21st Century University Students

In an article in The American Thinker in fall 2009, I described the difficulties that a professor with conservative views encounters on American campuses. For example, during eleven years in a senior administrative position, I trod the ever-present minefield of liberal dogma that thoroughly permeates the campus. Since that time, I stepped down from my administrative post and formally retired, but I am continuing to teach mathematics courses – largely to engineering and science majors. This fall, in my first teaching assignment in twelve years, I delivered a post-calculus course to approximately 200 sophomores and juniors. My goal here is to describe the nature of today’s students – at least as represented by the two hundred with whom I interacted, point out some differences from students in the 1990s and earlier, reflect on how the differences mirror societal changes, and finally to speculate on the implications these differences portend for the nation.

Here are the salient characteristics that I see in today’s university students, together with an indication of how their attitude/behavior differs from those of previous generations.

  • Despite a great diversity in race, sex and ethnic origin, there is a remarkable consistency in how students approach problem solving, differentiate what they think is important from what they see as trivial, and also how they interact with each other and with the faculty member. This consistency was highlighted by almost unbelievable similarities that I saw in their exam papers: almost all make the exact same mistakes, concentrate their study on the same right – or wrong – topics, and ask questions that reveal a scarily uniform train of thought. This is of course an exaggeration, but there were times when I wondered whether they were all cloned from a common model. Certainly, the diversity of thought and behavior was far greater among students in previous generations.
  • Related, but not identical, was a lack of creativity and originality that I observed. This was surprising because in terms of academic performance, the students were strong. The university has been working diligently for more than 20 years to upgrade the quality of the student body. And as far as I can tell, it has succeeded. The scores on my exams – the level of which was comparable to those I administered 15 years ago – were higher. But the students achieved the higher scores by careful attention to method, lots of studying, working collaboratively when appropriate, memorization of technique and by dint, perhaps, of a higher level of innate intelligence. What I didn’t see was the unusual student who solved a problem by a clever, innovative method, distinct from the procedures learned from me or the text. Average performance might have been lower a generation ago, but I rarely failed to see a clever solution (by an unexpected method) on at least one student’s paper for each exam. Not today!
  • Also related, but distinct from the previous two points, I saw few (if any) students whose prime objective in the course was to learn well a distinctive branch of mathematics. In the past I always encountered students – not always the best – who seemed to enjoy learning a new mathematical subject and who would approach me for suggestions on what they could do (beyond class) to enhance their knowledge of the subject. I saw none of that this past fall. The prime goal, even for the best students, seemed to be to earn the highest grade possible and their entire approach to the course was in pursuit of that objective. Getting good grades was always important, but for today’s students it seems to be the only objective. In a related vein, one senses that they are at the university primarily to collect a degree – which they see as a ticket to a job or a graduate program – and little attention is paid to the accumulation of knowledge, wisdom or moral values.
  • On the plus side, my students were virtually always well-behaved, respectful, polite and pleasant to interact with in person. This was a welcome change from some of the surly and immature behavior that I too often witnessed (admittedly decreasingly) over the years from the 60s to the 90s.
  • In a somewhat similar, but definitely less encouraging spirit, I found today’s students too deferential. They seem to have too much respect for authority. They never challenged anything I said, questioned my judgment or doubted that I was an oracle dispensing the concrete pieces of information that they required. I sense that they are used to being told what to do by their superiors, that they rarely question the content of the “wisdom” that their elders supply, but rather they are programmed to believe what they are told and to follow orders. I might be overstating this but there was not an iconoclast in the bunch.
  • Finally, twelve years ago, students didn’t send emails to faculty. Now they have no hesitation whatsoever. And they send the most outrageous messages. They whine about missing quizzes because of illness and demand a makeup, plead for advance information on upcoming exams and demand redress for their poor and undeserved fate on exams. They don’t complain about the syllabus, my teaching style, the amount of material to be covered – only about exams and their grade. But as we shall see below, this is completely consistent with what I described above.

