Back from the beyond

Post – March 25, 2003

As if I needed another reason to love Molly Ivins

“When the man says there will be a tax cut ‘for everyone who pays income taxes’ and that the average tax cut will be $1,100, he expects you not to notice that half of all taxpayers will get less than $100, while people making over $1 million will get an average of $92,200. That averages to $1,100 all right. As The New Yorker pointed out recently, if Bill Gates went to a mission where two nuns were feeding soup to sixty bums, the average net worth of everyone in that room would be $1 billion each. But it would still be Bill Gates, sixty bums, and two nuns.”

-Molly Ivins in “The Progressive”

If we want to live in a purely Darwinian society, where each person just grabs what they can, that’s not hard to create. But is that really the society we want to live in?

3 Comments

  1. Sparky

    Unlike objectivists (poke) I’m all for altruism. However, is a “Darwinian” society really something that needs to be created, or does it just happen on its own? Is it really possible to create any other kind of enduring society. On a purely intellectual level, wouldn’t any enduring society be “Darwinian”? Gotsta maintain a perspective of scale.

  2. John Kusch

    Objectivists believe that rational self-interest is not the same as selfishness. Selfish people will let the world be destroyed for their short-term, animalistic greed. Rationally self-interested people will see that social justice, ecological protections, and Democracy are best for individual human beings in the long-run. Objectivists (myself sort of included) believe that altruism — i.e., hurting yourself to help others — is irrational. We help ourselves by helpinig others. We benefit our own lives by giving to others. An objectivist would reject karma, but he/she would eagerly accept “what goes around comes around”.

  3. Sparky

    (poke)

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