Principles to Live By

Common Good (New 1 Oct 2010)

Home
Definitions
Spiritual wisdom for the Class of 2020 (New 23 May 2020)
FBI: Hate crimes, anti-Semitic attacks up in 2017 (New 16 Nov 2018)
High CEO Pay Means Disappointing Stock Returns (New 1 Aug 2016)
Importance of Teaching Values (New 24 Mar 2016)
America's economy is a nightmare of our own making (New 25 Jun 2015)
The Stranger in Your Home (New 24 Mar 2015)
The Cost of WWII Air War (New 28 Mar 2014)
Wealth Inequality in America (New 6 Dec 2013)
The Psycholoty of Winning (New 3 Feb 2013)
Crisis of the Middle Class (New 8 Jan 2013)
Income Inequality Grows in TN (New 15 Nov 2012)
Why the Economy is Slow (New 12 Oct 2012)
Veteran's Charity Under Fire (New 15 Aug 2012)
Nursing Homes Vs. Prison (New 12 Nov 2010)
Soul of the Republic (New 30 Oct 2010)
National Purpose (New 16 Oct 2010)
Inside Job (New 14 Oct 2010)
'Big Business' Democrats (New 14 Oct 2010)
Corporate Governance (New 1 Oct 2010)
Common Good (New 1 Oct 2010)
American Wealth (New 19 Sep 2010)
Shrinking Middle Class (New 19 Sep 2010)
Financial Market Failure (New 15 Mar 2010)
Pledge of Allegiance (New 14 Mar 2010)
The Gift of Fear (New Jan 2010)
No Time to Lose (New Sept 2009)
Fiduciary Responsibity (New 7 Mar2009)
What Hamilton Has Wrought (New 27 Mar2009)
What Would Jesus Do? (New 21 Mar2009)
Global Warming (New March 2007)
Compassion
Democracy
Christmas
What I Wish For
Scout's Oath
Perspective
Statistics
Osama Bin Laden
Torture
ENRON
Close to Home
Inhumanity to Man
Thanksgiving
DC Area Snipers
Historectomy
Education
Civil Society
Religious Extremism
Stem Cell Research
Rapture
Mailbag
Contact Me
Peaceful Civil Disobedience


Fairness Trustworthiness Kindness
Patience Gentleness Knowledge
Discipline Compassion Integrity

Do unto others as you would have them do unto you

bar_blue.gif

When does the common good become bad?  We run into this question frequently.  Personally, I tend to think it's when the common good restrains me from doing something I want to do.  When the common good protects me from things I don't want to happen I think that's good too.
 
I came up with the following short list of things that can fall into either basket, depending on your point of view:
 
Being forced to wear a helmet while riding a motorcycle because society doesn't want to assume the liability of paying your hospital bills if you hit your head and live in a coma for the rest of your life.
 
Not being able to build a particular kind of fence around your house because your neighborhood association wants all the lots to look more or less alike.
 
Not being able to carry a weapon in a bar and drink liquor because the legislator thinks you would be a risk.
 
Being forced to wait for a left turn light, even though no one is coming in the opposite direction and the through light is green, because the traffic engineers don't trust drivers to use good judgement.
 
You can think of many more and I encourage you to think about examples and apply the golden rule to reach a decision if the restriction resulting in common good is good or bad.
 
In closing, Kathlean Parker's obversation that there is a positive correlation between population density and the number of restrictions on us is worthy of thought.  When we think about how good it was in the "good old days" we need to remember that there are a lot more of us around today and tomorrow there will be even more.  Change is inevitable, and if Kathlean Parker is right, some of this change will be even more restrictions imposed on us for the common good.
 
Being forced to drive on the right side of the road, even though the left side is not occupied as far as you can see because the Government dictates it.

bar_blue.gif

At what point does the common good become bad?

Nashville Tennessean Newspaper

Sept. 30, 2010, Kathleen Parker

Kath­leen Parker


After liv­ing in New York City for a few weeks, I’ve reached a few con­clu­sions about the great polit­i­cal divide in America.