The changes in student attitudes and behavior are not accidental. Today’s university students are a product of a government school system, which teaches them that modern society (including its political, economic and even its cultural components) is too complex to be understood by the average citizen and its direction must be entrusted to professionals and experts. They are taught according to an increasingly uniform national curriculum that belittles non-conformity and drums into their heads the primacy of multiculturalism, global climate change, egalitarianism, central planning, secularism and the illegitimacy of any exceptionalism – American or otherwise. Finally, they are imbued with the idea that their highest objective should be to get credentialed and connected so that they can enter the Ruling Class so aptly described by Angelo Cordevilla in the American Spectator last summer. They are also a product of a society that reinforces the baneful lessons they are taught in school; a society in which: lack of feasance to the prevailing wisdom is punished by marginalization and scorn; morals are relative and no value system is more worthy than any other; deference to professional authority is encouraged and individual curiosity, initiative and responsibility is demeaned; and respect is due to those who help one to gain entry to the Ruling Class, while contempt is reserved for those who stand in one’s way.

It does not augur well. While I suspect that many of today’s students will make good managers, bureaucrats and competent engineers and scientists, I wonder how many Mark Zuckerbergs or Sergei Brins we shall produce.

Compared to the unkempt, undisciplined and unruly students that I taught 35 years ago, today’s students are a delight – hard-working, self-disciplined and pleasant. But unfortunately also a bit boring and predictable, except when they are tenaciously arguing for a higher grade. Two hundred more will arrive at my lectern at the end of January. I am trying to decide whether to supply them with the link to this article.
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This article also apperared in The Intellectual Conservative at

Both Sides are Right about the Tax Deal; and What that Portends

Since the passage of the “bipartisan” tax deal to extend the Bush tax cuts, the Republican Party has engaged in an argument with itself over the wisdom of what was enacted. Those on the more conservative side of the ledger argue that while the preservation of the current tax rates was absolutely imperative, the Republicans in Congress paid far too high a price to achieve that objective. They cite:

  • The plethora of liberal goodies that Obama extracted as the price – extension of unemployment benefits, continuation of various targeted tax cuts and credits that do little but enrich the coffers of Democratic supporters, and the seemingly worthwhile but actually temporary and phony stimulus of a reduction in the payroll tax.
  • The fact that the preservation of the Bush rates is again temporary – and at two years, ridiculously short – leaving continued uncertainty in the business community and the public in general about the future of tax policy in the nation.
  • And most seriously, the lack of any corresponding spending reductions that would help to pay for the legislation and more importantly set the government on the path to fiscal responsibility as demanded by the voters on November 2.

Moreover, say conservative critics of the deal, we could have secured far better legislation if we had waited until the new Congress was seated. In fact, given that Obama had already acceded to the argument that not extending the rates would have brought renewed calamity to the economy, he would have had no choice but to go along with whatever the new Congress proposed, regardless that it would have addressed some or all of the criticisms just enumerated. Conservative, i.e., Tea Party critics of the bipartisan deal complain that it represents a sellout by the Republican Party to the big government mentality that continues to govern the nation and reveals that the GOP has learned little from the fundamental lesson that the voters offered up in the last election.

The “establishment” wing of the Republican Party is having none of this. According to the Mitch McConnells of the GOP, this was a huge victory for Republicans and conservatives. According to their reading of November’s Tea leaves, the prime directive was to forestall any tax increase on any Americans. Therefore, they were determined to ensure that the current rates would be preserved for everyone. They claimed – correctly – that a tax increase on so-called wealthy Americans would impact a large percentage of America’s small business community and consequently inhibit job creation and prolong, if not exacerbate, the unemployment situation in the country. Virtually any price that Obama exacted to secure the continuation of the Bush rates, for however long, was a price worth paying. The liberals’ silly targeted tax credits, extension of unemployment benefits, etc. were small potatoes compared to the critical goal of extending the current tax rates for all.

Both arguments are logical, convincing and easily defended. Moreover, the underlying rationale for either argument emanates from the right side of the political spectrum. Demanding spending cuts and fiscal restraint is as conservative as it gets. But so is the plea for low taxes and job creation, as is the fight against progressive taxation. Thus in some sense, both sides are “right” in their arguments.

