Black Americans Failed by Good Intentions: Q/A with Jason Riley
"My beef with the black left is that they want to keep the focus on what government or Washington or politicians or whites in general can do for blacks, instead of what blacks can do for themselves," says Jason Riley, author of Please Stop Helping Us: How Liberals Make it Harder for Blacks to Succeed and editorial board member of the Wall Street Journal.
In a wide-ranging conversation with Reason TV's Nick Gillespie, Riley praises the Civil Rights acts of the 1960s even as he takes aim at affirmative action in higher education, which he says keeps black graduation rates low even as it increases diversity among freshman classes at various univesities. He also argues that the drug war doesn't explain black-on-black violence and ending it won't transform urban America in the way libertarians insist. His book lays out the case against the minimum wage in a chapter called "Mandating Unemployment" and he argues that especially among African Americans, an intact family unit is the best anti-poverty program available.
About 20 minutes.
Produced by Anthony L. Fisher, camera by Meredith Bragg and Fisher, with assistance from Brett Crudgington.
Music: "Applicant" by The Matt Kurz One
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In 2008, Reason TV talked with Riley about his book about immigrants, Let Them In, and his case for open borders. Watch that here.
Below is a rush transcript of the interview with Jason Riley. Check all quotes for accuracy against video.
FULL TRANSCRIPTION
0:32 - Black Experience and Characterizations
reason: At the start of the book, you write that "the sober truth is that the most important civil rights battles were fought and won 4 decades before the Obama presidency. The black underclass continues to face many challenges, but they have to do with values and habits, not oppression from a manifestly unjust society. Blacks have become their own worst enemy." And liberal leaders, you go on to say, are essentially abetting that. What is the typical black experience and is there this fixation on the black underclass that no longer exists, or is representative, or what does it mean?
Jason Riley: Well, I don't know that there is a typical black experience, which is progress in and of itself. You have a big black middle class now, most blacks are not poor in this country. But the problems of the black underclass continue to dominate the discussion and rightly so, and they do continue to be representative of blackness writ large, so to speak. We need to talk about these problems and what I'm talking about is culture. One of the reasons I wrote this book is because I think there is a hesitancy, particularly among those on the left, to discuss black culture. And I don't know how we're going to address those problems if we're afraid to talk about them.
1:45 - Achievements of Civil Rights
reason: And I want to get to this, you say, "Much more disturbing is that half a century after the civil rights battles were fought and won, liberalism remains much more interested in making excuses for blacks than in reevaluating efforts to help them." And you talk about the civil rights acts of 1964 and 1965 as "liberalism at its best." Civil rights activism set the stage for those victories, what did they achieve?
Jason Riley: Well, the 1964 Act gets at legal discrimination in the country. The 1965 voting rights act makes voter registration possible and actual voting possible. They made this country a more just society and I think with Thurgood Marshall, Martin Luther King, and Rosa Parks, and the Freedom Riders and those folks, what they were fighting for was worth fighting for.
reason: Absolutely necessary?
Jason Riley: Absolutely necessary, and all Americans can be happy that they made this country more just. Then you get Lyndon Johnson coming in and saying, "that's not enough. Equal opportunity is not enough. We need equal results." And I question whether that is a legitimate or a reasonable goal, since you don't see equal results among groups historically in America or anywhere else in the world. Maybe the best you can hope for from government is equal opportunity. Then it's up to those groups to take advantage of those opportunities.
reason: There is no question that the black experience, with the possible exception of the Native Americans, is infinitely more punishing and oppressive of an experience. So it's not completely out of bounds that you would say, you know what, equal opportunity is not enough. I mean, it may be wrong, but you can understand the impulse.
Jason Riley: What have the results been of trying to go beyond that? That's what I look at in this book. Have these efforts helped or harmed black Americans?
3:32 - Government Programs Intended to Help Blacks
reason: As you point out in the book, the black unemployment rate is essentially double the white or national average. What were the programs put into place supposedly to help blacks?
Jason Riley: Well, these were anti-poverty programs. And also, wage floors. And I'm talking about minimum wage laws. Davis-Bacon, and so forth. And if you look at black employment prior to the implementation of these policies - you saw much better outcomes. In the 1940s, well into the 1950s you saw black labor participation rates higher than what we have today.
reason: And just to put a button on that, it's insane that in an America that was manifestly more discriminatory and prejudiced, you had blacks participating more…
Jason Riley: Well, that's the point. For all the legacies of slavery, for all the legacies of Jim Crow, they couldn't keep black employment from being essentially parallel with white employment within the same environment.
reason: Young blacks without skills, like all young workers who have relatively low skills, are they priced out of the labor market and then they just can't get work? Or are you saying that it's anti poverty programs that allow them to get by…
Jason Riley: Well it's a number of factors. One is, yes, pricing people out of the labor force. When you make it more expensive to hire people, fewer people get hired. And you are particularly hurting less skilled, less experience workers by raising the cost of hiring them. Now the left sells this as an anti-poverty program, but most poor households are in that category because they have no workers, not because they have workers that are paid too little. You can't confuse poor households with households with minimum wage workers. And a lot of that confusion results in trying to use the minimum wage as an anti-poverty measure.
reason: And the left, or liberals, tend to look at the person who keeps a job and goes from making $4 an hour to $6 an hour…
Jason Riley: …if they keep the job.
reason: …but they ignore the people who never get hired, and they assume those people will keep their job and work at the same number of hours. Let's look at poverty. Between 1940 and 1960, black poverty in America fell by 40 percentage points in 20 years. That's before the civil rights act, before voting rights act, before Brown v. Board of Education…now it continued to fall through the 70s and 80s but at a much slower rate. You had a much stronger black family coming out of slavery, throughout reconstruction, into Jim Crow, two parent households were much more likely among blacks than what you have today. And in some years, according to the census, the rate of two parent households among blacks exceeded that among whites. And the difference today, and I would argue largely as a result of these efforts to help blacks, you have seen the disintegration of the black family. And until blacks repair that damage, and there is significant damage there, I don't see how these other outcomes are going to improve.
6:44 - Single Parent Households/Intrusive Policy Programs
reason: What can the government do? If, in fact, single parent households are the problem, what happens?
Jason Riley: Again, to the title of the book, it's not about what I want the government to do, it's what I want the government to stop doing. Stop raising the minimum wage and pricing blacks out of the labor force, stop mismatching kids with schools in the form of affirmative action and setting them up to fail, stop trying to replace a father in the home with a government check.
reason: You opened the book with a discussion of the last time you saw your father. Your parents were divorced, ideally one assumes fathering is in the household with the kids, but you can be a parent and a father while not living in the same household.
