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townhall.com Printer-friendly version June 10, 2004
The fact that benefits have costs means that those who create these
benefits are tempting targets for accusations from those who know how to
dramatize the costs. This means that the doers are constantly on the defensive
when attacked by the talkers. "Safety" issues are ideal for talkers because nothing is absolutely
safe. A vaccine may save the lives of 10,000 children but, if five children die
from the vaccine itself, that can set off loud denunciations of "corporate
irresponsibility" and "greed" on the part of the companies that produced the
vaccine. Some people die from reactions to peanut butter. If the government
banned every food from which some people can die, we would all die of
starvation. If they banned every vaccine or drug from which people die, more
people would die from diseases. More than sloppy thinking and runaway rhetoric enables the talkers to
harass the doers. The ever-growing jungle of laws and regulations provides a
virtually unlimited number of grounds for lawsuits. The talkers are in their natural habitat in courts where judges allow
junk science to be used as evidence and juries are gullible enough to be
impressed by glib and clever lawyers. The low cost of attacks and the high cost
of defense tilts the system in favor of the talkers, especially since the
talkers need pay no price for having made totally unfounded accusations. Both the talkers and the doers know this. That is why the doers so
often settle out of court, rather than be tied up in endless litigation. This is
then taken as proof of guilt. Anyone who wants to build anything can be hit with costly delays by
environmental activists demanding environmental impact reports. It doesn't
matter what the facts are, the talkers can always demand more information and
object to the analysis. All this takes time -- and more time adds to the costs of borrowed
money, on which interest must be paid, no matter whether the building for which
it was borrowed is being built or the machines and workers are idled while
speculative complaints are being investigated by bureaucrats who are in no
hurry. Not only the legal system and the regulatory bureaucrats enable talkers
to impose high costs on the doers at low costs to themselves. So does the
talkers' ready access to the media. Talkers are usually more articulate than doers, since talk is their
specialty. Moreover, they can stage demonstrations that the media will not only
broadcast but give free air time for the talkers to make their accusations. Jesse Jackson has made a science -- and a lucrative occupation -- out
of accusations of "racism" against businesses. There is no way to prove that you
are not a racist, so the doer's choice is to pay off the talker or face losses
of customers from either the bad publicity or an organized boycott. These kinds of incentives and constraints help explain a strange
anomaly that many have noticed -- big corporations contributing much more to
left-wing causes than to conservative or libertarian causes. "For every $1.00 major corporations gave to conservative and
free-market groups, they gave $4.61 to organizations seeking more government,"
according to a study by the Capital Research Center, a Washington think tank. Why? According to the Capital Research Center: "Many advocacy groups
win corporate funding by threatening lawsuits and boycotts and by petitioning
government regulatory bodies. Regulatory policies, in particular, give
corporations a built-in incentive to pay-off left-wing activists." Talkers cultivate an aura of morally lofty goals, while depicting doers
as mere selfish money-grubbers. But professional talkers are pretty good at
collecting big bucks, some through legalized extortion and others by creating
huge windfall gains as their building restrictions cause housing prices to
skyrocket. The talkers' admirers include people struggling to pay inflated
apartment rents and make huge monthly mortgage payments. Even their victims
often admire the talkers more than the doers.
©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc. Contact Thomas Sowell | Read Sowell's biography townhall.com
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