Labels

Saturday, October 26, 2019

SOME OF THE ARTICLES BY THOMAS SOWELL

SOME OF THE ARTICLES BY  THOMAS SOWELL 

Thomas Sowell Archives
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell.html

CLICK 

9/04/98: Random thoughts
8/31/98: The twilight of special prosecutors?
8/26/98: "Doing a good job"
8/24/98: America on trial?
8/19/98: Played for fools
8/17/98: A childish letter
8/11/98: Hiding behind a woman
8/07/98: A flying walrus in Washington?
8/03/98: "Affordability" strikes again
7/31/98: Random thoughts
7/27/98: Faith and mountains
7/24/98: Clinton in Wonderland
7/20/98: Where is black 'leadership' leading?
7/16/98: Do 'minorities' really have it that bad?
7/14/98: Race dialogue: same old stuff
7/10/98: Honest history
7/09/98: Dumb is dangerous
7/02/98: Gun-safety starts with
parental responsibility
6/30/98: When more is less
6/29/98: Are educators above the law?
6/26/98: Random Thoughts
6/24/98: An angry letter
6/22/98: Sixties sentimentalism
6/19/98:Dumbing down anti-trust
6/15/98: A changing of the guard?
6/11/98: Presidential privileges
6/8/98: Fast computers and slow antitrust
6/3/98: Can stalling backfire?
5/29/98: The insulation of the Left
5/25/98: Missing the point in the media
5/22/98: The lessons of Indonesia
5/20/98: Smart but silent
5/18/98: Israel, Clinton and character
5/14/98: Monica Lewinsky's choices
5/11/98: Random thoughts
5/7/98: Media obstruction of justice
5/4/98: Dangerous "safety"
5/1/98: Abolish Adolescence!
4/30/98: The naked truth
4/22/98: Playing fair and square
4/19/98: Bad teachers"
4/15/98: "Clinton in Africa"
4/13/98: "Bundling and unbundling "
4/9/98: "Rising or falling Starr "
4/6/98: "Was Clinton ‘vindicated'? "
3/26/98: "Diasters -- natural and political"
3/24/98: "A pattern of behavior"
3/22/98: Innocent explanations
3/19/98: Kathleen Willey and Anita Hill
3/17/98: Search and destroy
3/12/98: Media Circus versus Justice
3/6/98: Vindication
3/3/98: Cheap Shot Time
2/26/98: The Wrong Filter
2/24/98: Trial by Media
2/20/98: Dancing Around the Realities
2/19/98: A "Do Something" War?
2/12/98: Julian Simon, combatant in a 200-year war
2/6/98: A rush to rhetoric

What Is "Social Justice"?






“In politics, the great non-sequitur of our time is that 1) things are not right and that 2) the government should make them right. Where right all too often means cosmic justice, trying to set things right means writing a blank check for a never-ending expansion of government power.”
This key passage from Thomas Sowell’s 1999 book, The Quest for Cosmic Justice, frames Sowell’s thoughtful analysis and rejection of arguments advanced by “social justice warriors,” or more briefly, SJWs.
Although written nearly 20 years ago, Sowell’s insights are especially relevant today, when you consider the heights of influence social justice activism has reached—especially on college campuses—in 2018.
For a blueprint to understand and refute today’s increasingly vocal SJWs, Sowell’s book proves to be an indispensable resource.
First, Sowell provides clarity to the concept of social justice, which he labels “cosmic justice.” Social justice seeks to “eliminate undeserved disadvantages” for selected groups. Sowell explains “undeserved disadvantages” by quoting Thomas Nagle, a professor of philosophy and law, as akin to an “unequal starting point” certain people have through no fault of their own.
For the social justice warrior, equality of treatment under the law is not a sufficient condition to achieve justice.

These conditions—be it race, gender, family income, etc.—are from mere chance of birth. Sowell prefers the term “cosmic” to represent a random factor—beyond anyone’s control—landing different groups in different conditions.
But given we can’t change the conditions we are born into, nor erase past injustices, the real concern boils down to what actions and policies are prescribed to mitigate these “unequal starting points” that people occupy.
For the social justice warrior, equality of treatment under the law is not a sufficient condition to achieve justice. Citing philosopher John Rawls’ A Theory of Justice, Sowell asserts that SJWs insist “having everyone play by the same rules or be judged by the same standards” is found to be lacking. True equality of opportunity, in their view, means “providing everyone with equal prospects of success from equal individual efforts,” and “putting segments of society in the position that they would have been in but for some undeserved misfortune.”
To make this a reality, processes need to be put in place, according to social justice theory, so that outcomes—such as income level, unemployment rates, leadership positions, etc.—are equalized regardless of one’s starting point or demographic trait. Any deviation from “equalized” outcomes is proof positive in the eyes of the social justice movement that some form of social injustice—be it racism, sexism, or capitalist greed—must be the culprit.  
The quest for social justice “focuses on one segment of the population and disregards the interests of others."