Jason Riley: These kids need a father's presence in their lives, and we know all the bad outcomes associated with not having a father present. We have people calling out there for slavery reparations, or another wealth distribution scheme in America to help solve black poverty. Here's a back poverty program: married couples in this country who are black, they have a poverty rate in the single digits, and have for 20 years. There is your anti-poverty program: get married before you have kids. My beef with the black left is that they want to keep the focus on what government or Washington or politicians or whites in general can do for blacks or should be doing for blacks, instead of what blacks can be doing for themselves. This is the polar opposite of what you got in, say, Martin Luther King's generation, who made black self-development a priority. And he was in a long line of civil rights leaders who did that. I quote from Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington, both men born slaves, who said 'all we can really ask for from government is equal opportunity.' Then it's up to us to take advantage of these opportunities. Now today you have civil rights leaders saying, 'until racism has been vanquished from America, blacks cannot be held responsible for the criminality, for the attitudes towards education, for the work habits, and so forth.' Again, the complete opposite of the previous civil rights movement…and the reason behind that, is because the civil rights movement has become the civil rights industry. They have a vested interest in keeping a certain narrative out there, to maintain their own relevance. If it really is about black culture, if it really is about a racial conversation that black people need to have among one another, then what the NAACP is out there trying to do, what Jesse Jackson is trying to do, what Al Sharpton is trying to do, is less and less relevant. It's one of the reasons I wrote the book is because there is an audience for what I'm saying, a receptive audience, that agrees with me on these cultural issues, even though the supposed black leaders don't want to talk about it because it's not in their vested interest to do so.
9:35 - Younger Generation of Black Leaders
reason: Who are the young generation of black leaders do you think that are sending the right message.
Jason Riley: There are people like Artur Davis, former congressman. Another former congressman Harold Ford Junior has been saying these things…
reason: and Harold Ford Jr. a Democrat from Tennessee.
Jason Riley: I don't think it's necessarily generational. I think you have many ministers in the black community, many black parents who get what I'm saying in this book and want to talk about these issues. Again, they may not self-identify as conservatives, but I think there are a lot of them out there that share the same values.
10:11 - Affirmative Action
reason: So, your broad thesis is that a lot of programs that were put in, whatever their intentions, are having negative effects because they allow the perpetuation of a dependency culture, or a culture that gives rise to a lot of social problems. How does affirmative action fit into all that?
Jason Riley: Again, affirmative action is another well-intentioned policy intended to increase the ranks of the black middle class, increase the number of black college graduates. I talk about it in the book mostly in the education sector and what it's done at the higher education level in particular. And what you have is a mismatch problem, and we saw that when California ended its ban on racial preferences back in 1996. What happened after that ban took place is that black graduation rates increased by more than 50%, not only overall, but in some of the more difficult disciplines, like math, science, and engineering, again by more than 50%. So a policy that intended to help increase the number of black graduates was resulting in fewer doctors, lawyers, engineers than we otherwise would have had.
reason: Explain how that happened?
Jason Riley: Well, what happened was that these schools were funneling blacks into environments where they didn't match the educational credentials of the average student at the school, and so they were outmatched. Many of them dropped out or switched to easier majors. After the ban took place, kids were being better matched with schools where they could do the work, and therefore you had better graduation rates. But the way the whole affirmative action debate has evolved: graduation rates aren't the priority! Diversity is the priority! The campus has to look like America, the college catalogue has to be color-coded. Whether kids are actually graduating is a secondary concern at best. The freshman class is what matters. A good example of this in a nutshell, is a study some years ago done at MIT, black kids at MIT. Black kids at MIT scored in the top 10% of the math section of the SAT, of all the kids in the country, of any color. But they were in the bottom 10% of scores in the math section of the SAT, at MIT. So you have these very smart black kids who would be hitting it out of the park at a less selective school, but they're struggling at MIT. But MIT could care less, because their campus looks like America.
12:40 - School Choice/Charters
reason: That leads to one of the places where government policy, in the context here, is going in the right direction and it's really getting out of the way of people creating their own culture - which is school choice. You write a lot about K-12 school choice and this is the fascinating issue because it tends to unite libertarian, conservatives, as well as inner-city blacks in particular. Talk a little bit about the value of school choice and why it's a good thing that it seems to be on the rise.
Jason Riley: Well, it works, that's the value of it. And the problem is that this whole debate we have about school choice is not really about whether school choice works, it's about whether public education should be primarily a jobs program for adults. That's the real debate that's going on out there.
reason: What do you mean by that?
Jason Riley: What I mean by that is first of all, it's hugely popular among the very people who want it and need it the most, low income, inner city, black and hispanic people. For decades it is polled off the charts. And I use this as another example of a disconnect between the black rank and file and the black leadership, your Jesse Jacksons, Al Sharptons, NAACPs, who tend to oppose school choice because they're siding with the unions, who do not like it not because it doesn't work, but because many of these charter schools, and many of these schools where these vouchers would be used aren't organized, and their primary concern are the adults within the system, not the kids. So you see them fighting for laws which have no educational justification. Last In First Out hiring policies? There is no educational justification for that. Hiring teachers after two years in the classroom, giving them a job for life, making them impossible to fire…there is no educational justification for that. Those are job protections. And yet you see the unions fighting for them even to the detriment to the children they claim to represent. And then you see these organizations like the NAACP who take money from the unions, siding with the unions over the kids and the parents of the kids who they claim to represent.
reason: There were no charter schools in 1996, the first one in the country opened its doors in Minnesota in 1997, now there are tens of thousands. What has to happen for it to become the new normal?
Jason Riley: One of the arguments that opponents of charter schools and vouchers make is that they can't be scaled up to replace our public school system. That's a red herring. They don't need to be scaled up. We don't need a KIPP in every neighborhood in America. I live in suburban NYC, we don't need a KIPP up there, the public schools are just fine. We know where we need these schools, we need them in our inner cities, in our most difficult neighborhoods, with the kids facing the most challenges. And that's where these schools want to be located, and that's what we need. We don't need them everywhere, so this argument that 'oh, we can't voucherize the whole system or charterize the whole system, so we can't do anything' is a dodge and should be dismissed out of hand. But where these schools are located - they are getting results. But you do have a leadership out there, from the president on down, who talks one game but his actions do something different. So he talks a lot about school choice, but his administration is trying to shut down a voucher program in Louisiana. He talks a lot about school choice, but he's been trying to shut down the voucher program in DC since the day he entered the oval office. The president of the United States has never found a public school good enough for his own children, either before he was president or since. He tells us, 'be patient, I'll fix those public schools' while his kids attend private schools. And again, he has a whole other agenda, which is to continue his support from labor, from the teacher's unions, from others who have a vested interest in the status quo, no matter what. No matter that that status quo is harming our most vulnerable kids. I think it's appalling.
16:42 - Post Racial Society?
reason: Speaking of Obama, when he was elected, many people on both the right and the left - you start your book with the discussion that this is a pretty great moment, that America has moved past a certain stage in race relations. Do you think discussions of race have gotten better or worse? Or at least are we having more now since Obama has become president? And should we look forward to a period - and how would we get there - where race is no longer an open wound that it seems to be in American political and cultural discourse.
Jason Riley: We're not post racial. But I'd argue that the left has no interest in being post racial. They claim they want to be post racial, but they really don't. They want to keep race front and center in our national conversations, because it serves their agenda, that racism is the all-purpose explanation for what ails black America. There are a lot of people making a lot of money on that narrative and they want to keep it out there. There are political parties who gain and keep political power with that narrative out there, and they want to keep talking about it.
