By Cal Thomas
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
BELFAST, Northern Ireland -- In the 1970s, while working
as a low-paid cub reporter in Houston, Texas, I always looked forward to the
annual Christmas catalogs from Neiman-Marcus and Sakowitz, a local luxury
department store. Both contained outrageously expensive things that only the
super-rich could afford -- his and hers Thunderbirds stick in my memory. My
wife and I couldn't wait to thumb through them and we frequently laughed at how
much some of the items cost, wondering if even rich Texans would spend so
extravagantly.
Another tribute to conspicuous wealth comes in the annual
"Rich List," a guide to the 1,000 richest men and women in Britain,
published in a special edition of The Sunday Times Magazine. A fat feline sits
proudly on the cover with the symbol of a British pound (in gold) around its
neck.
In addition to income rankings, the list is broken down
by country and region. Most names will not be familiar to Americans, unless
they read the business pages or engage in similar businesses or
income-producing activities. One couple possibly familiar to many Americans --
number two among the wealthiest in Northern Ireland -- are the actress and
co-producer of TV's "The Bible" and "Son of God," Roma
Downey, who is Irish, and her reality TV husband, the British-born Mark
Burnett.
Apart from the fun of reading how much people are worth,
the Times story accompanying the list promises the rankings "will create a
combination of envy, admiration and mild outrage." Still, it bears reading
and can easily be applied to our modern Western culture of envy, greed and
entitlement promoted by President Obama and Democrats.
Titled "Don't beat the rich: just join them,"
the Times writes: "(the list) is a picture of self-made millionaires and
billionaires, many of whom have overcome educational disadvantages and personal
setbacks -- including poverty and the loss of a parent -- to succeed. Most
eschewed cozy normality, taking risks and putting their livelihoods on the line
in their determination to succeed."
With an estimated 47 million Americans on food stamps and
others receiving other kinds of government assistance; with President Obama and
his fellow liberal Democrats preaching a false financial gospel aimed at
penalizing the wealthy and the successful, could it be, as another Times
article asserts, "...western democracy is on its last legs, crushed under
the weight of a bloated state"? The story suggests the West "look
east, where the Asian model -- minimal welfare, restricted rights -- is
producing the world's most successful societies."
What amazes me is that Western values and a work ethic
that created so many rich and successful people, who did not settle for the
circumstances into which they were born, have been ceded to the welfare state.
In Asia, individuals and some nations -- notably Singapore -- have adopted the
West's former standards, creating unprecedented prosperity.
In Britain and America, just a few generations ago, those
who came by their wealth and success honestly and through hard work were
idolized and emulated. The attitude shared by those who began life in modest
circumstances, was, "if they can do it, so can I." Today, we appear
to punish success and treat successful people and those independent of
government as enemies who have stolen from what rightfully belongs to others.
The "Rich List" is fun to read, but the stories
behind their wealth ought to be a lesson to people living in free societies.
That lesson is that while not all can necessarily become as rich as these men
and women, by adopting their work ethic they can improve their lives far beyond
their current place on the economic ladder, to their benefit and to the benefit
of their nation.
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