As we see the liberal agenda collapse in the coming years as the pendulum swings back toward the middle and then toward the far right, America will finally enter a healing phase. It will be painful but the excess baggage will be weeded out. Those with skills and the desire to work will be OK even if greatly inconvenienced at times. Those without skills who look for others to sustain their lives will wither and die. I will not shed any tears for them because they are a burden on humanity and a threat to our natural individual security.
“If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat. For we hear that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busybodies.”
--Apostle Paul
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by Michael Quinn Sullivan
I don’t think I have ever
urgently needed someone with a Ph.D. Yet in the cultural economy of the 21st
century, we celebrate the pursuit of even meaningless degrees, and dismiss
critical professions once known as the trades. The cultural elite would have
us believe it is better to be unemployed than do real work that serves
others.
We have turned the notion
of honorable work upside-down, devaluing practical labor and exalting trivial
knowledge. We celebrate someone pursuing an advanced degree at Texas A&M
getting a special certification in Gender Studies, but look down on the high
school kid who wants to be a mechanic.
Our schools subtly – and sometimes not-so-subtly –
communicate to kids that anything less than earning a four-year college
degree makes them something less than useful.
As a result, those
students find themselves pressured into loading up on unnecessary debt that
mainly purchases four years of suffering through indoctrination from leftist
college professors.
The free market operates
best when people are working at their passions with their naturally gifted
skills. Conversely, when individuals are pressured to ignore their skills and
talents to appease an elitist mandate, everyone suffers.
Does anyone ever urgently
need someone with a graduate-level certification in Gender Studies? Yet we’ve
all had moments when we were willing to pay a king’s ransom to get an honest
plumber or roofer to the house.
The hostility of the
educational and cultural elite, subtly belittling individuals if they don’t
seek a college degree, has a devastating effect on individuals and society.
None of this is
particularly new; it’s just recycled garbage from the past. The ancient
Greeks believed labor was a curse. Aristotle taught it was preferable to be
an unemployed beggar, so one could be devoted to contemplation.
The Bible turned such
thinking upside down. It begins with the understanding human beings are
created in God’s image, and called to practical work. The Old Testament
placed a high value on what Aristotle would see as “menial” jobs: Adam and
Eve were told to work the land; King David was a shepherd. In the New
Testament, Jesus was a carpenter who used the examples of daily work as the
springboards for His teaching, rather than subjects to be avoided.
After the old lie reared
its ugly head in the Middle Ages, 16th century Christian reformer John Calvin
reclaimed the biblical doctrine of the value of work. He held that all work,
in all professions, is glorifying to God.
But that elitist Greek lie
keeps coming back. Public policy incentivizes young adults to take on massive
debt to earn economically – and even socially – meaningless degrees unrelated
to the jobs they wish to pursue. We have adopted policies that make it more
advantageous to follow Aristotle in the handout line, than join the Apostle
Paul as a productive tent-maker.
Indeed, Paul was
unapologetically clear on the subject in his second letter to the church in
Thessalonica: “If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat. For we hear
that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busybodies.”
Many of our social and
political problems can be attributed to those idle busybodies. In a republic
of sovereign, self-governing citizens, each of us should be about the high
calling of productive, daily work.
Real, productive work –
meeting real needs – should be celebrated. All work is meaningful, because in
our work we serve others with the gifts and skills given to us by God.
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