By J. D. Vance
Monday, January 07, 2019
Tucker Carlson’s monologue heard ’round the world is
interesting on its own terms. In it, he argues against a conservatism that
consistently prizes commercial interests above those of everyone else. I
encourage you to watch or read it in full. Yet the response on the right is as
interesting as Carlson’s monologue itself, for it reveals a discomfort among
some conservatives for balancing the tensions that exist in our coalition and
in our ideology.
There is, by many on the right, an effort to sing the
praises of market capitalism without acknowledging the tensions between our
pro-market principles and everything else. I respect Ben Shapiro a great deal,
but I found this paragraph in his response to Carlson curious:
Supply and demand economics has
powered most of the world’s human beings out of extreme poverty, and led to the
richest society in human history. It has allowed us to live longer, in bigger
houses, in more comfort. It has meant fewer dead children and more living
parents. If we’ve blown that advantage, that’s our own fault. Traditional
conservatives recognized that the role of economics is to provide prosperity —
to raise the GDP. The role of a social fabric and a value system is to provide
meaning.
To put a particularly fine point on it: Our economy has
not produced fewer dead children and more living parents in America, at least
not in the section of the country where I live. The opioid epidemic, in
particular, has ravaged whole communities — driving down life expectancy,
depriving children of their parents, and parents of their children. The human
cost of this crisis is simply incomprehensible. In states such as Ohio, West
Virginia, and Kentucky, countless children are growing up with parents in jail,
incapacitated, or underground. Yes, they live in a country with a higher GDP
than a generation ago, and they’re undoubtedly able to buy cheaper consumer
goods, but to paraphrase Reagan: Are they better off than they were 20 years
ago? Many would say, unequivocally, “no.”
Some economic libertarians might say that these problems
are the consequence of bad individual choices, and I wouldn’t entirely
disagree. I grew up in a family plagued by addiction, and I saw some bad
choices. Yet bad choices simply aren’t enough to explain the crisis — people
have always made bad choices, and the familial, neighborhood, and economic
contexts in which they live can exacerbate or improve them. Others might admit
that it’s not all bad choices, that bad policy plays a role, but oddly the bad
policy they point to is almost always the negative incentives of the welfare
state. Again, they have a point — our welfare state is far from perfect,
especially when it comes to encouraging work and family formation — but there
are many other policies at play here.
To keep the focus on the opioid epidemic, the Los Angeles Times’ reporting on the role
of the pharmaceutical industry is both excellent and disturbing. It chronicles
the ways in which some companies gamed our regulatory system to obtain approval
and patent protection for highly addictive drugs. Those companies then
knowingly lied about the safety of those drugs to doctors and patients. Some
commentators have framed their problem with Tucker’s argument as promoting
“government intervention” when that same intervention is the problem. But if
you want to protect a community from drugs that can take hold of a person’s
mind and destroy whole neighborhoods soon thereafter, you need some government
intervention.
This raises a fundamental question with which so many of
Tucker’s critics refuse to even engage: What happens when the companies that
drive the market economy — and all of its benefits — don’t care about the
American nation’s social fabric? What happens when, as in the case of a few
massive narcotics sellers, they profit by destroying that fabric?
Surely our response can’t be: “Well, the market will take
care of it.” The market is not a Platonic deity, floating in the sky and
imposing goodness and prosperity from on high. It is the creation of our
choices, our laws, and our democratic process. We know, for instance, that
pornography has radically altered how young boys perceive their relationships
with women and sex, and that the pornography industry has acquired a lot of
wealth in the process of creating and distributing that content. Just last
month, we learned that a Chinese entity created the first gene-edited baby,
using a technology developed in the United States. Some company, here or there,
will eventually create a lot of prosperity by using this gene-editing
technology (called CRISPR) in an unethical way, quite literally playing God
with the most sacred power in the universe — the creation of human life. In the
past few years, it has become abundantly clear that Apple — despite
self-righteously refusing to cooperate with American security officials — has
willingly complied with the requirements of the Chinese surveillance state,
even as China builds concentration camps for dissidents and religious
minorities. And, as Carlson mentioned, there are marijuana companies pushing
for legalization, though we know from the Colorado experience that legalization
increases use,
and from other studies
that use is concentrated among the lower class, causing a host of social
problems in the process.
All of these entities are doing what the market demands,
and in some ways, it’s hard to blame them. But shouldn’t our laws and policy
make life harder for them? Or should conservatives cry “small government” every
time someone suggests an intervention and stick our collective head in the
sand, pretending there’s no relationship between market actors and the civil
society we say we believe in?
Of course, the recognition that corporate interests might
not always align with civil society’s interests comes from the patron saint of
capitalism, Adam Smith. We simply must develop the intellectual ability to
understand the way in which law and policy drive outcomes in our society
besides creating bad incentives for poor people. Sometimes they create bad
incentives for the rich. Sometimes they allow the incentives that already exist
to run roughshod over our communities and families. The market, as Smith
understood, is merely a tool — a powerful tool, yes. But if we care about the
flourishing of our society, and if we value ends besides a larger GDP, then we
have to do the difficult work of balancing the competing demands of our values.
Instead, many of our intellectuals simply pretend there is no competition —
that what is good for markets is good for the rest of our nation. This is a
recipe for boring thinking and bad policy.
This is not to say that all the fault lies with the
failure of government to act in some way or another. Growing up in a household
that was, by nearly every metric, “disadvantaged,” I loathed the cultural
signal that told me, in essence: “Because you are poor, you have no agency.
Because you are disadvantaged, you are a victim of the system, and you might as
well give up.” So I understand and agree with the premise of David French’s
response to Carlson, but having spent some time with Carlson, I don’t think he
would disagree with the importance of emphasizing resilience even in the face
of adversity.
There is, of course, a tension between acknowledging
adversity and fighting to overcome it. It is a tension I’ve struggled with in
my own life, and one that runs through my book Hillbilly Elegy. We can and should promote a cultural sensibility
that values agency and personal responsibility. But if the conservative answer
to people’s real problems is “we can’t talk about them, because it promotes
victimhood,” then we are fighting a battle that we both deserve to lose and
will lose.
No comments:
Post a Comment