Sowell takes issue with such thinking. He believes it is the actions and policies in search of equal outcomes, along with their results, that need to be judged by an ethical evaluation of justice.
At this point, Sowell begins to expose the injustices involved in this process. “This conception of fairness requires that third parties must wield the power to control outcomes, over-riding rules, standards or the preferences of other people.”
Indeed, the quest for social justice “focuses on one segment of the population and disregards the interests of others who are not the immediate focus of discussion, but who nevertheless pay the price of the decisions made.” Such processes, it turns out, necessarily involve treating people unequally.
In classic Sowell style, he reminds readers that there are no perfect solutions, only trade-offs. Trade-offs involve costs as well as benefits.
“Costs of achieving justice matter…What, after all, is injustice but an arbitrary imposition of a cost—whether economic, psychic, or other—on an innocent person? And if correcting this injustice imposes another arbitrary cost on another innocent person, is that not also an injustice?”
These costs of attempting to advance social justice are not only borne by these innocent third parties, but also by society through changes in behavior of the supposed beneficiaries.
“Those given legal entitlements to various compensatory benefits have, for example, developed a sense of entitlement,” Sowell explains. Entitlement sows seeds of division among the givers and takers while blunting the recipients’ incentives to work. The productive are punished to serve the non-productive.
Promoting a vision of social injustices can also create a sense of helplessness among those labeled as “victims” of cosmic injustices. “Why study and discipline yourself in preparation for the adult world if the deck is completely stacked against you anyway?” Sowell asks rhetorically.
According to Sowell, aside from evaluating the costs involved, the key question in addressing the “unequal starting points” of different groups involves deciding between either political actions or voluntary individual cooperation.
With his typical precision, Sowell favors the latter.
“One of the crucial differences between political and non-political ways of dealing with undeserved misfortunes is that the non-political approaches do not acquire the fatal rigidities of law nor require either the vision or the reality of helplessness and dependency. Nor does it require the demonization of those who think otherwise or the polarization of society.”
Problems abound even with how SJWs diagnose current hot-button issues like income inequality and racism.
For example, Sowell contends most income statistics are crude aggregates. The implicit assumption that the mere existence of income disparities is evidence of racial discrimination is unsubstantiated. Simply examining the average age differences among different demographics can explain away a portion of the income inequality that SJWs proclaim exists due to discrimination. Adding factors like education level and personal career choices explains much of the rest.
The real issue, Sowell concludes, is not with income inequality itself, but with the processes put in motion in hopes of eliminating inequality.
“To allow any governmental authority to determine how much money individuals shall be permitted to receive from other individuals produces not only a distortion of the economic processes by undermining incentives for efficiency, it is more fundamentally a monumental concentration of political power which reduces everyone to the level of a client of politicians.”
Moreover, the culture of envy created by income inequality obsessions can harm the very groups SJWs purport to want to help. Attributing the “greater prosperity of others to ‘exploitation’ of people like themselves, to oppression, bias or unworthy motives such as greed, racisms and the like,” makes those people feel that self-improvement is “futile” and paints “the less fortunate into their own little corner, isolated from potential sources of greater prosperity.”
Finally, Sowell holds no quarter regarding the motives of the self-anointed saviors of the downtrodden. As if anticipating by two decades the rampant “virtue signaling” consuming left-wing social media accounts, he writes,
“Like so much that is done in the quest for cosmic justice, it makes observers feel better about themselves—and provides no incentives for those observers to scrutinize the consequences of their actions on the ostensible beneficiaries.”
Social justice warriors too often value ego gratification over actual benefits. Sowell continues, pointing out that those invested in the social justice narrative create for themselves a “vested interest in the incapacity of other people,” while developing a “tendency to see people as helpless and not responsible for their own actions.”
All the better to gratify their own egos as self-styled “rescuers” of the purported helpless victims. Such attitudes, however, produce policies that fail to generate desirable results, while instilling a defeatist mindset among those being labeled victims, inducing them “to accept that image of themselves.”
“This is only one of the ways in which the vision of morally anointed visionaries’ ministers to the egos of the anointed, rather than the well-being of the ostensible beneficiaries of their efforts,” Sowell concludes.
The author finds that the corrective “solutions” for perceived social injustices involve costs that most often will outstrip any benefits, and invariably create real injustices at the hands of centralizing government power. Such insights explain why The Quest for Cosmic Justice is a valuable tool for understanding the social justice movement and how to confront its arguments.
Mar 14, 2018 - This key passage from Thomas Sowell's 1999 book, The Quest for Cosmic Justice, frames Sowell's thoughtful analysis and rejection of ...
Apr 22, 2019 - Thomas Sowell on the Subtle Tyranny of “Anointed” Social Justice Champions. Freedom, personal responsibility, and voluntary interactions are ...
Mar 16, 2019 - Despite how persuasive the words of John Rawls and other 'social justice' advocates may be in the world of words, demonstrated facts in the ...
Jun 28, 2012 - If someone told you that country A had more “social justice” than country B, and ... Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

Dec 4, 2018 - Thomas Sowell on "The Quest for Cosmic Justice". He is an American economist and social theorist who is currently Senior Fellow at the ...

