If you’ve been watching this page, you know that this is the
second part of a larger post. My first post was a brief discussion of the
economist, David Ricardo and his views on the growth of inequality and how to
tax it back into balance.
If you read my post of a few days ago about the great
economist Ricardo and his argument for progressive taxation, this will be
something of a follow up to that. A “Part Two.”
He argued that since the amount of food-producing farmland in
England always stay more or less the same size, but the population would always
increase, then the value of land
would go up because of its relative scarcity. And one class of people would
become richer and richer, not because they created something or produced
something (at least something more than what they were already producing), but
simply because the demand for their product had gone up. And if this continues,
it would skew the economy and do damage to those who did not have access to this
resource.
So, he argued for something that we might call today a “Progressive
Tax,” that is, increase the taxes on land to keep the land owners’ income more
within the range of ordinary Brits.
This post today has some overlap with that, that’s why I am
considering it the second part of a two-part, longer essay. Recently (Friday,
September 13, 2014), Bill Moyers had on his show a climate scientist named
Katherine Hayhoe. When he asked her why it was that so many people simply
denied the science about climate change, she answered something like the
following, with my additions and commentary.
She said that for Republicans (not to be confused with
“Conservatives,” who share some of the same positions, but who do not have the
restrictions of fund raising in influencing their opinions), there are two
conflicting problems. For one, they strongly believe (or must claim they
believe) that government is bad, and government programs do not work. That’s
not totally true, of course. Most modern day Republicans will support government funds for
the military and police and roads programs and a few other things. But generally speaking, as a broad
philosophical position, they are the first to say that government is the
problem (and the last to say that it is the solution) and that trust in the free market is the answer to most problems. On the other hand,
Climate Change is a huge and global threat like nothing we have ever seen
before. Left unchecked, it will destroy the globe and all of our children and
children’s children. And, perhaps more importantly, it is something that simply
cannot be addressed without massive government intervention. Your own personal
recycling simply will not get us there.
So, how do they reconcile those two positions? They can’t
deny the existence of government. They can’t deny the fact that it will take a
major government action all over the planet to turn around the problem. So,
what they wind up doing is denying the existence of the problem. They continue
to claim that there is a debate about it when there actually is not, or that it’s
true, but humans did not exacerbate it (and it will go away) or that there is
nothing there at all and the problem is just a hoax.
It’s a tragic paradox for them, but given the fact that they
have to be re-elected and they have to maintain their belief that
government cannot fix things, then they almost have to create this illusion that their denial of the science
somehow has some legitimacy.
She was also asked by Bill Moyers her thoughts on climate
science deniers “in the street.” She is a practicing Christian, so he put it
pointedly: why do Christians believe this in such large numbers?
Her first answer was that most people just don’t know the
research, but it was more complicated than that. People don’t have time to look
up Climate Change and study the issues. So, they make up their minds by
following people who they trust. And the guy (usually a guy) who they elected
into office is one of those. When they don’t know how to look into it on their
own, they trust their Congress person, and if he or she says there is no issue
there, then they feel like they have to agree. It’s not malicious, it’s just
the way that people have to be to make sense out of things that are above their
abilities (and time).
It may well be that one of the reasons why Democrats or
Liberals (also not always the same thing) tend to believe in the emerging
climate disaster is because they tend not to be afraid of government. Democrats
have historically had more trust in government programs, even while wanting to
question or change a few of them along the way. Their openness to government’s
abilities (admittedly spotty on occasion) allows them to look at the reality of
the gradually disintegrating climate more clearly. Not because they are
smarter, but because they are not hamstrung and held back by an anti-government
ideology.
The connection between this and the comment about Ricardo is that both
problems require government action (they can’t be fixed by waiting for the free
market to fix them) and both problems are denied either relevance or reality by modern day Republicans. If Hayhoe’s theory is correct, then today's Republicans simply cannot
admit to the reality of either problem—or for that matter any problem that requires government action. We cannot support any new government action
on anything, therefore we cannot
believe in any problem that is so large that it requires government action. Now, that is a problem that needs something other than Government help.
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