WHAT IS CHARITY?
WHAT IS COMPASSION?
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
© May 2012, L.D. Wilson
Consultants, Inc.
All information in this article is for educational
purposes only. It is not for the
diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.
Many
people feel that welfare programs are the mark of an advanced civilization - a
"kinder and gentler" nation. However, one must remember there are two
types of welfare - private welfare and government welfare. They are very different with entirely
different consequences. Let us
examine the differences.
CHARITY MUST BE VOLUNTARY
The donors. Let us examine the consequences of public versus private
charity. One principle is that
charity must be voluntary. Private charity is voluntary. Government welfare programs are not
voluntary.
If
one pays taxes for social programs under the threat of a jail sentence for tax
evasion, it is hardly charity. It
is coercion! When one is forced to contribute, the entire spirit
of charity is ruined. No longer is
charity an expression of caring and compassion for others. It is a forced morality that isn't
moral at all. It takes on a
viciousness - "Contribute (pay your taxes), or go to jail".
This
occurs because the donor has no control over how much and when money is
given. This is harmful as a sense
of control is a beneficial quality in society. Anger results in less
altruism, instead of encouraging sharing.
High taxes also leave the people with less money for private
giving.
There
are other consequences. Voluntary
private charity helps the donor to learn sharing and generosity. Government programs in which money is
collected by force breed anger and resentment.
With
government welfare type of ÒcharityÓ, the donorÕs attitude becomes Òleave me alone, I already gave in
paying my taxesÓ. Also, and even
more damaging, if one is faced with the choice of paying a high percentage of
one's income to the government or not working as hard, many people choose the
latter. This results in less money
available for charity and less productivity in the entire society. This is an important negative
consequence of high tax rates.
The Recipients. There are also consequences for the
recipients of private and government welfare. Recipients of private welfare are not treated as though they
are entitled to help. They know
they receive it due to the goodness of the donors.
In
contrast, recipients of government welfare become spoiled and regard it as a
'right'. Many have become used to
handouts. Their desire to work
hard is diminished. They may also
sense that help isn't coming from the heart, but rather from compulsion.
'Free'
health care (of course it is not free - some hard-working person is forced to
pay for it) or any 'free' benefits cause most people to care less about what
they receive. After all, they
don't have to pay for it. This
creates laziness and dependence, the exact opposite of responsible
behavior.
Consequences for the charities. These are different as well. With private welfare, if the charity is
found to be wasting money, committing fraud or otherwise acting unprofessionally,
donors learning this will withdraw their support and the charity will go out of
business. This is a powerful
incentive for them to maintain their integrity.
Government
welfare programs, however, have no such constraints. Fraud is rampant, for example, in Medicare, Medicaid and
most government welfare programs!
Waste
also becomes a terrible problem in government programs, and could be called a
type of fraud. For example, it is
known that administrative costs in government welfare programs are at least
twice that of the administrative costs of private welfare agencies. Private agencies often publish their
costs, while government programs rarely are forced to do so.
The
only way to get a government program to stop or go out of business is usually
an act of Congress, which requires a lot of political clout. As a result, government welfare
agencies waste much more than private charities in administration and every
other type of costs.
CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT AND RESPONSIBILITY
Character
development requires taking more responsibility for every area
of our lives. Private welfare
encourages responsibility on the part of the donor, the charity and the
recipients.
Government
welfare takes responsibility away from individuals and private groups,
transferring it to a bureaucracy.
This tends to hinder personal development. America was established to allow maximum liberty of
the people, which requires maximum responsibility.
Some
people are born richer, smarter, healthier, more beautiful and so forth. The social welfare advocates understand
this. But in attempting to change
reality, they impose a new kind of unfairness of their own making that is far
more devastating.
Many
self-made people endorse forcing others to support questionable welfare
schemes. If these individuals want
to give away their own funds, that is fine. But to impose their idea of Ôforced charityÕ on others is
just a new kind of unfairness and tyranny. The only difference is it is their design, not the Creators.