17:58 - Black Outreach
reason: By the same token, I'm not a partisan one way or another - I don't know that you are, but what is the Republican party doing to send a message to black America? What did Mitt Romney get? What should they be doing and how responsible are they for the fact that they're lucky if they get 5% of the black vote? And there was a time when the Republican party actually was the black party.
Jason Riley: Oh yeah, these things change over time. Loyalties to parties change over time, that's certainly true. There is some black outreach among the GOP. Today you have people like Paul Ryan making an effort. Chris Christie in his reelection bid in NJ, went into Camden, introduced himself - did pretty well among blacks. In the past you've had people like Jack Kemp, known for his work in the inner cities. You had Richard Riordan out in LA, you had Stephen Goldsmith in Indianapolis, but those still tend to be exceptions. By and large, serious black outreach does not occur among Republican candidates. And I don't ascribe that to racial animosity, I think they're being very pragmatic. They feel they don't need this vote to win, and they feel that time spent courting this constituency that they're not likely to get a big return on is time not spent courting someone else. And I don't think that's really going to change until the Republican party feels they need the black vote to win. You were speaking about immigration earlier. Right now there is a huge debate in the GOP about the Latino vote and whether they can continue to win elections going forward without more of this voting bloc. There is no such discussion about blacks among the GOP right now. I don't think you're going to get one until they feel they need this group to win elections. I wish they would do more black outreach, and the black outreach that they do is pretty much laughable. Going to the NAACP every four years to give a speech is not black outreach. Those folks are probably lost to the GOP. I like what Rand Paul is doing, going to black colleges and trying to get at that younger generation, but that's what you need to do, you need to go into the barbershops, you need to go into the community centers, the churches, introduce yourself. The habit among Republican candidates these days is really to just concede that vote. Make symbolic statements, 'I support school choice,' and maybe that will win me a few votes. You have to do more than that.
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Clearly that author is a racist against black people.
Race Traitor! Race Traitor!
I hope that your comment is sarcasm.
The author is a voice of reason in a gutter culture.
I think it would be awesome if the Feds suspended income taxes for African Americans. After 10 years when poverty and unemployment drops precipitously in the black community, the Feds would have to explain why lower taxes for all Americans is a bad thing.
That would be a nice pushback against those occasional weak calls for reparations.
That was my thought. "Since we don't know who benefited from slavery we will let you keep all the results of your labor". It will never happen, but it would be awesome to have a side by side comparison of taxed and untaxed Americans and productivity.
But....how will the ROADZ be paid for?
Let me introduce you to my friend the turn pike
So how much will this "turn pike" charge me to go from Miami to Seattle, and how many toll booths must I stop for?
As much and as many as the toll owner deems prudent for you to pay and stop at.
After all, driving is not a right (nor is flying or boating), just ask the courts!
More seriously, the government already has a monopoly on ownership of the roads, and yet there continue to exist toll roads and their frequency and cost is beyond my personal control. Never mind that the other roads are payed for from my taxes, regardless of how much I use them.
The worst caricature of a free market pales in comparison to the reality we live under.
"The worst caricature of a free market pales in comparison to the reality we live under."
Hardly...no need to exaggerate, it just weakens the argument.
Hardly...no need to exaggerate, it just weakens the argument.
Would you care to explain?
You do realize that you are not owed the property of others even if that's inconvenient? But by all means, familiarize everyone with your love of central planning and externalizing costs onto your neighbors.
Or conversely, it might demonstrate that lowering or eliminating taxes does nothing to decrease poverty and unemployment in the black community, and therefore taxes should be raised instead.
Taxes are the least of the problems in the black community.
You think raising taxes will help the black community? I fail to see how having less in your pay check makes you wealthier.
Of course not, but neither will eliminating them. Taxes aren't the problem, black culture is the problem, and until you address that, taxes won't make a difference.
I think some of black culture has been institutionalized by outside groups helping. Allowing black people to keep more of what they earn helps to break the cycle of dependency. You are right, I don't know what the outcome would be, but I suspect if people are allowed to keep what they earn, they will try to earn more.
So let's abolish them anyway and find out. While we're at it, we can abolish the crippling regulations and oppressive welfare schemes, too. Then we'll see which is more powerful, the iron laws or the mythical "black culture".
There's always going to be taxes, like it or not. While I'm all for lowering taxes and making EVERYONE pay an equal percentage based on their income, "abolishing" taxes altogether is neither possible, nor is it desirable. I personally like the idea of having a government to take care of all that complicated shit like national defense, roads, and the like.
Well that is where we part ways. I think privatizing police, fire, water, power, education, roads, is preferable. National defense is the one place I think government may be justified but I would prefer a voluntary service vs career soldier model.
You think that because it sounds so simple on the surface, but it's not. Let's do privatized police for an example: As a business, isn't their primary goal going to be profit, and isn't profit going to be driven by results? There has to be a measurable indicator of performance, and as police that measurable indicator of performance is going to be things like "crimes solved" or "arrests made". Their motivation will be to make as many arrests as possible. Can you see what I'm getting at?
Except harassing the people who pay your salary AND can fire you is bad business. The incentive of police will be the protect the property and people that pay your salary. No one cares how many arrest you make as long as my house doesn't get burgled and I can walk the streets safely.
You've just described the current system of law enforcement, minus unions.
Having to win an election every few years is not the same as having to justify getting a paycheck every few weeks.
You still don't get it. As a business, the police would have to project or produce quantifiable results in order to renew a contract. If they can't project or produce quantifiable results, someone else will. "I feel safer walking down the street" is NOT a quantifiable result; arrests are. The bottom line is this: The police do not exist to "protect the property and people", they exist to arrest criminals who they suspect have ALREADY violated the law. They have no legal obligation to protect property and people. NONE.
They have no legal obligation to protect property and people. NONE.
Then why the fuck do they exist? You get to steal from me so some dickwads can run around with badges and guns pumping up useless numbers by shoving people in cages? What the fuck does that accomplish?
They exist to arrest criminals; people that have violated the law. What else would you have them do, stand guard outside every building and provide armed escorts to every individual?
YOU are responsible for the security and safety of yourself and your property.
Please don't tell me you actually thought the government was obligated to protect you.
Please don't tell me you actually thought the government was obligated to protect you.
Of course not. It clearly exists to steal from me to pay for your goodies. I was under no illusion about that. What I can't understand is why you think hammering this point home is a defense of government.
We're both calling government the largest band of armed thugs, but you're the only one deluded into thinking that's a good thing.
Nobody pays for my "goodies" but me, and you're missing the point: There will always be "armed thugs". You can have a million groups of them all operating independently with no oversight, no regulation, and no interoperability, or you can have them all operating as a single entity with some oversight, some regulation, and interoperability. I prefer the later. It's more efficient, the rules are more defined, and I have at least some influence with a vote.
Personally, I'd prefer to live in the wilderness and not put up with any of it, but that's currently not possible.
Nobody pays for my "goodies" but me
I didn't realize you could field the entire defense budget out of your own pocket.