So should conservatives be celebrating the deal or ruing the day that it was struck? I believe the answer lies in what conservatives believe to be the current political and economic status of the country, how one measures the degree to which the ongoing progressive onslaught has altered our nation and how radical a course correction one believes is required in order to right the ship of state. Much has been written – from Codevilla’s The Ruling Class to DeMint’s Saving Freedom to Levin’s Liberty and Tyranny – arguing that the political and economic nature of our nation has been radically altered over the last century. According to those arguments, we are no longer a Constitutional republic whose fundamental values are based upon individual liberty, free enterprise, American exceptionalism and Judeo-Christian culture. We are now much closer to a Euro-style, social welfare state in which feasance to the Constitution has been replaced by dependency on big government to satisfy our needs and desires. If one accepts Codevila’s thesis that the Democratic Party is the engine that drives the transformation, abetted by a compliant Republican Party whose leaders aspire to no more than to be admitted to the board rooms of power that administer the social welfare state, then clearly the tax deal represents yet another step down the road to serfdom – even if only a halting and ambiguous baby step. But if one rejects that argument, and instead sees the political landscape comprising a true oscillation between conservative and liberal advances and retreats, not reflecting a persistent, overwhelming advance by progressives, then the tax deal is a small victory for conservatives and should be celebrated.

If the latter are right, we should expect little in the way of fundamental change in the next two plus years. Obama’s natural, hard left inclinations will be held in check to some extent and then who knows what will ensue in 2012? It depends on who is elected president. But the country will continue to bounce back and forth – indulging its equally strong impulses to conserve and liberalize, and while conservatives have the upper hand, they should achieve what they can.

But if Codevilla is right, and we do not initiate a Constitutional revolution in the nation, to wit:

  • drastically, broadly and permanently cut the size and scope of government;
  • overthrow the unholy alliance between the mainstream media, public sector unions, government bureaucrats, crony capitalists and multiculturalists that have and continue to push America to the left;
  • restore a Constitutional republic in which a limited government serves the interests of the people rather than rules them according to elitist ideals;

then we are doomed to complete the progressive trajectory to utopian socialism, second class status as a nation, enforced egalitarian poverty and loss of freedom.

Which side of the argument are you on?
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This article also appeared in The Land of the Free at

Will I Have to Hold My Nose Yet Again?

Since I voted for Ronald Reagan in 1984, I have cast six presidential ballots – all for Republicans, but in every instance with my thumb and forefinger clasped firmly on my nose. My two votes for Reagan were offered up enthusiastically, optimistically and with confidence that I was voting for a candidate devoted to individual liberty, Constitutional faithfulness, American exceptionalism and free market principles. In my six votes since (four Bushes, a Dole and a McCain), I knew without doubt that the person for whom I was voting did not come remotely close to matching Reagan’s belief in the ideals I just cited. Of course, in each case, my candidate appeared substantially more palatable than the egalitarian, statist-obsessed leftist that the Dems put up – so the choice was foreordained. Although, in the end, it felt like a choice between an uber liberal and liberal lite. Therefore, in some sense, it didn’t matter that much who won as the victor continued to lead America down the path toward Euro-socialism, multiculturalism, moral degeneracy and economic calamity.

Here we go again. We are in the season in which dozens of would be Presidents are making their final decision as to whether to throw their hat in the ring for 2012. The election is still two years away, but in our increasingly insane system – in which an obscene amount of money is required to make the run – late entrants into the race (as Fred Thompson proved in the last cycle) do not have a chance. Within a few short months, we shall have before us a playbill with probably a dozen actors listed, each of whom has decided that he or she is the answer to our Republican presidential prayers. Thus, the question again: when I vote for the survivor of the Republican primary/caucus marathon, will it be with my nostrils clenched, or will it be with the enthusiasm that I felt for Ronald Reagan? In this regard, it is worth mentioning that of my six previous Republican votes for President, not once did I vote for the eventual winner in the Republican Presidential primary.

