For a long time, I’ve found myself wishing I could live on an island somewhere — or maybe even in a cave — to escape the stupid people who seem to be all around.
But when I think about it more seriously, I realize it’s not just stupid people who I want to escape. I want to escape from very bright people who insist that it’s their moral right to force me to obey their will.
There are some quite brilliant people — at least as measured by IQ — who have fallen for the civic religion that tells them it’s their moral right to make my decisions and take my money to use as they please. Most galling, perhaps, is their sanctimonious belief that I’m being “greedy” if I don’t want to obey them.
I watched an online discussion play out of Facebook Monday between siblings over the issue. One woman posted this graphic from the Bastiat Institute, which I had also posted Monday. It points out something that I’ve talked about before. If someone else claims a right to what you produce, you are a slave to that person or group to that extent.
After the woman posted the graphic, her two sisters disagreed with her, each for a different reason. It ended up mostly as a dialogue between the original poster and one of her sisters, who is a progressive left Democrat. They’re all three exceptionally intelligent women. But the leftist misses the moral point about the theft of property entirely. I think this part of the exchange was when I most wanted to bang my head against a wall:
The goals we chase can become chains that hold us in bondage
Shared misery: Nobody can have air conditioning unless everyone can
Without motivation, dreams fade,
Weddings are triumphs of love and hope over reasonable fears
Most prizes feel empty, because our real need is for connection
Just a sandwich: Why do people make everything so political?
Counting on the status quo? Do you have a plan in case things collapse?
Italy sending seismologists to jail for failing to predict big earthquake
Narcissists set themselves up for miserable lives and lonely deaths