You can have a million groups of them all operating independently with no oversight, no regulation, and no interoperability, or you can have them all operating as a single entity with some oversight, some regulation, and interoperability
Do you know what "oversight" is? It's people who give a shit keeping an eye on the things that matter to them. The only thing bureaucrats "oversee" is their own careers.
Oversight in a free market is me making a contract with you that has milestones and deliverables. It's me checking up on you to see that the money I gave you is being put to good use.
Now it is you who is engaging in naive fantasies about how the government operates. The only oversight in government comes from the voters, and only insofar as they care. Are you seriously going to argue that the very same voters who gleefully create these moral hazards in the first place are going to be effective overseers of them?
1. The DoD is not "my goodie". It's "our goody", and arguing that we don't all need to pay for Nation Defense is just going to make you look like a libertarian fringe idiot.
2. I know exactly what oversight is, and you have no fucking idea how many "bureaucrats" are tasked with government oversight.
3. Aren't you the same guy that's arguing for "free market" law enforcement, where milestones and deliverables logically equals arrests and prosecutions? Or are you still arguing that "feelings" are milestones and deliverables?
4. I know EXACTLY how government operates. I work for or with the government on an almost daily basis. It's a monolithic entity, but it's composed of individuals, some of which suck, and some that excel. The problem is that when the good people try to change it, the sucky people resist, and because of fucking unions, it's almost impossible to fire the sucky people.
I don't believe in the necessity of a standing army, whether it be the DoD or the local police force. We can compromise at cutting these things drastically down to size. If I start out giving you 90% of what you want, then "compromise" is you getting everything you want.
Your idea of "free market police" is "the government contracting out police work". Everything to you must fit within the established laws and paradigms. Well, fuck that. You don't get to dictate the terms of acceptable debate. I'm not here just to eat the scraps off your fucking table.
The free market means that I pay for what I deem worth paying for. You want a standing army? Then you fucking pay for it. You've got no right to force me to do what you think is "necessary". It is not just that you think you are owed the fruit of my labor, but the nature of my thoughts as well, that makes you a fucking slaver.
Well that's bullshit. Insurance companies do that now! I don't need my house to burn down every year to justify my selection of a fire insurance provider.
No, they don't. Insurance actuaries determine the statistical odds of an event occurring based on quantifiable data, not "feelings".
No, they don't. Insurance actuaries determine the statistical odds of an event occurring based on quantifiable data, not "feelings".
Do you really not understand the difference between the insurance company's employees and its customers?
You seriously think you'll get to choose your police department like you do your insurance company? What do you think the insurance market would look like if insurance companies had the power to arrest their competitors?
No, actually, I "seriously think" I don't need a full-time police department anyway. You've already said they don't protect me or my property, so I don't see a reason to keep them employed. Bounty hunters can deal with murderers, rapists, and robbers on the lam, and I'm pretty sure my contribution to the occasional bounty each year will be a lot less than what I have to pay for the PD annually.
The courts can keep a sheriff to take complaints and bailiffs to protect the courthouse, but that still eliminates 95% of the police force.
Absolutely. They are providers of a service, they are not exempt from the basic principles of economics.
Insurers would compete among themselves for marketshare and companies who behave badly would accordingly be punished by consumers. Insurers would need to be able to work with each other both cooperatively and competitively. I wouldn't subscribe to an insurer who didn't know how to play nice with other firms otherwise I would be paying for a pretty shitty service that couldn't protect me adequately. Ergo such firms wouldn't not persist and market based contracts and laws would arise naturally in the market.
WHOOOOOSHED over you once again. I wasn't talking about how insurance companies determine price and insurability, I was talking about how consumers choose between insurers.
The fact that you think security is a non-quantifiable service is absurd. There are tons of crime statistics in existence that utterly demonstrate quanitifiability. Secondly, to say that only a monopoly that overproduces or underproduces security can effectively deliver this service is similarly absurd for reasons that shouldn't need to be explained to a supposed libertarian.
So you're saying that if police was privatized, they would have more incentive to solve as much crime as possible? Gotcha.
Obviously your example relies on bad performance metrics, no accountability, and vast amounts of convoluted and nonsensical laws. Sounds familiar..
Government run police forces across the nation get to keep the spoils of war already when they write tickets or confiscate property when foul play is suspected. They don't even have to build a case and convict you in some cases (civil forfeiture.)
I'm not necessarily in favor of privatized police, but your argument is demonstrably exactly the same, or slightly worse when examining the power dynamics, against publicly funded police.
No it's based on market based incentives. When security producers compete for their clients' money, they must meet demand. Consumers would demand protection and indemnity companies would have their own incentives to catch and punish criminals in order to mitigate their own payouts.
You need to read a lot more, not just on anarcho-capitalism but on basic economics. A firm that must satisfactorily deliver products to consumers behaves entirely differently from a 'firm' that forcibly takes consumer's money whether they meet demand or not. Different incentives breeds different behavior. Monopolies time and time again have been proven to raise prices while diminishing quality at the same time. This is no different for the services monopolized by government.
Of course you do. You can't be bothered to think through problems rationally when you can just support a monopoly to provide such services at the point of a gun.
Sometimes a monopoly is the only viable solution. I can only imagine the back-woods ass-pain involved in having thousands of individual companies involved in interstate roads and law enforcement while trying to drive across the country. This mile belongs to this guy, that five miles belongs to these guys, this back-woods gang of cops has this set of laws, that gang of cops has a different set of laws; it's utterly fucking stupid to think that this would somehow improve anything.
I can only imagine the back-woods ass-pain ...
I'm glad my liberty could be sacrificed at the altar of your convenience.
Exactly what "liberty" have you personally "sacrificed" for me?
Exactly what "liberty" have you personally "sacrificed" for me?
Nobody's granted me a tax holiday, a reprieve from economic regulation, or an exemption to the bullshit criminal laws, so I'm gonna say quite a bit.
I've yet to see any instance where a monopoly is the only viable option except in cases of hyperscarce resources like natural diamond's etc. Again, your own shortsighted idea of convenience does not confer the right to expropriate property from others. And what business do safety officers of these roads have to be enforcing drug laws and everything else the state decrees?
Never heard of a speed trap? Different law enforcement agencies have already carved up sections of public roads as their fiefdoms. What I find utterly fucking stupid is the proposition that a transportation network should be centrally planned and financed through coercion as if that were the best way to meet consumer demand. This is another thing that shouldn't have to be explained to a libertarian. But I can see how a 'libertarian' with absolutely no insight to principles or libertarian philosophy might arrive at your conclusions.
"I can only imagine the back-woods ass-pain involved in having thousands of individual companies involved in interstate roads"
Uh, they already are.
Government doesn't build the roads. They hire the thousands of contractors who do. They also theoretically oversee them and ensure adherence to a set of rules that would make your head spin.
Ask me how I know?
Abolishing income tax certainly is possible. In fact, abolishing all federal taxes is possible too, by having federal the federal budget paid for by the states. That would greatly change the power structure in the US for the better, since the states wouldn't be looking for federal handouts, but the federal government would be looking for handouts from the states.