Pundits, pollsters and the media have been handicapping the field for a while already. One could list as many as two dozen people who are considered “potentially serious candidates.” I must say that I feel somewhat more encouraged than I have been at the corresponding point in previous cycles. Within the field there are definitely several candidates who appear worthy of the mantle worn by Reagan. Two in particular are very attractive to me: Jim DeMint and Mike Pence. Now admittedly I might not know enough about either to be certain that we don’t have another Trojan Bush in the making. But DeMint’s book, Saving Freedom is a glorious manifesto for individual liberty and Pence’s recent article in the October issue of the magazine Imprimis entitled “The Presidency and the Constitution” is a testament to Constitutional faithfulness that is inspiring. I know even less about some of the other contenders (Barbour, Daniels, Jindal, Pawlenty, Perry, Thune), but their conservative credentials appear strong and – at least at first glance – it seems quite possible that I might be able to cast an enthusiastic vote for one of them.

But you will note that I have so far omitted mention of the four names that garner the most play in the media – and the likelihood is that my eyes will be gazing at one of their names on my electronic ballot as I decide whether my nose must be shielded before I tap the box next to their name.

Gingrich. In principle, Newt passes muster. His conservative credentials are impeccable. The books he has published, the causes he has championed, the candidates he has supported since he was chased from power, all reinforce his unquestioned conservative beliefs. But Newt is damaged goods, thoroughly demonized by the left, and he has a track record of volatility and questionable judgment. I’m sure that Obama is licking his chops at the prospect. I don’t think that it will happen. Still, I would vote for him with some enthusiasm, but I would be worried.

Palin. More damaged and demonized goods – maybe more so than Newt. More chop licking by Obama. It would take a book to explain the incredibly negative reaction she elicits. But the sad fact is that some of that reaction emanates from certain conservative quarters. Therefore, I doubt that she could secure the nomination – if she even decides to run. She is extremely attractive, with bona fide conservative credentials, but one cannot escape the feeling of insufficient gravitas for her to be considered Presidential material. Of course the current resident of the White House apparently had gravitas (now unmasked as arrogance unsupported by talent) and charisma. We know how that turned out. I would vote for her over Obama of course, but as with Newt, I would be worried.

Huckabee. He certainly has played a magnificent game since 2008. If one watches his TV show and reads his words, one senses that his adherence to the principles enunciated earlier are solid and unshakeable. There is just the little matter of his failure to live up to those principles when he was Governor of Arkansas. If it comes to it, I’ll vote for him. But I doubt that I’ll be able to keep my fingers off of my nose – although the stench I‘ll be attempting to avoid will not be nearly as pungent as it was for McCain.

Romney. Can you say RINO? Romney has a proven track record as a fake conservative. The words “Massachusetts Health Care” should be sufficient to instantly disqualify him. If elected, there is not a chance that he will lead the charge to reverse the country’s inexorable slide toward Euro-socialism, international feebleness and economic decline. And yet he is widely perceived to be the front runner for the Republican 2012 nomination. Should he achieve that goal, it would prove that the Tea Party revolt of the last two years has been for naught. The thought of voting for him – despite the fact that I will do so if left no other choice – is deeply disheartening.

But perhaps fate will be kind and one among the earlier group of names will emerge as the victor. I will vote enthusiastically for the person who can help the US turn the page on the sorry age of Obama and lead our country out of the leftist wilderness.
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This post also appeared in The Intellectual Conservative at

The GOP and Race

An op-ed piece in the November 10 issue of the Wall Street Journal entitled “The GOP‘s Racial Challenge” has been troubling me since I read it. The author, Zolton Hajnal, a faculty member at the University of California, San Diego, makes a veiled charge that the Republican Party’s strategy for winning elections is inherently racist. But let’s allow Professor Hajnal to speak for himself.

Lost in the GOP’s euphoria over its landslide midterm victory is the fact that the Republican Party has almost become a whites-only party. Its strategy may win seats now, but it will lose over the long run.

Republicans won big in 2010 primarily because they won big among white voters…

The problem for Republicans is two-fold. First, whites may currently be the majority but they are a declining demographic. The proportion of all voters who are white has already declined to 75% today from 94% in 1960. By 2050, whites are no longer expected to be a majority of the U.S. population.

Second, Republicans are alienating racial and ethnic minorities – the voters who will ultimately replace the white majority and who [sic] they need to stay in power. In every national election in the past few decades, Democrats have dominated the nonwhite vote…

Republicans thus face a real dilemma. They may be able to gain over the short term by continuing their current strategy of ignoring or attacking minorities. But that is short-sighted.

