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9780385513500

Makers and Takers

Makers and Takers
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  • ISBN-13: 9780385513500
  • ISBN: 038551350X
  • Publication Date: 2008
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group

AUTHOR

Schweizer, Peter

SUMMARY

1. THE MIGHTY ME Or, Why Liberals Are More Self-Centered Than Conservatives The archetype of the modern liberal is not John F. Kennedy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Martin Luther King, Hubert Humphrey, or even Jimmy Carter. It is Peter Pan, the mythical character who avoids responsibility, refuses to grow up, and is terribly self-absorbed. Ronald Reagan kept a plaque on his Oval Office desk that read: "There is no limit to what a man can do, if he doesn't care who gets the credit." Reagan often reflected this attitude. After he left the White House, the economy was strong, the Cold War was won, and national pride had been restored. Dismissive of praise, he headed quietly back to California. "I'm not a great man," he would say. "I just believe in great ideas." In contrast, Bill Clinton has spent his post-White House years giving speeches about what he accomplished as president. Even his closest friends recognize that he is obsessed with his favorite subjecthimself. In an in-depth profile of Clinton in the usually friendlyVanity Fair, veteran journalist Robert Sam Anson explained the frustrations of his friends. "He just talks. You don't really have a conversation with him...He is just self-absorbed. Totally." According to Anson, Clinton has "a hankering for attention that makes him a joke even to admirers." His 957-page memoirMy Lifehas been called one of the most "self-absorbed" pieces of literature in American history.(1) Clinton may seem to be an easy target. But he is not alone. He is in fact a perfect reflection of contemporary liberalism and its obsession with self, individual freedom, personal growth, and "doing what feels good." One of the central aims of modern liberalism is avoiding commitment and responsibilities by outsourcing them to the government. Autonomy and independence, avoiding constraints imposed by family, tradition, churches, and community are a major preoccupation. If you don't believe me, consider these results from the highly regarded General Social Survey: Do you get happiness by putting someone else's happiness ahead of your own?Of those who described themselves as "very conservative," 55 percent said yes. Those who described themselves as "very liberal"? Only 20 percent agreed. Would you endure all things for the one you love?More than half--55 percent of conservatives--said yes, compared with only 26 percent of liberals. Are you willing to sacrifice your wishes to let the one you love succeed?Only 33 percent of liberals said yes, compared with 57 percent of conservatives. Is it your obligation to care for a seriously injured/ill spouse or parent, or should you give care only if you really want to?Fully 71 percent of conservatives said it was. Less than half (46 percent) of liberals agreed.(2) Today's liberalism is completely wrapped up with the notion of self. The legacy of the sixties' "if it feels good do it" ethos is alive and well. Modern liberals, as we shall see, often embrace these teachings and incorporate them in the way they live their lives and maintain their relationships. For dramatic proof, go to the streets of a liberal enclave like San Francisco, Seattle, or Vermont. There will be plenty of expensive boutiques, antique dealers, health spas, sushi bars, and upscale coffee shops. But you won't see very many children. The reason is not that right-wingers have dumped buckets of birth control pills into the San Francisco municipal water supply. The simple fact is that many on the liberal-left today just don't want to have children. A 2004 survey showed that a typical sample of 100 unrelated adults who called themselves liberal will have 147 children. That contrasts with the typical conservative, who is likely to have 208 children peSchweizer, Peter is the author of 'Makers and Takers', published 2008 under ISBN 9780385513500 and ISBN 038551350X.

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