The burden of collection would simply pass from the feds to the states. The solution is to reduce taxpayer-funded programs to the minimum required for the state to function as a state. Interstate highways, the judiciary, and defense. You might ask "Why interstate highways?". Because without federal control of the interstates, individual states could control interstate commerce, and they're necessary for national defense.
Because without federal control of the interstates, individual states could control interstate commerce
By doing what? The courts have already held that the states cannot restrict movement across state lines and cannot target out-of-state drivers for extra scrutiny.
and they're necessary for national defense.
Pretty sure we won WW2 without federally administered interstate highways.
If you or I, or any other individual has no right to seize property of others, how exactly can anyone delegate this right to the state? You can't give something you don't have.
black culture is the problem
What specifically within the black culture is the problem and how do you address it?
I should read down.
Also what do you think are the major problems in the black community?
How about vastly disproportionally higher crime rates (murder, rape, robbery, pretty much everything but DUI), vastly disproportionate rates of school drop-outs, vastly disproportionate rates of single parent families, a lack of positive role models (unless you consider Flavor Flav and Michael Vick to be positive role models), an entitlement mentality, and a tendency to blame everyone but themselves for these problems.
City police forces are well staffed and well funded. City schools, too. Welfare flows freely in the inner cities. And city regulators are so effective at their jobs that they brag about how many dozens of businesses they shut down every week.
Maybe it's time to start addressing causes instead of symptoms.
Yea, but the "cause" is that the people who manage the city were elected to office by the people who live in the city. Whether it's on a local scale or a national one, the problem stems from an ignorant, easily manipulated populace that continues to vote for people who enact these policies.
I'm not sold on "democracy uber alles". Moochers are electing "politicians" to steal from the productive. That's not the fault of the productive, and it's unsurprising that the balance between the moochers and the productive shifts to favor the latter.
I also don't believe inner city elections are even remotely honest. Nobody outside the city cares, and those inside the city who do care are the ones being intentionally marginalized. The state and federal governments collect taxes from and impose rules on the city's residents, do they not share in some responsibility?
s/latter/former/
Guess who voted for the state and federal governments?
The same sort of assholes?
Did you have a point here, other than "democracy sucks"?
Because I already knew that and said as much.
It has nothing to do with "democracy sucks", especially since we don't live in a democracy. It has everything to do with people. You all want to blame government, politicians, and everyone but yourselves, but it is you, WE to be exact, that voted for the people who impose the rules and laws and regulations that affect us all. WE DID THIS TO OURSELVES by letting any uninformed idiot vote in a country full of uninformed idiots. WE sent our kids to public schools, and instead of teaching our kids values and critical thinking ourselves, we relied on the government to do it. WE call the police when our neighbor plays loud music, because we can't be bothered to ask them to turn it down ourselves. WE expect the government to provide us with safety and security, and then we bitch when it costs money, and they arrest people for committing the very same crimes we voted into existence. WE don't want to drive 3000 miles across country on a Hodge-podge of disconnected dirt roads and a thousand toll booths, and then bitch when we have to pay to build and maintain an Interstate highway system.
We expect to be able to walk from point "A" to point "B" without having to go armed every minute of the day, and not get raped, mugged or murdered. WE vote for people who are "tough on crime", or have the highest conviction rate, or dole out money to those who didn't earn it, precisely because we don't want to deal with the problems of society ourselves.
The solution isn't not to deal with the problems, the solution is to deal with the problems intelligently, and that's damn near impossible when any fucking imbecile can vote for his or her favorite imbecile.
The solution isn't not to deal with the problems, the solution is to deal with the problems intelligently, and that's damn near impossible when any fucking imbecile can vote for his or her favorite imbecile.
So why don't you just argue that the best solution is to restrict the franchise, instead of shitting all over every other idea?
"The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money."
"When the taste for physical gratifications among them has grown more rapidly than their education . . . the time will come when men are carried away and lose all self-restraint . . . . It is not necessary to do violence to such a people in order to strip them of the rights they enjoy; they themselves willingly loosen their hold. . . . they neglect their chief business which is to remain their own masters."
? Alexis de Tocqueville
I believe many of the crime problems stem from unemployment. Young men with nothing to do tend to get in trouble and act violently. I'm not saying removing taxes is a panacea, but that increasing wealth and employment will make a huge impact. People tend not to commit crimes when they are at work. They also take care of homes and neighborhoods they pay for. The single motherhood problem is a symptom of the welfare state making it profitable to be unproductive. I'm skeptical there is anything unique to black people that makes them prone to poverty. The US government has done plenty to make African Americans dependent on government. I think part of the solution is the stop the incentives against productivity and increase incentives in self sufficiency.
"Young men with nothing to do tend to get in trouble and act violently."
While true, blacks aren't the only people who suffer from unemployment, and yet they are much more likely to "get in trouble and act violently" than others facing the same hardships.
The problem has nothing to do with race, and everything to do with culture. If you RAISE YOUR KIDS in an environment where their peers consider getting education to be "acting white", where their peers emulate the "gangster" lifestyle, and where there are no fathers to set a positive example, you get what you've earned. And while government policies have enabled the demise of the black family, nobody ever forced any black man NOT to take responsibility for his children.
If incentives don't matter, then surely we can stop manipulating them?
Oh, don't get me wrong. I'm all for cutting off ALL welfare, except to those who are physically and mentally handicapped to the point of immobility or incoherent babbling, and have no family to care for them. I've worked for the last 40+ years, only to have almost half of what I earn taken from me. I pay enough in taxes every year to buy a small aircraft, and it fucking pisses me off to see some lazy fuck living off my labor.
it fucking pisses me off to see some lazy fuck living off my labor
Yet you would sooner punish him than see some change in the system that made it possible in the first place.
How is not giving my money to someone who didn't earn it "punishment"?
It is not. But you have completely shifted the goalposts from "lower/eliminate taxes" to I don't even fucking know what anymore.
Not at all. I'm 100% for lowering taxes. I'm also 100% for EVERYONE paying taxes, regardless of income. If you don't have skin in the game, you shouldn't be able to vote.
How much taxes do you imagine that someone on welfare pays?
But since those eligibilities are not race-based, something else produces the disparity.
But since those eligibilities are not race-based
Many of them are, actually.
There is no doubt that the attitudes of many black leaders play a part in shaping the cultural attitudes of black people.
But it is largely the government that amplifies their voices through policies that discourage employment and ownership.
"Black culture" has no agency of its own. People bear responsibility, and it is bullshit to isolate only one person in a situation involving many people and assign all the blame to him.
"But it is largely the government that amplifies their voices through policies that discourage employment and ownership."
Bullshit. If you look at crime statistics from across the globe, one thing becomes clear: Regardless of government polices, minority or majority, blacks have a disproportionally higher crime rate than other cultures. EVERYWHERE. There's only two possible explanations: It's either inherent in their race, or it's inherent in their culture. Genetics is inescapable, and as evidenced by the fact that many blacks have become successful, law-abiding citizens, that leaves culture. Nobody forces blacks to accept handouts, nobody forces black fathers to abandon their children, and NOBODY forces blacks to blame everyone but themselves for their faults. You can't fix a problem if you refuse to acknowledge it exists.