HIDDEN MOTIVES
Often
the advocates of government welfare and socialist programs have a hidden motive
- to create dependency rather than to really help and free people.
I
call it "The Overprotective Syndrome". It is analogous to parents who overprotect their
children. Overprotection weakens
the children and makes them less able to care for themselves. The childrens' dependence secretly
increases the parents' power and control.
Samuel
Gompers, a famous American labor leader, stated this principle very well:
"Doing
for people what they can and ought to do for themselves is a dangerous
experiment. The welfare of the
workers depends on their own initiative.
Whatever is done under the guise of social morality that in any way lessens
initiative is the greatest crime that can be committed against workers. Let social busybodies and professional
'public moral experts' reflect upon the perils they rashly invite under this
pretense of social welfare."
Booker
T. Washington was a famous black educator and writer who founded Tuskeegee
University. He taught black people
(and everyone else who listened) to be responsible, excel at your job, and you
will gain the respect of good people of all colors and races. You may not gain the respect of bigoted
people, but you will never gain their respect, anyway.
Today,
Booker Washington is pushed aside in favor of modern ÒleadersÓ who downplay the
importance of self-development and taking full responsibility. Instead, leaders increase racial
tension by advocating special privileges, special rights and more welfare for
their constituents.
Modern
black leaders ask, for example, for Civil War reparations from people who
werenÕt even alive during slavery, instead of teaching their constituents to be
self-sufficient. This is the
handout mentality that has been developed in America due to public welfare
schemes. It is the rule in Europe
as well and much of the developed world today, sadly.
RETURNING TO PRIVATE WELFARE
Asking
for and receiving help from others is often beneficial for both giver and
receiver in mysterious ways. The
process of freely giving and receiving, however, is spiritually worlds apart
from government welfare that confiscates money at gunpoint from the population
to give to those the bureaucracy decides deserve it.
Those in favor of more government
welfare ask, "Are you willing to allow people to starve in the
streets?" The answer is, of
course not. But there is another
way. It is the way that was in
place in America and elsewhere before the rise of the government welfare
system.
The
alternative is private charity and private welfare societies, a concept that is
as old as civilization. It is
superior to government welfare programs in many ways. Private charity allows the donor to control how much and to
whom he donates - a critical principle to help control misuse of funds.
Most
importantly, private charity is voluntary. It comes from the heart. It encourages an attitude of altruism by appealing to one's
compassion, not fear of arrest.
And it does not produce the 'side effect' of anger and resentment, as
does forced taxation.
The
recipients of private charity also have a different understanding. The gift is not a 'right', but simply a
little help along the way. Private
charity runs much less risk of robbing people of the incentive to succeed on
their own. As a result, recipients
are less likely to become dependent and lazy. The administration of private charity is far more efficient
because less bureaucracy is involved and the administrators are directly
accountable for their actions.
Some
say our problems are so huge - the homeless, the poor, the sick - that private
charity can no longer handle it. I
do not believe this for an instant.
Along
with privatizing welfare, underlying causes of social problems have to
addressed. For example, government
mortgage and bank guarantees, and tax exemptions for home mortgage interest
have helped push home prices beyond the reach of the common man. Medicare, Medicaid and a
government-enforced allopathic medical monopoly contribute to the health care
cost crisis. These flawed ideas
have to be changed, or we will forever need to apply band-aid solutions.
CONCLUSION
Some
will violently disagree with all that is written here. Please consider
carefully the question of how best to encourage others to take responsibility
and become self-supporting members of society. Helping others requires more than throwing money at the
problem. And when that money is
obtained 'Robin Hood style', it creates more problems than it solves.
Tax-supported
'entitlement' programs have the appearance of charity, but it is only a
facade. This vicious and misguided
philanthropy confiscates wealth by force from hard-working taxpayers to a large
bureaucracy, and does not empower the recipients. Forced giving reduces altruism and breeds resentment,
dependence and laziness. Solutions
lie in setting personal examples, and realizing that charity must be voluntary.
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