In honor of the election season, Glamour magazine started a “Glamocracy” blog, with 5 regular bloggers from a range of positions on the political spectrum (including CBLPI speaker and writer Amanda Carpenter), as well as guest blogs by the candidates and voters in early primary states.
While I’m sure I’ll find time later to comment on the lack of meaningful political analysis, or the fact that conservative Amanda Carpenter has been getting a lot of negative feedback from the entitled liberal set, I’m short on blogging time today, and this little gem from Obama’s guest post jumped out at me (emphasis mine):
My wife, Michelle, radiates beauty, strength and integrity, and continues to make me a better person every day of our lives. Michelle has done an extraordinary job balancing her role as a mother with her responsibilities at work. But I know it’s not easy, and I also know that many other working moms are having an even harder time. That’s wrong. Women shouldn’t have to choose between their children and their careers in the United States of America. That’s why as president, I’ll make sure that employers provide their workers with seven paid sick days a year, and I’ll encourage all 50 states to offer paid leave.
Unsurprisingly, I take a somewhat different stance. In a free society, people are allowed to make choices about their lives. The corollary to this right is the sometimes unpleasant fact that people will be forced to make choices. Sure, it would be nice if no one ever had to make trade-offs. But that’s not how life works in a free society. Once you accept that it is the government’s responsibility to keep people from having to make trade-offs (like more time at work versus more time with children), it’s a very short step to government limiting the range of choices available.
What’s funny is that Obama’s proposal here, while moving down the path of greater government interference, is hardly extreme. So why does he use such extreme rhetoric?
As Thomas Sowell points out, Democrats (and unfortunately, an increasing number of Republicans) seek power through “Santa Claus politics”: the promise of something for nothing. Here, Obama is playing to an audience of Americans trained to believe that the government exists to make everybody’s lives easier and eliminate tough choices. He makes a run-of-the-mill life experience sound like a moral crisis: mothers having to choose between careers and children.
As with most rhetorically-created crisis situations, the answers are predictably big-government: mandates on sick leave and/or parental leave, optional flex-time, taxpayer-funded daycare (a perennial favorite of moral crusaders), or a larger refundable childcare tax deduction.
But these options tend to restrict rather than expand choice, especially the latter two. When government preferentially funds childcare, whether through tax deductions or public daycare, it reduces the ability of a family to choose to have a parent at home (increased tax burden=fewer options). And mandates on paid leave tend to hurt the competitiveness and productivity of a business, especially small businesses that lack the personnel and resources to provide flexible leave.
But what does that matter to big-government advocates? As long as you get to feel morally superior because of the goodies you hand out, who cares whether you’re hurting small businesses, or increasing the tax burden on families?
Side note: I do like the fact that Mr. Obama says he will “encourage all 50 states” to offer paid leave. It’s probably too much to hope that he has the disposition of a federalist, but at least he doesn’t jump right to “I will force everyone.”
January 9, 2008 at 5:57 am
Exactly. The irony of all this is that the country that has gone furthest down the route of nationalising childhood (Sweden) is now the one country where government and mothers are starting to have doubts about the whole feminist/socialist interpretation of the role of the state in family life:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/femail/article.html?in_article_id=495499&in_page_id=1879
I’d like to think other countries (not least Britain and America) learnt this obvious common sense lesson before going down exactly the same road the Swedes have travelled; but listening to the likes of Obama speak, my hopes aren’t high.
January 9, 2008 at 10:06 am
Unfortunately, I think it’s more likely that we’ll go charging off the cliff after them.
That’s an interesting article, especially when it compares the percentage women in top management posts in Sweden versus the United States. If gender equality in the workplace is the goal, but the means you chose don’t actually work, shouldn’t you reconsider it?
And more importantly (to me), shouldn’t the US and Britain avoid that path?
(BTW, did you use to write for the GSO?)
January 9, 2008 at 2:34 pm
Marianne, I did indeed write for the GSO; y’all had a good newspaper going on over there, and I couldn’t resist the thrill of seeing my own crackpot right-wing views in print. You know the feeling. Hows the year going? You still at CofC? Think Fred’s got a chance in hell of winning the GOP nomination?!
America and Britain should definitely avoid this path; but as you say there’s a certain dreary inevitability about it all.
January 9, 2008 at 7:32 pm
I thought I recognized the name. When you left, I was the only crack-pot right-winger left on those hallowed pages. Then I quit my editor job and the whole enterprise took a sharp left turn. I have one more semester, then I get to face the joy of the real world.
At this point, I think Fred missed his chance, but a girl can still hope. If Huckabee implodes (like I hope he will), Fred may be able to snatch some up. But at this point, it’s looking like 2008 may be a year for the Democrats (Thanks, President Bush. Thanks a lot).
Have you done any more opinion writing since you left?
January 10, 2008 at 3:27 pm
Unfortunately my opinion writing opportunities have been limited this year owing to irregular output by my home university newspaper and my own heavy workload. Still, we’ll see what the future holds; I’m not discounting journalism as a potential career choice as I enjoy writing.
If your ever in London, look me up at the British branch of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy. I’m sure you know the handshake.
January 10, 2008 at 4:32 pm
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