If individual responsibility is perfectly deterministic of individual outcomes, then why do we need collective institutions?
The two things (individual outcomes and collective institutions) are totally unrelated and independent of each other.
As far as "collective institutions" go, some things simply cannot operate as a "for profit" business. Law enforcement is one of those things. The military is another.
As far as "collective institutions" go, some things simply cannot operate as a "for profit" business. Law enforcement is one of those things. The military is another.
Anybody with a monopoly on force is operating a "for profit" business. They collect money at the end of a gun and then pay themselves with the proceeds. It's pretty crude and strains some of the more strict economic definitions of "profit" but I'm pretty sure "pillage and plunder" is not one of the typical categories of nonprofit.
The two things (individual outcomes and collective institutions) are totally unrelated and independent of each other.
Also, WTF? If a collective institution can do nothing for me, then why the fuck would I want to be a part of it?
Sorry. You really are a true believer.
Government is special in your world.
Are private security guards any less effective than local police in performing their similar duties?
I'm not backing Anon E. Mouse on every one of his arguments in this thread, but you misunderstand his argument. It's possible to say, "black culture is the problem" without stating or implying that it's a problem "unique to blacks."
For example, if you look at American history, the Irish were once reviled for having the exact same social problems as modern American blacks. (Thomas Sowell has researched and written extensively on this.) This is a familiar pattern to anyone who looks at the development of different social groups, worldwide & throughout history.
Blows my mind how we can talk so much about the important of personal responsibility but then absolve American blacks of responsibility for their behavior. That isn't helping them.
I'm not "absolv[ing] American blacks of responsibility for their behavior". I have not once defended or excused licentiousness or criminality.
People of all skin colors are rational actors, and that simply means that they respond to incentives and act in their interest.
To a young man in the inner city, slinging dope is less of a hassle than starting and keeping a business. The permits will take you years to obtain, you face constant threat of "inspection", you will be taxed out the ass regardless of how it impacts your business, and the cops will turn a blind eye to theft of your property and the demands of gangsters for "protection" money.
To a young woman in the inner city, it's easier to get knocked up half a dozen or so times and collect the welfare checks than to get a job. The minimum wage makes job competition fierce, rent control and Section 8 drive out affordable housing, and welfare itself is heavily structured to favor single motherhood and continued dependence.
This is the price of good intentions enforced at the end of a gun.
If you want to lay the blame solely at a man's feet for the entire circumstances of his existence, then you damn well better take your boot off his neck first.
You believe a lot of things. Your beliefs don't necessarily reflect the human condition.
It seems to me that the majority of blacks don't pay income taxes anyway. About 50% of taxpayers do not pay income taxes. I'm sure the majority of blacks fall into that category.
And if in 10 years, poverty and unemployment didn't drop...?
"Jason" Riley? Or "Tom" Riley?
-HuffPo's next feature article.
Oh there was a lot of "Tom" in there.
But overall, I really liked this piece and agreed with a lot of it.
I disagree with the following:
1. Having BOTH voucher programs and public schools. I'm completely OK with eliminating the Board of Education and Public Schools, establishing a common and minimum core program standards at the national level, and allowing the free market to establish schools.
However, the current School District concept was developed to "keep the riff-raff" out of "our community". those that "can't afford" to live here won't mingle with our kids. It will be an uphill battle especially in White Suburbs.
2. I am for a living wage. But I'm open for an experiment with the elimination of the minimum wage in one or two states and let's see how it looks.
I'm for a "living wage" too, but then again, people can "live" in a tent eating MREs.
The planning commission, zoning board, health department, and vagrancy police beg to differ.
If we can make tent-city jails, we can make tent-city housing for those expecting someone else to support them.
Fuck off, slaver.
How exactly does wanting people to support themselves make me a "slaver" again?
Do you not understand the difference between allowing someone to do what is best for himself and forcing him to do what you think is best for him?
Letting someone build a tent for himself is not the same as building a tent city and throwing him in it.
Here's the deal: There are people in the world that will spend their lives "gaming the system", especially when gaming the system provides them with a comfortable life free of responsibility and productivity. There are families that have been on government assistance for generations, and they wear those government handouts like a badge of honor. There are families where everyone has some sort of disability or problem that keeps them from working, but miraculously doesn't keep them from partying and drinking. If you can lift a beer or drive a car, you can work. Ignorance and sloth should be uncomfortable, if not downright painful, otherwise there is no incentive to get off the government cheese. You throw someone in a section-8 house with a steady supply of food, electricity, and water, and where exactly is the incentive to give that up? There isn't any. You throw someone in tent city and give them MRE's to eat, and THERE'S some incentive to improve one's lot in live. You're still supporting them, just not so lavishly.
You're about as likely to get your tent city fantasy as to abolish welfare altogether, and you're going to have a riot either way, so why not fight for the option that doesn't involve essentially creating concentration camps?
Like you. You want other people to be forced at gun point to pay for your road usage, security and whatever else you strenuously justify. You can join them in the tents.
Nobody supports me. I pay federal income taxes, state income taxes, sales taxes, road taxes, gas taxes, property taxes, and a dozen other taxes, licenses, and fees. I simply expect to get something in return for my money, and I expect everyone else to share the same financial burden. You want to lower taxes, that's great...I'm all for it. I can think of about a dozen programs off the top of my head that we can do without. You want to eliminate taxes? It's a pipe-dream, and it's never going to happen in an organized society. ANARCHY. NEVER. WORKS. Not at any time, and not at any place. It ignores human nature. Someone ALWAYS comes along, appeals to basic instinct, takes charge, and organizes people into groups. The end result is always government in one form or another. Government always need money to operate. The most you can do is minimize and control it.
I simply expect to get something in return for my money
Wait, are unrealistic ideas of the way government works good or bad? I'm unclear on that point.
The most you can do is minimize and control it.
Then why are you arguing about doing just that?
You were not the buyer of the roads, you and a hundred millionish other people paid for those roads at gun point. The subsidized products you buy, the monopoly services you are forced to subscribe are all paid by others. If it really were a matter of you paying for your own usage as you claim, they wouldn't put a gun to anyone's head to pay for these things.
Well that's a lovely expectation you have of other people's wealth.
It already happened in many times and places. To say a society cannot be ordered without coercive theft is completely disproven by reality in addition to falling flat on it's face theoretically.
Really? The Icelandic commonwealth period stands in contrast as do the other medieval European polities based on contractual relationships.
Oh you can minimize and control the state huh? There has never been a state that didn't centralize and consolidate it's power beyond it's supposed limitations. You are the one ignoring human nature when you propose an institution with a monopoly right to expropriate and enslave, as such institutions inevitably attract a certain kind of pathological personality. If humans are too immoral or unfit to govern themselves voluntarily, what makes you think they're fit to be handed a monopoly right to protect life, liberty and property of other people?
The people who say that anarchy never works believe that, because no anarchy has ever survived, it's an impossible scenario.
