S
sedonaman
Guest
That’s right!!! Besides, people don’t want economic equality, otherwise there would be no incentive to go to school and learn and to better yourself and society.Inequality is not the same thing as injustice.
God gave individuals varying degrees of knowledge, skills, abilities, and attractiveness; and these all translate into varying degrees of creativeness and hence income and wealth. We are reminded that we have to use our “talents”[1]. Man is made in the image and likeness of God. God likes to create, hence man likes to create. In order to make people equal, you have to take away their rights, especially the right to be creative. If a person cannot benefit from his creativeness, he will cease being creative. “It’s a lot easier to make a dumb pretty girl smart that to make a smart ugly girl pretty.”[2] That’s why Pareto said, “If incomes are equalized, they will be equalized at a low level.”
It never ceases to amaze me that foremost among those advocating an equal “distribution”[3] of wealth are none other than college professors who have their own levels of inequality.
[1] A term I do not like to use in this context because a “talent” is an ability of unusually high quality. Not everyone has talent.
[2]“Love is a Fallacy”, from The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, by Max Schuleman
[3] Is wealth “distributed” or is it created?