? What’s outrageous about telling
people that they’re better off if they behave responsibly? What’s
compassionate about habitually excusing bad behavior that consistently
leads to bad outcomes?
I don’t want anybody to get shot by the police, but it’s probably
truthful to say that 99% of the people who do, whether they’re black,
white, green, or purple, could have avoided it if they had behaved
responsibly when they were confronted by the police. The same illegal
aliens most conservatives would LOVE to see deported would be welcomed
here as citizens if they respected our laws and did it the right way.
Plenty of people who have made the minimum wage (myself included) move
on to make a lot more money if they’re responsible enough to work smart,
work hard and keep making themselves more valuable.
The problem with encouraging irresponsible behavior is the more you
feed the beast, the more it grows. You’re not “helping people” by
excusing behavior you find abhorrent. That kind of “help” decimates
people and when it’s done on a large enough scale, it ruins societies.
In America, we’re getting to the point where we’re stepping all over
the people who work hard and play by the rules to cater to the
irresponsible. Instead of wagging our fingers at the people who make
society work because they’re not giving enough, what’s wrong with asking
all of us to take a minimum level of responsibility for our own lives
before we start pointing the finger at other people?
Source:
Your Screwed Up Life Is Your Own Responsibility | John Hawkins' Right Wing News
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