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townhall.com Printer-friendly version June 9, 2004
The big divide in this country is not between Democrats and
Republicans, or women and men, but between talkers and doers. Those who have created nothing have maintained a constant barrage of
criticism of those who created something, because that something was considered
to be not good enough or the benefits turned out to have costs. Every time I get on my bicycle and go pedalling down the road, I
remember from my childhood that old geezers in their 70s didn't go biking in
those days. They sat around on the porch in their rocking chairs. Partly that was the style of the times but partly it was because old
people did not have the energy and vigor that they have today. Much of that has
been due to medical advances that not only added years to our lives but life to
our years. Doctors and hospitals have helped but much of the improvement in our
health has been due to pharmaceutical drugs that keep us from having to go to
hospitals, and have enabled doctors to head off many serious medical problems
with prescriptions. Yet the people who produce pharmaceutical drugs have been under heated
political attack for years -- attacks which often do not let the facts get in
their way. During the anthrax scare of 2001, for example, the maker of the leading
antidote for anthrax was accused of making "obscene profits" even though (1) the
total cost of treatment with their drug was just $50 and (2) the company
actually operated at a loss while they were being denounced for obscene
profits. People who know nothing about advertising, nothing about
pharmaceuticals, and nothing about economics have been loudly proclaiming that
the drug companies spend too much on advertising -- and demanding that the
government pass laws based on their ignorance. Today, we take the automobile so much for granted that it is hard to
realize what an expansion of the life of ordinary people it represented. There
was a time when most people lived and died within a 50-mile radius of where they
were born. The automobile opened a whole new world to these people. It also
enabled those living in overcrowded cities to spread out into suburbs and get
some elbow room. Trucks got goods to people more cheaply and ambulances got
people to hospitals to save their lives. Yet who among the people who did this are today regarded as being as
big a hero as Ralph Nader, who put himself on the map with complaints about cars
in general and the Corvair in particular? Hard data on automobile safety and
tests conducted on the Corvair both undermined Nader's claims. But he will
always be a hero to the talkers. So will those who complain about commerce and
industry that have raised our standard of living to levels that our grandparents
would not have dreamed of. Home-ownership is far more widespread among ordinary people today than
in the past because of entrepreneurs who have figured out how to produce more,
bigger and better houses at prices that more and more people could afford. But
can you name any of those entrepreneurs who have been celebrated for their
contributions to their fellow human beings? Probably not. In California, anyone in the business of producing
housing is more likely to be demonized as a "developer," a word that causes
hostile reactions among Californians conditioned to respond negatively -- and
automatically, like Pavlov's dog. As for computers, no one made them more usable by more people around
the world than Microsoft. And no one has been hit with more or bigger lawsuits
as a result. Why can't the talkers leave the doers alone? Perhaps it is because that
would leave the talkers on the sidelines, with their uselessness being painfully
obvious to all, instead of being in the limelight and "making a difference" --
even if that difference is usually negative.
©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc. Contact Thomas Sowell | Read Sowell's biography townhall.com
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