Sunday, July 20, 2008
-
"Subsidized Apathy"
This stunning essay by Theodore Dalrymple describes what happens to individuals when the government supplies all wants and needs. Here's a quote:
By the end of three months my [foreign guest] doctors have, without exception, reversed their original opinion that the welfare state, as exemplified by England, represents the acme of civilization. On the contrary, they see it now as creating a miasma of subsidized apathy that blights the lives of its supposed beneficiaries. They come to realize that a system of welfare that makes no moral judgments in allocating economic rewards promotes antisocial egotism. The spiritual impoverishment of the population seems to them worse than anything they have ever known in their own countries. And what they see is all the worse, of course, because it should be so much better. The wealth that enables everyone effortlessly to have enough food should be liberating, not imprisoning. Instead, it has created a large caste of people for whom life is, in effect, a limbo in which they have nothing to hope for and nothing to fear, nothing to gain and nothing to lose. It is a life emptied of meaning.
I'm adding his book Life at the Bottom to my reading list.
Post a Comment
- Back to sawatdeeka's Xanga Site!
- Note: your comment will appear in sawatdeeka's local time zone: GMT -05:00 (Eastern Standard - US, Canada)



Comments (1)
Amazing essay. I'm going to send it to a few friends. Thanks for sharing!