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Ode to the Welfare State



The following was nationally distributed in the United States by the Associated Press and appeared in the New York Daily News on Friday, November 4, 1949. The measures being referenced are those in the Fair Deal, the cradle-to-grave welfare state proposal of President Harry S Truman to follow up on Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal of the 1930s. Fortunately at the time, most of these measures were not adopted but with bi-partisan support, most have since become federal law.

ODE TO THE WELFARE STATE

Mr. Truman’s St. Paul, Minn., pie-for-everybody speech last night reminded us that, at the tail-end of the recent session of Congress, Republican Clarence J. Brown (R-Ohio) jammed into the Congressional Record the following poem, describing its author only as a “prominent Democrat of the State of Georgia”:

Democratic Dialog

Father, must I go to work?
No, my lucky son.
We’re living now on Easy Street
On dough from Washington.

We’ve left it up to Uncle Sam,
So don’t get exercised.
Nobody has to give a damn—
We’ve all been subsidized.

But if Sam treats us all so well
And feeds us milk and honey,
Please, daddy, tell me what the hell
He’s going to use for money.

Don’t worry, bub, there’s not a hitch
In this here noble plan—
He simply soaks the filthy rich
And helps the common man.

But, father, won’t there come a time
When they run out of cash
And we have left them not a dime
When things will go to smash?

My faith in you is shrinking, son,
You nosy little brat;
You do too damn much thinking, son,
To be a Democrat.

With a fiscal train wreck looming ahead for Americans, will Republicans, Democrats and Independents today seek ways to dismantle the welfare state?

For all those seeking real change, please see the following for insights and superb holiday gifts:

Financing Failure: A Century of Bailouts, by Vern McKinley

Beyond Politics: The Roots of Government Failure, by Randy T. Simmons, foreword by Gordon Tullock

Against Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society, by Robert Higgs

The Voluntary City: Choice, Community, and Civil Society, edited by David T. Beito, Peter Gordon, and Alexander T. Tabarrok; foreword by Paul Johnson

Out of Work: Unemployment and Government in Twentieth-Century America, by Richard K. Vedder and Lowell E. Gallaway; foreword by Martin Bronfenbrenner

Crisis and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government, by Robert Higgs; foreword by Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr.

HT: Gary Theroux

3 Comment(s)

  1. The American welfare state is alive and well. It is also non-partisan!

    Believe All Things | Dec 3, 2011 | Reply

  2. Our Public Welfare State can also compete against an optional Private Welfare Institution through an “Internationals Private Mutual Welfare Trust” (IPMWT or Trust). Please view our Website & Video that shows how to establish a non-taxed financed private welfare institution that’s more efficient & less wasteful than the Public Welfare System financed with the taxpayers’ money.

    Daniel J. Roque | Dec 6, 2011 | Reply

  3. David suggested that I post this poem on his blog comments, so here it is...

    Eating Our Own

    Well it’s how we’re brought up, and the typical pitch
    is to pity the poor and to envy the rich.
    At the knees of our parents, especially mothers,
    we’re taught to relieve those unfortunate others

    unless, of course, others have more than we do,
    in which case they’re all fair game for me and for you
    and for all of us sovereign salt of the earth
    whose hearts bleed for all those with a minus net worth

    and propose to augment it with golden transfusions
    by bleeding our betters. Indulge no illusions,
    that’s just what we want, what our rhetoric’s for,
    as we rob all the rich in the name of the poor

    and our “redistribution” treats people like animals,
    dead meat, the tactic of all moral cannibals.

    Stephen Colley | Dec 6, 2011 | Reply

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