Sunday, March 15, 2015

Blame the Culture, Not the Economy

The New York Times' Ross Douthat writes about the blame our culture must take for the dysfunction of our less educated and less affluent. He opines:
In a substantially poorer American past with a much thinner safety net, lower-income Americans found a way to cultivate monogamy, fidelity, sobriety and thrift to an extent that they have not in our richer, higher-spending present.

Our upper class should be judged first — for being too solipsistic to recognize that its present ideal of “safe” permissiveness works (sort of) only for the privileged, and for failing to take any moral responsibility (in the schools it runs, the mass entertainments it produces, the social agenda it favors) for the effects of permissiveness on the less-savvy, the less protected, the kids who don’t have helicopter parents turning off the television or firewalling the porn.
It's clear our society needs to be more judgmental - less laissez faire - than it has become in recent years.