In a touching but revealing column, conservative pundit and highly syndicated columnist George Will speaks to his son celebrating his 40th birthday while still handicapped by Down syndrome. Jon, as George describes him, was born at a time when leaving a child at a hospital was “still considered an acceptable choice for parents who might prefer to institutionalize or put up for adoption children thought to have necessarily bleak futures.”
Within the age of nanny state government, apathy toward child abandonment is both financed and encouraged by faceless bureaucrats waiting in the wings to institutionalize in a bare room (one which meets a litany of erroneous regulations of course) those judged unacceptable for the public.
And just as entitlement programs have bred a generation unable to comprehend what wealth-enhancing production entails, it has given these state devotees an aversion to imperfection. The Great Society dogma can be reduced to the simple declaration that everyone deserves a good paying job, health care, housing, and nutrient rich food, irregardless of the source. Such a flawless civilization was thought up by aspiring oligarchs imagining themselves divinely qualified to shuffle around societal resources to achieve their most effective and “fair” use. In placing the notion of equality on the highest pedestal, these “entitled” are often the first to demand themselves wealth transfers while being the most unwilling to fall prey to the same theft.
Will brilliantly ties this social corroding mentality to the practice of taking the life of a person afflicted by Down syndrome. In his typical brilliant prose, he writes:
Jon was born eight months before Roe v. Wade inaugurated this era of the casual destruction of pre-born babies.
This era has coincided, not just
coincidentally, with the full, garish flowering of the baby boomers’
vast sense of entitlement, which encompasses an entitlement to exemption
from nature’s mishaps, and to a perfect baby. So today science enables
what the ethos ratifies, the choice of killing children with Down
syndrome before birth. That is what happens to 90 percent of those whose parents receive a Down syndrome diagnosis through prenatal testing.
In addition to being both an anti-Semite and pedophile, John Maynard Keynes, whose work popularized government-directed planning, was an endorser of eugenics and the centralized control of the world’s population. According to classical liberal historian Ralph Raico:
The state, according to Keynes, will even
decide on the optimal level of population. Regarding eugenics, Keynes
at times gave the appearance of indecision: “the time may arrive a
little later when the community as a whole must pay attention to the
innate quality as well as to the mere numbers of its future members.”
Despite dressing itself in the garb of egalitarianism and tolerance, the progressive movement, which takes much of its influence from Keynes, has a nasty history of fostering the perfect society through government dictum. As Austrian economist Larry White points out in his new book “The Clash of Economic Ideas,”
Many of the Progressive economists
favored alcohol and drug prohibition, and even eugenics (immigration
barriers against and sterilization of “inferior races” to prevent “race
suicide”), as scientific means to social betterment.
The paradox these confused dictators often run up against is that if man if flawed and incapable of functioning under his own judgment, then what gives a select few, just as flawed, individuals the ability the run a society? How can it possibly be determined what is the proper money supply or amount of employment? Taken further, how can a select number of schemers even begin to know the appropriate population size or best state of mental functionality?
Economist Friedrich Hayek defined these presumptions as the pretense of knowledge which he also named his Nobel acceptance speech after. Hayek closed his speech with perhaps one of the most imperative advice to be suggested to planners and their ilk:
The recognition of the insuperable limits
to his knowledge ought indeed to teach the student of society a lesson
of humility which should guard him against becoming an accomplice in
men’s fatal striving to control society — a striving which makes him not
only a tyrant over his fellows, but which may well make him the
destroyer of a civilization which no brain has designed but which has
grown from the free efforts of millions of individuals.
“Nor is it true that self-interest generally is
enlightened; more often individuals acting separately to promote their
own ends are too ignorant or too weak to attain even these”
It causes great anguish for leftists to be told that humanity is intrinsically imperfect. No amount of intellect will ever make central planning successful or removed from complete violent oppression. Man has no perfect state. To assert that those diagnosed with Down syndrome are undeserving of life compared to an infant deemed in perfect health is a value judgment reserved for only those with a pure disgust for the human race.
Thankfully the luxury afforded to all by market-driven material production, no matter how hampered, allows for even the most handicapped to not be left starved or destitute on the street. It enables those unfortunate enough to be born with lesser ability to live amongst the rest of the populace in relative comfort. And we are all better off as Will cleverly observes:
…the world would be improved by more people with Down syndrome, who are quite nice, as humans go.
And the more unfortunate byproduct of such a wholly controlled society is lives like Jon Will’s may very well never come into being.

Speaking of Turncoats, Noahpinion wrote this on Sunday:
ReplyDeleteIn The Road to Serfdom, Hayek claimed that Keynesian-style macroeconomic management would lead to totalitarianism; in reality, nothing of the sort has ever happened. America, Europe, Japan, Korea, and others became solidly Keynesian after World War 2, and while macroeconomic management didn't always work as advertised, it nowhere and never led to the advent of totalitarian regimes.
******
It was Robert Lucas and Edward Prescott who truly restored Hayekian "classical" economics to dominance in the macro field, with their models of frictionless economies and near-optimal business cycles.
********
This foreshadowed the unfortunate libertarian support for dictators like Augusto Pinochet, as well as more recent libertarian flirtations with “scientific racist” ideas.
http://noahpinionblog.blogspot.com/2012/11/keynes-hayek-by-nicholas-wapshott.html
In response, I linked to your article which pointed out that Keynes was a pedophile and a longtime advocate of eugenics. Further, I posted a link to a 1977 TV interview with Hayek where Hayek states that “The General Theory” was nothing but a ruse to put in place inflationist policies in order to lower British wages without the victims knowing what hit them.
So, in response to me linking to Hayek’s interview on “Firing Line” in 1977 and posting a transcript in the comments, self-described “former libertarian” Gene Callahan wrote:
It is true that Bob Roddis’s comments are much more disgustingly wrong than Noah’s were!
For some reason, Gene Callahan does not like that 1977 Hayek video interview.
http://tinyurl.com/c2d9dxc
Nice.
DeleteSome people will go to great lengths to defend Keynes despite the man's personal shortcomings and devious, nonsensical view on economics.
And Callahan doesn't seem to like anyone or anything. He is the ultimate contrarian.