In Wisconsin, public employees have protested in support of the "right" to perpetuate a system that guarantees them better pay, benefits and job security than that held by the taxpayers who employ them. In Washington,
Democrats can't find more than a few billion dollars to cut from a federal budget deficit of $1.6 trillion.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid recently insisted upon continued federal funding for Nevada's cowboy poetry festival. Apparently, to find a place "where seldom is heard a discouraging word," one need only go to Congress and ask for money.
America was blessed with a Constitution designed to "promote the general Welfare." But we've perverted our public institutions into vehicles for promoting the welfare of some at the expense of others.
If cowboys -- the quintessential rugged individualists -- can't be denied largesse under the reigning definition of legitimate government spending, then no one can.
One need look no further than the progressive movement for the roots of this disintegration of "E pluribus unum." Ever since progressives redefined "general welfare" to include redistribution of wealth, Americans have been pitted against each other in a death match over pieces of the pie.
One ostensible justification for progressivism is that it is a legitimate outgrowth of our democratic process. Because a majority of the public supports redistributive policies, the rationalization goes, those who oppose such policies are obligated by our social contract to go along.
The problem is that the redistributive ethic is itself a corruption of the democratic process. Consider: Federal and state laws make it illegal for a candidate to offer anything of value to a person in exchange for his or her vote.