As Barack Obama told us at the Demo­c­ra­tic con­ven­tion in 2004, we are not a red-and-blue nation, etc., etc. True, but we are a high-density/low-density nation.

As a smallish-town girl come to the humon­gous city, I am aware of the appeal and hor­ror of cen­tral­ized gov­ern­ment. Sim­ply put, the more peo­ple cram them­selves in-to small spaces, the more gov­ern­ment will be involved in their lives.

This isn’t the stuff of rev­e­la­tion, of course, but it’s a use­ful metaphor for the two pre­vail­ing world­views now in conflict.

If you live in a large urban area, chances are you are accus­tomed to lots of rules and regs. But to the new­comer, fresh from liv­ing largely inde­pen­dently by her own wits, the oppres­sion of bureau­cratic order is a fresh sort of hell.

Between rules for plants on an apart­ment ter­race and a build­ing ban on light­ing birth­day can­dles, I’ve uttered more than once, “Now I know what it’s like to live in com­mu­nist China.” With­out, of course, the conveniences.

Noth­ing is sim­ple when you cram 8.4 mil­lion peo­ple within 303 square miles. This seems obvi­ous, but the daily impact of those sta­tis­tics can’t be fully appre­ci­ated until you’ve expe­ri­enced it. For every indi­vid­ual action, there are four typed, single-spaced pages of restrictions.

So it must be, one could argue, or else there would be anar­chy. You can’t have 8 mil­lion peo­ple act­ing out indi­vid­ual impulses. What if half the city’s res­i­dents decided to fire up the Weber for some burg­ers on a given Sat­ur­day? On the other hand, when staffers threw me a birth­day party a few days ago, rules pro­hib­ited light­ing the sin­gle can­dle on my pink-frosted cupcake.

You may have heard about Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s cru­sade against trans fats, which are now banned from restau­rant fare in the city. OK, fine, trans fats are bad for you, and I vol­un­tar­ily eschew them. Not so the fel­low who installed my wireless.

“You can’t get a good dough­nut in the city any­more,” he railed. “I have to drive to Jer­sey to get a decent doughnut.”

But Bloomberg cares about my cable guy’s arter­ies. He fig­ures cit­i­zens will be bet­ter for these rules, which is the think­ing behind all deci­sions that remove the decision-making (i.e., free­dom) from our lives. It is one thing to cre­ate laws that pro­tect us from another’s stu­pid­ity, but shouldn’t the cable guy have the right to be stu­pid? Even just now and then?

These are tiny lit­tle things, but inevitably, the mind wan­ders to health care and other gov­ern­ment pro­grams that aim to do nice things for good peo­ple but in the process elim­i­nate the options of being self-directing individuals.

This is fun­da­men­tally where Democ­rats and Repub­li­cans face off. At what point is the com­mon good bad for people?

Many so-called every­day Amer­i­cans who live in the oft-maligned red states essen­tially are peo­ple who live in more-open spaces and, there­fore, see lit­tle need or ben­e­fit for gov­ern­ment man­age­ment of their lives. The fron­tier may be nearly gone, but the per­son who prefers wider hori­zons will have lit­tle use for bureau­crats bear­ing the lat­est gov­ern­ment how-to (or how-not-to) document.

Those who have opted to live in densely pop­u­lated blue areas need third-party author­i­ties to keep order and fig­ure they’ll trade a lit­tle free­dom for con­ve­nience and cul­tural riches of city life.

These are com­pletely dif­fer­ent ori­en­ta­tions toward life in gen­eral and the role of gov­ern­ment specif­i­cally, and I’m not sure the two can be rec­on­ciled. City dwellers will never under­stand the folks who pre­fer the com­pany of trees, and coun­try folk will always resent the impe­ri­ous pre­sump­tions of urban­ites who think they know best.

But when the lights go out, I’m gonna light that dadgum candle.

Kath­leen Parker is a syn­di­cated colum­nist. E-mail: kparker@kparker.com.

0 Responses to “At what point does the common good become bad?”

Feed for this Entry