Me to Rep. Ilhan Omar: You don’t understand America!

on Miller - White House Brief updates@blazemediaemail.com Unsubscribe

Fri, Oct 25, 6:41 PM (16 hours ago)

to me


 

TODAY AT THE WHITE HOUSE …

Thanks for reading the White House Brief email newsletter, where we give you what the mainstream media is NOT telling you about the Trump administration. Please encourage your friends, family, and colleagues to sign up.
Me to Rep. Ilhan Omar: You don’t understand America! WATCH: 

Thursday, October 24, 2019

How To Start A Civil War

Please always scroll down !!!

Obama admin. Knew Weapons Were Shipped From Benghazi to Syrian Rebels/Jihadists
DOD records obtained by Judicial Watch contain the first official documentation that the Obama administration knew that weapons were being shipped from the Port of Benghazi to rebel troops in Syria. The heavily redacted documents do not disclose who was shipping the weapons. Another DIA report, written in August 2012 (the same time period the U.S. was monitoring weapons flows from Libya to Syria), said that the opposition in Syria was driven by al Qaeda and other extremist Muslim groups: “the Salafist, the Muslim Brotherhood, and AQI are the major forces driving the insurgency in Syria.” The growing sectarian direction of the war was predicted to have dire consequences for Iraq, which included the “grave danger” of the rise of ISIS.
 •  2019-10-22  •  Judicial Watch



Iran, Syria, Turkey, and whatever happened to the United Nations?


Iran, Syria, Turkey, and whatever happened to the United Nations
Almost one full month ago, on September 24th, President Donald Trump addressed the 74th Session of the United Nations. 
He gave a bold speech and one of the more memorable lines that he proclaimed to the body of world leaders was: “the future does not belong to globalists. The future belongs to patriots, the future belongs to sovereign and independent nations.” 
 •  2019-10-22  •  Dennis Jamison

Arrogant Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Reduced to Minority Status
Arrogant Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Reduced to Minority StatusThe only good news takeaway from yesterday’s Canadian Election is that scandal-plagued Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his ‘Progressive’ MPs were reduced to Minority Status, despite the fact that the Socialist New Democrat Party (NDP), with whom he will likely form a Coalition Government, will make Canada even more Progressive.
It’s a blessing in no disguise that Barack Obama’s 11th-hour endorsement couldn’t pull him over the top to majority status.

 •  2019-10-22  •  Judi McLeod


The Kurds, Turkey, and Attack of the Swamp


The Kurds, Turkey, and Attack of the Swamp
So it’s getting absurd again. The Kurds were fighting Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran long before President Donald Trump was even born. And The Donald has been on the public scene for a while. But he was not yet born when this war was raging.
 •  2019-10-22  •  Jonathon Moseley

                                                                  Kurdish women Fighters 

Alberta - a province without a country
Alberta - a province without a countrySince Trudeau took office there has been a slow miasma of division in Canada due to very poor policy decisions.
He has no economic experience, just drama, yet he controlled the direction this once great country was going. It has not only divided us, but economically destroyed us.
Related:• Arrogant Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Reduced to Minority Status
• A Useless Minority Government Heading Canada’s Way?
 •  2019-10-22  •  Guest Column

How To Start A Civil War


How To Start A Civil War
The Democrat Party has made a fateful decision. They’ve decided to safeguard all that is left of their power and the progressive movement they have worshiped at the cost of the existence of the nation they have sworn an oath to preserve.
 •  2019-10-22  •  Ray DiLorenzo

Sunlight degrades polystyrene much faster than expected
Sunlight degrades polystyrene much faster than expectedPolystyrene persists in the environment for millennia, according to some international governmental agencies. This estimate is based on the amount of time required for microbes to break down the plastic. But now researchers have challenged this common assumption with the finding that sunlight can break down polystyrene over a much shorter time scale, from decades to centuries. They report their results in Environmental Science & Technology Letters.
 •  2019-10-22  •  American Chemical Society

Why no inquiry of Hillary raising money secretly from Russians while Secretary of State?
 •  2019-10-22  •  Dag Barkley

Canada Free Press Daily Mailout

How Jim saved his family

@swaffarcongress HELP PATRIOT DARLENE SWAFFAR FLIP FLORIDA DISTRICT 22 🇺🇲 Darlene Swaffar for Congress, #22 FL @swaffarcongress...