Tuesday, July 06, 2010

"Some Different Group Than Themselves"

"Don't get me wrong: I'm no fan of the European welfare state. There are sound economic reasons for rejecting it as a model. Most decisively, the aging of the population and the continued development of promising but expensive medical treatments are rendering it unaffordable, and fiscal constraints will sooner or later lead to significant restructuring here as well.
"But Brooks doesn't want to use economic arguments. He counsels against 'getting stuck in the old arguments over money.' Instead, he wants to defend America's track record of more modest social spending on cultural grounds. And that is a really bad idea. Our tragic history of race relations may have inhibited spending, but we should be ashamed of that cultural heritage. We certainly shouldn't embrace it and brag about it. Brooks apparently doesn't realize what he's doing; he thinks he's touting good old Yankee self-reliance. But his argument is offensive even if he's oblivious to how offensive he's being."

In The American Prospect, Brink Lindsey reviews Arthur Brooks's The Battle: How the Fight between Free Enterprise and Big Government Will Shape America's Future.

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