Thanks to Steve Hayward on Powerlineblog.com for this:
Churchill on the Buffett Rule
Since I was a couple days late with last week’s helping of Winston, I
might as well do this week’s a day or two early, especially since I was
reading the source material for this one just this morning—WSC’s 1937
essay about Franklin Roosevelt. Obama (and Buffett the Buffoon) ought
to read this warning, one of several, that Churchill offered about the
New Deal:
A second danger to President Roosevelt’s valiant and
heroic experiments seems to arise from the disposition to hunt down rich
men as if they were noxious beasts. It is a very attractive sport, and
once it gets started quite a lot of people everywhere are found ready
to join in the chase. Moreover, the quarry is at once swift and crafty,
and therefore elusive. The pursuit is long and exciting, and
everyone’s blood is infected with its ardour. The question arises
whether the general well-being of the masses of the community will be
advanced by an excessive indulgence in this amusement. The millionaire
or multi-millionaire is a highly economic animal. He sucks up with
sponge-like efficiency money from all quarters. In this process, far
from depriving ordinary people of their earnings, he launches enterprise
and carries it through, raises values, and he expands that credit
without which on a vast scale no fuller economic life can be opened to
the millions. To hunt wealth is not to capture commonwealth.
This money-gathering, credit-producing animal can not only walk—he
can run. And when frightened he can fly. If his wings are clipped, he
can dive or crawl. When in the end he is hunted down, what is left but a
very ordinary individual apologizing volubly for his mistakes, and
particularly for not having been able to get away?
But meanwhile great constructions have crumbled to the ground.
Confidence is shaken and enterprise chilled, and the unemployed queue up
at the soup kitchen or march out upon the public works with
ever-growing expense to the taxpayer and nothing more appetizing to take
home to their families than the leg or the wing of what was once a
millionaire. One quite sees that people who have got interested in this
fight will not accept such arguments against their sport. What they
will have to accept is the consequences of ignoring such arguments. It
is indispensible to the wealth of nations and to the wage and life
standards of labour, that capital and credit should be honoured and
cherished partners in the economic system.
If this is rejected there is always, of course, the Russian
alternative. But no one can suppose that the self-reliant population of
the United States, which cut down the forests and ploughed up the soil
and laced the continent with railways, and carried the wealth-getting
and wealth-diffusing to a higher point than has ever been reached by
mankind, would be content for a week with the dull brutish servitude of
Russia.
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