Over the long term – as white voters become a smaller and smaller fraction of the electorate … – any campaign that appeals primarily to whites will be doomed.

Hajnal’s charge is ‘veiled’ because he doesn’t come right out and accuse the Republicans of adopting a blatantly racist strategy. But his implication is clear – even though he never identifies any specific Republican policy or platform that should appeal solely to whites while alienating blacks, Latinos or Asians. It’s almost as if just being a Republican puts anti-minority strands into one’s DNA and, according to Hajnal, Republicans had better shed that strand if they wish to remain electorally viable. The charge is a canard – and reprehensible. I am surprised that the WSJ published the piece.

Furthermore, Hajnal has, apparently without realizing it, advanced an opinion that is demeaning and condescending to America’s non-white citizens. For exactly what were the policies and platforms that garnered victory for so many Republican candidates in the just concluded election? The Democrats (from Obama down) won’t acknowledge them – likely because they do not comprehend the election’s meaning – but the Republican positions that the electorate found appealing were:

  • Government spending is out of control; the gargantuan federal deficit is a mortal threat to our economy – indeed to the Republic – and it must be brought under control.
  • Governmental intervention in the people’s lives – via excessive regulation, high taxes and radical (judicial and bureaucratic) social engineering – is far beyond acceptable and must be reversed.
  • Government bailouts, union favoritism, crony capitalism and creeping socialism are also threats to our society and must cease.
  • The denigration of America’s role in the world (e.g., the denial of American exceptionalism) by the President and other Democratic leaders is unacceptable, fundamentally contrary to the people’s belief in America as a force for good in the world and insulting to our history.

Now what in heaven’s name does any of that have to do with the race or ethnicity of an individual who subscribes to – or refutes – those views? Nothing! If it is indeed true that such views are adopted by a higher percentage of whites than in any non-white community, then that is sorry testimony to the fact that too many of our minority citizens have succumbed – through generations of brainwashing – to the siren songs of government handouts, victim advocacy and a laissez-faire culture. One of the minority communities that has succumbed is the Jewish community (78% for Obama in 2008). [Full disclosure: I am a member of that community, although I like to think that I have been inoculated.] The last time I looked, most of the Jews in America were white.

Contrary to Hajnal’s assertion, the GOP has no racial challenge. The challenge belongs to America’s minority communities, and to the remnant in America who has an appreciation for the United States’ historic greatness and a devotion to maintaining the freedom that allowed that greatness to emerge. The challenge for the latter is to expand their appreciation and devotion to all segments of the American populace; the challenge for the former is to shed the blinders that have kept them tethered to a statist, collectivist philosophy and to recognize that, while very far from perfect, the GOP has a much better chance than the Democrats of restoring the American commitment to personal freedom, free enterprise, traditional culture and economic prosperity.
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This article also appeared in The American Thinker at

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/11/the_gop_and_race.html

On the Genius of Friedrich Hayek, II

This article is a successor to a previous post in this blog. In that post I provided a representative sample of the brilliant ideas to be found in Friedrich Hayek’s 1944 book, The Road to Serfdom. I bemoaned the fact that so many of today’s educators are ignorant of Hayek’s thought, and that they pass that ignorance on to the youth of America. One tragic consequence is the people’s choice of economically retarded and philosophically ignorant leaders to govern the nation. The point of the article was to inspire right-thinking conservatives to redouble their efforts to get Hayek added to the curriculum.

In this follow on post I provide more of Hayek’s wisdom – this time from his other main publication, The Constitution of Liberty (University of Chicago Press, 1960). My hope is that readers, whether they have read the first post or not, will be further inspired to disseminate and promote Hayek’s ideas.

Chapter 1: Liberty and Liberties, pp. 11-12: The state in which a man is not subject to coercion by the arbitrary will of another or others is often also distinguished as “individual” or “personal” freedom…Even our tentative indication of what we shall mean by “freedom” will have shown that it describes a state which man living among his fellows may hope to approach closely but can hardly expect to realize perfectly. The task of a policy of freedom must therefore be to minimize coercion or its harmful effects, even if it cannot eliminate it completely… [Freedom means] the possibility of a person’s acting according to his own decisions and plans, in contrast to the position of one who was irrevocably subject to the will of another, who by arbitrary decision could coerce him to act or not to act in specific ways.