Point out that no kingdom, empire, or republic has ever or will ever survive indefinitely and get ready for a deluge of outrage. The funny thing is that ancaps more than anyone recognize that there is no end of history or stable form of society.
Just as markets evolve and change through roundabout production and cultural shifts, states and anarchic communities must necessarily evolve as well.
Nycl,
This statement implies that federal regulators know more about education than state regulators. If you want a free market in education you have to allow all methods of education and the market will determine which ones survive. Also welcome. I don't think I have seen you post before.
I know.
We can only wish for a Blue Ribbon Panel and not just the current crony.
Top. Men.
That sounds Gay.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoy4_h7Pb3M
Somewhat OT:
I've seen the "Top men" reference all over the Reason comments. And, I absolutely love it!
Those two little words say so much about the mismatch between expectations and reality.
I use them on "true believers" almost daily. But sadly, it generally goes right over their heads.
But, what did I expect? They are products of a few generations of U.S. society run by "top men". ;-(
I don't believe we need any panel. If some socon fundie wants to send his kid to snake handing school that should be his right. If an atheists wants to send her child to a secular humanist academy that should be her right. However I think most parents will evaluate what kind of school is most successful in preparing the students for real life and make that decision weighing cost and lifestyle choices. There is no one right choice, so there should be no one size fits all model.
You can have all of those schools. And, me as a Liberal am ok with eliminating public schools and going with 100% private schools paid for buy the tax payer.
But there should be a minimum reading/writing/technology/civics standard for each grade, in my opinion.
100% private schools paid for buy the tax payer
How can you call something a private market when it is a government monopsony?
The schools are privately owned/operated but regulated for minimum standards.
As far as being paid for by the tax payer, isn't that what the voucher system is?
The schools are privately owned/operated but regulated for minimum standards.
In other words, they are government enterprises in all but name.
Don't like the rules set by the government? Why, the government will just confiscate your property! Resist, and you go to jail!
It's like communism, except useful idiots like you get to pretend it's not.
The voucher system is not a private system. But a little bit of choice is still better than no choice.
The problem with having the tax payer instead of the parent pay for school is you disconnect the consumer from pricing signals. This is the same problem with healthcare. Education will become unnecessarily expensive and ineffective because the school doesn't answer to the consumer. Everyone responds to incentives.
But when you say you support vouchers, isn't that tax payer money?
I am suggesting an open enrollment with a 100% privately owned schools lightly regulated for education standards and safety.
I saw many years ago the Milton Freedman video on this. He suggested using tax payer money to pay for private schools and close down government operated schools. Am I incorrect?
I don't support mandatory education or vouchers in principle. I do think any school choice is better than none.
99.9% of your liberal friends are not OK with ending public schools
If government schools closed down, how would they brainwash our kids?
I think government deciding what people need to know is one of the major problems with the current school system: too many skills that are being taught are irrelevant and boring kids out of their minds; and some of the curriculum is intended to indoctrinate.
What's wrong with giving all parents school vouchers and letting them decide what kind of curriculum their kids follow?
"However I think most parents will evaluate what kind of school is most successful in preparing the students for real life and make that decision weighing cost and lifestyle choices."
They already are. Have you not seen the correlation between school ratings and housing prices within the district? Have you not noted the insane, over-the-top competition amongst well meaning but out of their mind parents to pay $1M for a crap shack in SF Peninsula towns within the "10 rated" school districts rather than buy a much nicer home where the school district rating merits a mere 9?
Maybe I'm just biased because I live in the SF Bay Area and am a real estate investor here. But, I'll tell you, the obsession with school scores - down to grade school level - is insanely important to many. Particularly with the influx of Asians into the tech jobs.
I've never seen people as obsessed with "the right school" as I have in this diaspora. They make Lake Wobegon seem tame by comparison. They are sure they children will be more than above average.
The offhandedness with which you throw around the racist trope that Riley belongs to the Dem party and is a traitor for daring to disagree with them pretty much tells me all I need to know about you.
How do you determine a living wage on a national level? A living wage in Alabama or Mississippi would not be a living wage in NY or LA.
A national standard for education levels is a violation of States Rights as well as an ignorant idea. Have you looked at "common core"? It's mostly political propaganda and pure BS.
Education is best managed at the local level. I don't need a lecture from a NY Liberal.
Why is it that whenever a black person speaks outside of what is accepted in the mainstream as black, liberal attitudes, the "Uncle Tom" remark is made?
Are people of any color forced to think alike and, if they step outside of that are they traitors to their color?
That is true racism in book. It presumes that each race must fit within a narrow range of thought....lest you be called an Uncle Tom.
Quick, someone discredit this guy before his message gets out. He is dangerous.
Riley is weak on the question of the fatherless family, rambling on about past leaders and so on. Fact is our society incentivizes men to split and leave their wives and children dangling. Abandoning one's family is the sensible thing to do from an economic point of view, and nothing Riley says, none of the reforms he suggests will change that fact.
Fact is our society incentivizes men to split and leave their wives and children dangling.
How so?
Depends on your economic situation and whether you are w-2 employed or own a business.
If you are w-2, "it is cheaper to keep her".
However, if you run a business and do what typical business people do and misrepresent what you make, child support payments are much much less.
Also, in the past, when a black fellow left the pregnant g-friend, she would get section 8, medicaid, welfare, food stamps with no consequence to the black fellow. SO yes, for him, it's best to leave.
And, for the blacks that are involved in narcotics, street crime, off the books work, etc., it's definitely cheaper to be on one's own.
However, if you run a business and do what typical business people do and misrepresent what you make...
You're so casually full of shit, it's amazing.
Hey, at least with a name like NYC Liberal, he's got that "truth in advertising" thing down.
If you're in biz for yourself, no investors to report to, if you're reporting your income fully you're a sucker.
Exactly. Thank you. I was in business for myself for over 20years. Clearly Brandon has never filled out form 1120.
Or maybe just honest and ethical. There's always that option.
Anon, don't confuse Robert with ideas like honesty and ethical behavior. You are confusing him.
Brandon, what do you expect from a self described NYC liberal? I doubt this fool has ever run a business in his life.
Take it from a former tax accountant. He's not.
Small business owners, sole proprietor or incorporated, are notoriously either not reporting income, or writing off many personal (non-business) expenses against their business income.
Frequently, they don't even realize they are doing this. In their minds, they can "write off my Mercedes because I use it in my business".
In other cases, they do so with full knowledge of the violation. Small restaurants frequently have twenty people working for them while only showing five employees on the payroll. Cash taken from the register each night to pay the wait staff is not only untaxed income to the worker, it's unreported income for the establishment.
I don't know if you ever read The Millionaire Next Door or the sequel, but one of the items detailed there was the way that business owners, who made up a large portion of the millionaires studied, paid a lower tax rate overall, than W-2 slaves, a la Buffet. What they failed IMHO to fully flesh out was, why. Because they are writing off a lot of their personal life against their business income that us working stiffs don't have the opportunity to do.
Nor do they mention that, writing off personal expenses like that against one's business income, is against the law.
