Green Room

My money: I deserve to keep it all

posted at 5:04 pm on September 16, 2011 by

I may decide to use some of it for the purposes I assign to government

This is being framed as a deeply silly public argument, because it is being argued on the terms of the left.  It’s being argued, in other words, the way kindergartners argue such things.  “I deserve…”  “You don’t deserve…”  “It’s not fair…”  “MOM!!!!!!!  Billy’s touching me!”  “Am not!” “Are too!”  Etc, etc.

If any of us doesn’t deserve to keep everything he has earned, then that man is a slave.  Alternatively, he is less than human; he has no moral standing, and no unalienable rights inhere in him.  He is like a farm animal.

Of course we all deserve to keep our own money.  If it is ill-gotten – stolen, swindled – then it’s the crime that deprives us of it, not any inherent function of the armed authorities to prowl the land in search of “undeserved” bank balances.

The question of what we “deserve” boils down to which came first, the individual human with rights, or the state.  America was founded on the principle that the individual human with rights comes first.  Any idea that violates that principle is counter to our founding idea.  It is not possible to reconcile with our founding principle the idea of collective schemes in which we make some modification to “what we deserve.”  We either deserve to keep all our own earnings – money – wealth – goods – or we do not have unalienable rights.

Now, what we decide to do with our own money will inevitably involve government functions of some kind.  People have to have a government in some form.  A certain minimum set of public services is essential to corporate human life.  The American founding idea is that we the people decide what government will do, and we decide how much money government will have to do it with.  Then we contribute out of what is inalienably ours.

In the American idea, the state doesn’t operate on the basis of “what we deserve.”  It operates on the basis of law: definitions adopted by due process, and objective circumstances.  “What we deserve” is outside the scope of the state’s competence to decide.  If we enter relationships in which someone else decides that for us, they are voluntary; e.g., employer paying or promoting employee, fan-base keeping pro sports or the music industry profitable.

The percentage-based income tax and the practice of payroll withholding have combined for a century now to obscure in our minds the simplicity of our founding principles.  But the founding principles were very clear.  Modern interlocutors can seek to change the argument, toss red herrings around, and get us in full 6-year-old mode talking about “deserving” and “not deserving” according to whether we are Leona Helmsley or Mother Teresa, but the bottom line is that a man whose title to his money is considered – as a first principle – subject to the whim of his neighbor, is a slave.

America was founded on the principle that individual rights precede and constrain the state.  As far as government is properly concerned, we all deserve to keep 100% of our money.  The question of what we decide to do with it, and how the functions of government figure into that, is a separate and subordinate topic.

It is impossible to live as free men and women otherwise.

J.E. Dyer’s articles have appeared at The Green Room, Commentary’s “contentions,Patheos, The Weekly Standard online, and her own blog, The Optimistic Conservative.

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Now reporting you to Atttaaaaaaaaaaaaaack Waaaaaaaaaaatch…

Ace ODale on September 16, 2011 at 5:58 PM

The question of what we “deserve” boils down to which came first, the individual human with rights, or the state.

So defines the difference between the right and the left, individualism and collectivism, freedom and tyranny.

Chip on September 16, 2011 at 6:32 PM

Mother Teresa (if one accepts the common public persona ascribed to her) chose to be Mother Teresa. Leona Helmsley chose to marry Harry Helmsley and, thus, become Leona Helmsley.

It is a choice we each get to make. If Barack Obama, whose estimated net worth is ~$1.3 million, wants to give away every penny in his name, that is his prerogative. What I did with every penny in my name is none of his business.

Howard Portnoy on September 16, 2011 at 6:45 PM

This is some damn good writing, J.E.

massrighty on September 16, 2011 at 9:34 PM

Hear, Hear, JE I’m giving you a standing ovation.

Mini-14 on September 16, 2011 at 11:22 PM

This post has been promoted to HotAir.com.

Comments have been closed on this post but the discussion continues here.

Ed Morrissey on September 18, 2011 at 3:13 PM

a man whose title to his money is considered – as a first principle – subject to the whim of his neighbor, is a slave.

This — RIGHT HERE — is why I call Democrats / Leftists Copperheads. They are still what they always were: the party of slavery. And just as we had to fight a Civil War to throw off the Copperhead 1.0 yoke in 1861, we will have to fight another one to throw off Copperhead 2.0.

SDN on September 19, 2011 at 8:39 AM