Chapter 4, Freedom, Reason and Tradition, pp. 54-56: The development of a theory of liberty took place mainly in the eighteenth century. It began in two countries, England and France. The first of these knew liberty; the second did not. As a result, we have had to the present day two different traditions in the theory of liberty: one empirical and unsystematic, the other speculative and rationalistic – the first based on an interpretation of traditions and institutions which had spontaneously grown up and were but imperfectly understood, the second aiming at the construction of a utopia, which has often been tried but never successfully. Nevertheless, it has been the rationalist, plausible, and apparently logical argument of the French tradition, with its flattering assumptions about the unlimited powers of human reason, that has progressively gained influence, while the less articulate and less explicit tradition of English freedom has been on the decline.

This difference was better understood a hundred years ago than it is today…To disentangle the two traditions it is necessary to look at the relatively pure forms in which they appeared in the eighteenth century. What we have called the “British tradition” was made explicit mainly by a group of Scottish moral philosophers led by David Hume, Adam Smith and Adam Ferguson, seconded by their English contemporaries Josiah Tucker, Edmund Burke, and William Paley, and drawing largely on a tradition rooted in the jurisprudence of the common law. Opposed to them was the tradition of the French Enlightenment, deeply imbued with Cartesian rationalism: the Encyclopedists and Rousseau, the Physiocrats and Concordet, are their best-known representatives.

Though these groups are now commonly lumped together as the ancestors of modern liberalism, there is hardly a greater contrast imaginable than that between their respective conceptions of the evolution and functioning of a social order and the role played in it by liberty. The difference is directly traceable to the predominance of an essentially empiricist view of the world in England and a rationalist approach in France. The main contrast in the practical conclusions to which these approaches has led has recently been well put, as follows: “One finds the essence of freedom in spontaneity and the absence of coercion, the other believes it to be realized only in the pursuit and attainment of an absolute collective purpose”; and “one stands for organic, slow, half-conscious growth, the other for doctrinaire deliberateness; one for trial and error procedure, the other for an enforced solely valid pattern.” It is the second view, as J.L. Talmon has shown in an important book from which this description is taken, that has become the origin of totalitarian democracy.

The sweeping success of the political doctrines that stem from the French tradition is probably due to their great appeal to human pride and ambition. But we must not forget that the political conclusions of the two schools derive from different conceptions of how society works. In this respect the British philosophers laid the foundations of a profound and essentially valid theory, while the rationalist school was simply and completely wrong.

Chapter 12, The American Contribution: Constitutionalism, pp. 176-178: The movement [for American independence] in the beginning was based entirely on the traditional conceptions of the liberties of Englishmen. Edmund Burke and other English sympathizers were not the only ones who spoke of the colonists as “not only devoted to liberty, but to liberty according to English ideas, and on English principles”; the colonists themselves had long held this view. They felt that they were upholding the Whig revolution of 1688…In England, after the complete victory of Parliament, the conception that no power could be arbitrary and that all power should be limited by higher law tended to be forgotten. But the colonists had brought these ideas with them and now turned them against Parliament. They objected not only that they were not represented in Parliament but even more that it recognized no limits whatsoever to its powers. With this application of the principle of legal limitation of power…, the initiative in the further development of the ideal of free government passed to the Americans.

Until the final break, the claims and arguments advanced by the colonists in the conflict with the mother country were based entirely on rights and privileges to which they regarded themselves entitles as British subjects. It was only when they discovered that the British constitution, in whose principles they firmly believed, had little substance and could not be successfully appealed to against the claims of Parliament that they concluded that the missing foundation had to be supplied. They regarded it as fundamental doctrine that a “fixed constitution” was essential to any free government and that a constitution meant limited government.