In other words, one way or another, government-created incentives are responsible for encouraging people to make "bad" decisions.
So why don't "we" stop doing that?
Because "we" are a nation of idiots where a coherent debate turns into "Fuck off, slaver" at the first suggestion of an opposing idea.
You can't envision a solution that doesn't involve top men dictating to the rest of us how to lead our lives. You might differ in substance from the progressives, but not in character.
I'm no more interested in being enslaved to your order than theirs.
Exactly.
"How so?"
Typically, a father spends a good deal of his income on the upkeep of his children. The father who abandons his children can spend this money on himself.
The family court does not agree.
Neither do you or Riley, apparently. Who does agree with me? The countless thousands who have weighed the costs and the benefits and decided to fly the coop.
The countless thousands who have weighed the costs and the benefits and decided to fly the coop.
Yet still pay child support. You have failed to identify how that creates an incentive to "fly the coop". Saying that people leave their families is not the same as saying that society made them do it.
I'm assuming that 'society' sets up the incentives and disincentives, and that people act rationally according to their own interests.
I asked you to state how that happens, and all you've done is restate the very thing that I asked you to explain.
"I asked you to state how that happens, and all you've done is restate the very thing that I asked you to explain."
Explain the thought processes that led to the decisions of thousands to abandon their families? Can't help you there. I suggest you find someone whose abandoned his kids and ask them how it happened. Good luck and report back if you uncover anything interesting.
Ah, I forgot, it's the mtrueman game, where the only winning move is not to play.
You asked me a question, I said I had no idea of how to answer, and suggested a way for you to find your own answer to your own question.
As I said earlier, it depends if you work on the books or not. Family court goes by tax returns.
Black deadbeat dads in the inner city many times sell drugs or work in the shadow economy.
Then the real incentive at play is what is driving people to work outside of the "legitimate" economy, no?
I had a skilled workman who wouldn't accept a job from me because I couldn't pay him off the books. He chose to work less hours than he could have, and for less than he was worth, to avoid paying child support.
If their reported income is "zero", how much child support would the court order them to pay? The correct answer is "zero".
Did the IRS run out of auditors?
If all of your transactions are cash, and you don't file a 1040, what is there to audit?
Tell that to Capone.
Keep your cash under the mattress if you're going to play this game.
But Capone was also instructive. They were only able to get him because they wanted him bad.
Most tax evaders are off the Fed's radar screen and thus, not subject to special scrutiny like Capone was.
Sorry, the IRS is too busy going after the TEA Party and wiping their hard drives.
Their auditors are awful at what they do. They really aren't that hard to fool. They couldn't cut it as private sector auditors.
That's trivially false. Traditional single-income marriages entail exclusive sexual privileges for men and financial security for women. Replace the wife's financial security with a state income and you introduce a massive incentive for divorce and a strong disincentive for marriage in the first place.
Nature incentivizes men to split and leave their spouses dangling when they have superior sexual options, which is why society has always and continues to heap opprobrium on that behavior, while the state reams both never-married and divorced fathers for hitting it and quitting it (or being quit on in part due to financial incentives, in many cases). Brute nature rewards promiscuous sex on the part of men, but it's society and the state that create incentives for them to stay monogamous.
"and the state that create incentives for them to stay monogamous."
I don't know where you get that. In some cases, sure, but the divorce rate has skyrocketed over the past 50 years or so. You attribute this to changes in Nature?
The truth is males are driven biologically to both spread their DNA AND to eventually settle down to raise children in a pair-bonded relationship. Society plays a crucial role in encouraging more of the latter behavior than the former, but it is not exclusively responsible for pair-bonding behavior. If it were, humans would not have evolved to be the way they are, with pregnant females requiring male protection for survival. Remember, we were procreating long before we were capable of abstract thought.
I'm making an economic argument: men have greater incentive to cheat on or abandon their spouses than women do. You could reformulate it as behavioral with reinforcements and punishments if you like, and it would remain true.
Women bear and breastfeed children, which tends to make their biological costs for childbearing high, while men do not incur those costs. It's equally true that men have always been and continue to be the primary earners in the west and every other culture we've encountered, which means that a parting of the ways between husband and wife is much more likely to leave the wife in the poorhouse than the husband.
And thus social opprobrium, shunning, or an aggressive court system is intended as a counterbalance to those biological or fundamental social forces.
Parting of the ways usually leaves both partners poor.
You can't split a single household into two and not incur higher total costs. There is economic and survival efficiency in a single family household.
Besides, for all the diatribe about women being left "poor" post divorce, there is a mis-focus on the division of assets. The truth is, it is the division of debts that kills most divorcing couples. Ask any divorce attorney.
They'll fight all day long over who gets the couch. But they avoid addressing who takes the $25,000 in credit card debts post divorce.
And, there is no limit on attorney's fees in a divorce like there is on those same fees in most states on probate. And yet, getting divorced involves the same estate determination and distribution as probate does.
There is a reason that the attorney's profit from divorce while the litigants often end up much poorer.
?ber-FAIL.
"Brute nature rewards promiscuous sex on the part of men, but it's society and the state that create incentives for them to stay monogamous."
Wrong. A woman's public assistant income is generally *contingent* on not sharing the household with a cohabitating adult male, whether married or living in "sin".
The incentives are *against* monogamy.
"Traditional single-income marriages entail exclusive sexual privileges for men and financial security for women."
You aren't married, are you? 😉
I don't think the problem is with the men. They're on the hook for child support anyway. I think it's the women that are being incentivized: they get child support from the father, plus government support, and don't have to make any commitments or compromises. As long as the man is fun to have around, they keep him, and when they tire of him, they just kick him out and still get all the economic benefits.
Clearly a racist!
my neighbor's step-aunt makes $74 /hour on the internet . She has been out of a job for seven months but last month her check was $12917 just working on the internet for a few hours.
find more information========== http://www.jobsfish.com
"Black Americans Failed by Good Intentions"
This is why the Progressive Theocracy wins. Those who oppose it, don't get it.
The intent to rule your neighbors through violence and threats of violence is NOT a *good* intention.
The intent to rule your neighbors through violence and threats of violence is NOT a *good* intention.
Exactly.
Which is why the premise that government post-1965 civil rights programs were "well intentioned" is wrong. The intention from Day One was to expand the power of the state, and to redistribute wealth. Read the Kerner Commission's report, this is what the federal government was promoting, using "civil rights" as the front.
my best friend's mother-in-law makes $82 /hr on the laptop . She has been out of work for ten months but last month her pay check was $15454 just working on the laptop for a few hours. visit this page....
============ http://www.netjob70.com
Dude who comes up with all that stuff?
http://www.Crypt-Tools.tk
my co-worker's mother makes $74 an hour on the computer . She has been out of a job for 6 months but last month her payment was $17073 just working on the computer for a few hours. visit the site.....
================ http://www.netjob70.com
my neighbor's half-sister makes $65 hourly on the computer . She has been fired for five months but last month her pay was $13918 just working on the computer for a few hours. you could try this out........
================ http://www.netjob70.com
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