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Financial columnist Barry Ritholtz authored a great tongue-in-cheek column in Friday’s Washington Post on how to ruin your financial life. If you faithfully adhere to his bizarro-world “guidelines” over your lifetime, you will likely die miserable and broke. The only “guideline” I have a problem with, though, is the one regarding our country’s safety net (i.e. government programs to help the unfortunate). Here it is.

Safety net? I got mine, you go get yours [emphasis his]! Why are you suddenly your brother’s keeper? The elderly, the impoverished, the disadvantaged are someone else’s headaches, not yours.

Now remember. Mr. Ritholtz is giving bizarro-world advice. He is actually a big proponent of the safety net. And he, like many Americans, believes that any cutbacks to our current safety net (however small) will devastate millions of Americans.

I disagree.

First, what makes Mr. Ritholtz believe that a dollar given to our current safety net actually translates into a dollar’s worth of help for a needy American? Our government has sadly become a government of, by, and for the people who can hire lobbyists. (Poor people can’t hire lobbyists. Middle-class and rich people who advocate for the poor can.) With each passing year, the people who have lobbyists siphon off a greater percentage of the government’s tax receipts. That’s why every government program is becoming less and less effective. Surrendering more of your income to “protect” the safety net is a losing game.

Second, what makes Mr. Ritholtz believe that our current safety net is making us a better people? Prior to 1960 our safety net was much smaller. Defense spending was over 50 percent of the federal budget. Medicare and Medicaid didn’t exist. Yet Americans prior to 1960 were far more resourceful and self-reliant. Today, defense spending is 25 percent of the federal budget. Our current safety net is more comprehensive and more costly than ever. And, yet, Americans have never been more helpless and dependent on government than they are now. Apparently, the only people in this country who can feed, clothe, house, educate, and doctor themselves without the government’s help are the one-percenters.

Finally, third, what makes Mr. Ritholtz believe that the elite’s definition of a safety net is valid? To show what I mean by this, consider this example. The Republicans in Congress announce that we need to build ten new aircraft carriers to protect our interests. They also insist that anyone who disagrees with this build-up is “anti-defense”. But what if you think this is overkill? What if you think we can defend the American empire with the amount of aircraft carriers we have now? Do you have to accept the military-industrial complex’s definition of national defense? And if you don’t accept it, are you a limp-wristed commie bent on appeasing the march of Islamofascism?

The compassion-industrial complex, like the military-industrial complex, is not immune to self-interest or hubris. It’s definition of a safety net is not automatically valid. And people who question its definition of a safety net are not automatically heartless wretches who relish the suffering of others.

Mr. Ritholtz is far smarter than I. His financial advice is excellent. But he has, like a lot of Americans, a blind-spot for the threat posed by the compassion-industrial complex. And he, like a lot of Americans, is quick to heap scorn on anyone who dares to question its motives and effectiveness.

6 thoughts on “Beware the Compassion Industrial Complex

  1. Love it Mr. Groovy,

    it is frustrating the way so many people try to extrapolite groupthink talking point conclusions out of individual thoughts. Not everything is black and white, but it seems no matter the topic, somebody has some opinion about something where any other option is just absolutely wrong.

    1. Agreed. Not everything is black and white. And the amount of groupthink in our schools and press rooms is scary. But hopefully with the growth of distributed news (e.g., bloggers, YouTubers, etc.), will have less black and white and less groupthink. Thanks for stopping by, my friend. Cheers.

  2. Great points. It’s a sad state when you can actually agree with someone in principle but be labeled as ‘anti-X’ just because you don’t agree with how or how much to do it.

    1. Yes, it’s frustrating. People are too emotional. The compassion industrial complex has great PR. So if you question it, it’s like you’re kicking a puppy. Thanks, for stopping by. Your thoughts are always welcome.

    2. Ah, yes. This.
      So many politicians get skewered in sound bites saying they voted against puppies and rainbows when in reality they voted against the ridiculous rider on the puppy and rainbow bill.
      I love that our state has tax credits that allow you to give to the charity or school of your choice. I do understand that this takes money out of the general budget and leaves less in the pot for schools, police, etc. But government is so inefficient I’d rather donate directly to the school.

      1. Great point, Julie. Does any bill crafted by Congress pertain to just one thing? Every bill contains hundreds if not thousands of pages and is filled with reams of goodies for various constituents. So if any congressperson votes against a bill because it’s filled with too much bullsh*t, he or she is then labeled anti-whatever by the opposition. My opponent is anti-defense. My opponent is anti-education. My opponent is anti-business. It’s a freakin’ joke. And our vaunted press is an unindicted co-conspirator in this sham. Sigh.

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