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Chapter 17, The Decline of Socialism and the Rise of the Welfare State, pp. 253-260: The common aim of all socialist movements was the nationalization of the “means of production, distribution, and exchange,” so that all economic activity might be directed according to a comprehensive plan toward some ideal of social justice…The great change that has occurred during the last decade is that socialism…has collapsed. It has not merely lost its intellectual appeal; it has also been abandoned by the masses so unmistakably that socialist parties everywhere are searching for a new program that will insure the active support of their followers. They have not abandoned their ultimate aim, their ideal of social justice. But the methods by which they had hoped to achieve this and for which the name “socialism” had been coined have been discredited. No doubt the name will be transferred to whatever new program the existing socialist parties will adopt. But socialism in the old sense is now dead in the Western world.

But, though the characteristic methods of collectivist socialism have few defenders left in the West, its ultimate aims have lost little of their attraction. While the socialists no longer have a clear-cut plan as to how their goals are to be achieved, they still wish to manipulate the economy so that the distribution of incomes will be made to conform to their conception of social justice. The most important outcome of the socialist epoch, however, has been the destruction of the traditional limitations upon the powers of the state.

Unlike socialism, the conception of the welfare state has no precise meaning. The phrase is sometimes used to describe any state that “concerns” itself in any manner with problems other than those of maintenance of law and order…But, once the rigid position that government should not concern itself at all with such matters is abandoned – a position which is defensible but has little to do with freedom – the defenders of liberty commonly discover that the program of the welfare state comprises a great deal more that is represented as…legitimate and unobjectionable….The current situation has greatly altered the task of the defender of liberty and made it much more difficult. So long as the danger came from socialism of the frankly collectivist kind, it was possible to argue that the tenets of the socialists were simply false: that socialism would not achieve what the socialists wanted and that it would produce other consequences which they would not like. We cannot argue similarly against the welfare state, for the term does not designate a definite system. What goes under the name is a conglomerate of so many diverse and even contradictory elements that, while some of them may make a free society more attractive, others are incompatible with it or may at least constitute potential threats to its existence…. [a] main ambition that inspires the welfare state: the desire to use the powers of government to insure a more even or more just distribution of goods. Insofar as this means that the coercive powers of government are to be used to insure that particular people get particular things, it requires a kind of discrimination between, and unequal treatment of, different people which is irreconcilable with a free society. This is the kind of welfare state that aims at “social justice” and becomes “primarily a redistributor of income.’It is bound to lead back to socialism and its coercive and arbitrary methods.

 

Chapter 19, Social Security, pp. 300 & 304-305: There are so many serious problems raised by the nationalization of medicine that we cannot mention even all the more important ones. But there is one the gravity of which the public has scarcely yet perceived and which is likely to be of the greatest importance. This is the inevitable transformation of doctors, who have been members of a free profession primarily responsible to their patients, into paid servants of the state, officials who are necessarily subject to instruction by authority and who must be released from the duty of secrecy so far as authority is concerned. The most dangerous aspect of the new development may well prove to be that, at a time when the increase in medical knowledge tends to confer more and more power over the minds of men to those who possess it, they should be made dependent on a unified organization under single direction and be guided by the same reasons of state that generally govern policy. A system that gives the indispensable helper of the individual, who is at the same time an agent of the state, an insight into the other’s most intimate concerns and creates conditions in which he must reveal this knowledge to a superior and use it for the purposes determined by authority opens frightening prospects. The manner in which state medicine has been used in Russia as an instrument of industrial discipline gives us a foretaste of the uses to which such a system can be put.

It is much more difficult to see how it will ever be possible to abandon a system of provision for the aged under which each generation, by paying for the needs of the preceding one, acquires a similar claim to support by the next. It would almost seem as if such a system, once introduced, would have to be continued in perpetuity or allowed to collapse entirely. The introduction of such a system therefore puts a straight jacket on evolution and places on society a steady and growing burden from which it will in all probability again and again attempt to extricate itself by inflation. Neither this outlet, however, nor a deliberate default on obligation already incurred can provide the basis for a decent society. Before we can hope to solve these problems easily, democracy will have to learn that it must pay for its own follies and that it cannot draw unlimited checks on the future to solve its present problems.

It has been well said that, while we used to suffer from social evils, we now suffer from the remedies for them. The difference is that, while in former times the social evils were gradually disappearing with the growth of wealth, the remedies we have introduced are beginning to threaten the continuance of that growth of wealth on which all future development depends…Though we may have speeded up a little the conquest of want, disease, ignorance, squalor, and idleness, we may in the future do worse even in that struggle when the chief dangers will come from inflation, paralyzing taxation, coercive labor unions, an ever increasing dominance of government in education, and a social service bureaucracy with far-reaching arbitrary powers – dangers from which the individual cannot escape by his own efforts and which the momentum of the overextended machinery of government is likely to increase rather than mitigate.

Chapter 20, Taxation and Redistribution, pp. 318-319: One of the chief reasons why progressive taxation has come to be so widely accepted is that the great majority of people have come to think of an appropriate income as the only legitimate and socially desirable form of reward. They think of income not as related to the value of the services rendered but as conferring what is regarded as an appropriate status in society. This is shown very clearly in the argument, frequently used in support of progressive taxation, that “no man is worth £10,000 a year, and in our present state of poverty, with the great majority of people earning less than £6 a week, only a few very exceptional men deserve to exceed £2,000 a year.” That this contention lacks all foundation and appeals only to emotion and prejudice will be at once obvious when we see what it means is that no act that any individual can perform in a year or, for that matter, in an hour can be worth more to society than £10,000 ($28,000). Of course, it can and sometimes will have many times that value. There is no necessary relation between the time an action takes and the benefit that society will derive from it.

The whole attitude which regards large gains as unnecessary and socially undesirable springs from the state of mind of people who are used to selling their time for a fixed salary or fixed wages and who consequently regard a remuneration of so much per unit of time as the normal thing. But though this method of remuneration has become predominant in an increasing number of fields, it is appropriate only where people sell their time to be used at another’s discretion or at least act on behalf of and in fulfillment of the will of others. It is meaningless for men whose task is to administer resources at their own risk and responsibility and whose main aim is to increase the resources under their control out of their own earnings. For them the control of resources is a condition for practicing their vocation, just as the acquisition of certain skills or of particular knowledge is such a condition in the professions. Profits and losses are mainly a mechanism for redistributing capital among these men rather than a means of providing their current sustenance. The conception that current net receipts are normally intended for current consumption, though natural to the salaried man, is alien to the thinking of those whose aim is to build up a business. Even the conception of income itself is in their case largely an abstraction forced upon them by the income tax. It is no more than an estimate of what, in view of their expectations and plans, they can afford to spend without bringing their prospective power of expenditure below the present level. I doubt whether a society consisting mainly of “self-employed” individuals would ever have come to take the concept of income so much for granted as we do or would ever have thought of taxing the earnings from a certain service according to the rate at which they accrued in time.

Chapter24, Education and Research, pp. 379-380: The very magnitude of the power over men’s minds that a highly centralized and government-dominated system of education places in the hands of the authorities ought to make one hesitate before accepting it too readily…there are strong arguments against entrusting to government that degree of control of the contents of education which it will possess if it directly manages most of the schools that are accessible to the great masses. Even if education were a science which provided us with the best of methods of achieving certain goals, we could hardly wish the latest methods to be applied universally and to the complete exclusion of others – still less that the aims should be uniform. Very few of the problems of education, however, are scientific questions in the sense that they can be decided by any objective tests. They are mostly either outright questions of value, or at least the kind of questions concerning which the only ground for trusting the judgments of some people rather than that of others is that the former have shown more good sense in some respects. Indeed, the very possibility that, with a system of government education, all elementary education may come to be dominated by the theories of a particular group who genuinely believe that they have scientific answers to those problems (as has happened to a large extent in the United States during the last thirty years) should be sufficient to warn us of the risks involved in subjecting the whole educational system to central direction.

If you have read through all of the above, then you may very well be thinking, “This is brilliant – although really it should be mostly self-evident.” Yes it is, and 125 years ago, the average American knew it. What happened? What happened is that a century of progressive education has sapped the American people of its innate wisdom. For the last 80 years we have been subjected to Keynesian economics, John Dewey-inspired progressive education, Euro-style socialism and a welfare state mentality that stifles individual liberty. Hayek observed the trend and foresaw the outcome. If we can reopen the people’s eyes to the truth of Hayek’s words, we should be able to reverse course and restore the nation.