"Certainty and Uncertainty - Trust in Government"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“Certainty and Uncertainty – Trust in Government”
March 30, 2015
“In
this world, nothing is certain, except death and taxes:” A line usually
attributed to Benjamin Franklin and with which it is difficult to argue; though
I can state categorically that I am certainly the son of my mother. On the
other hand, certainty in opinions is usually associated with a mule-like
stubbornness, or unquestioning obeisance – neither a characteristic we would
like to think of as being ours – but ones common among the political and
pontificating classes, the latter of which I admit to being a member.
Curiosity, openness and skepticism are as proper antonyms for certainty as
uncertainty.
“We
live in uncertain times…” is a quote from W. Somerset Maugham’s 1938
autobiography, The Summing Up, and has become boringly ubiquitous. Mr.
Maugham likely got the idea from the old Chinese curse: “May you live in
interesting times,” with “interesting times” being a euphemism for war. We
certainly live in an interesting time. The world is dangerous, manifestly more
so than it was six years ago when our newly elected President was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize, not for what he had done, but for what the committee was certain he would do. That Mr. Obama has
made the world more dangerous adds to uncertainty, raises cynicism and is, in
part, responsible for the diminishing trust in our leaders and institutions.
It
is interesting to observe how the roles played by certainty and uncertainty
have swapped over the past several decades. When I was growing up in the late
1940s and early 1950s most people were certain government could be trusted. After
the Soviets detonated their first Atomic Bomb, in the summer of 1948, MAD, or
mutually assured destruction, became an unwritten policy for peace. The Cold
War was called “cold” for a reason: While there was combat in places like Korea and Vietnam , the two super-powers never
militarily confronted one another. Despite having to periodically dive under
our school desks, people instinctively felt that commonsense would prevail:
that neither country, no matter how heated the dialogue, would be the first to
launch Atomic weapons. Both nations had a stake in the world as it was. Polls in
1960 showed that 70% of Americans trusted their government; providing a patina
of certainty over what was an uncertain world. Today that patina has been
stripped bare, with only 20% of the population trusting government, giving rise
to uncertainty. A recent Gallup
survey noted that dysfunctional government – not jobs or Islamic terrorism –
was the nation’s number one problem.
What
made us uncertain, in those far-away days, were mundane factors that today we accept
as certainties – like not getting a flat tire on a long drive, how to survive a
hot summer’s night when there is no breeze, or whether hot water will flow from
the bathtub spigot marked ‘H.’ A small, but significant segment of the
population could not be assured of shelter or food. Racial segregation made the
lives of African-Americans decidedly uncertain.
Technology
was critical in removing many of those uncertainties and for that we owe thanks
to the creativity and innovation of the human mind. The Supreme Court and
landmark Congressional legislation in the 1950s and ‘60s improved lives for
African-Americans and women. And governmental entitlements removed other
uncertainties; though there has been a price for the latter – an increased
sense of dependency for one. Additionally, in assuming that government will protect
us from life’s challenges, we have become less committed to our communities, as
Robert Putnam showed in his book Bowling Alone. We have become more
self-centered (but not more capable), as can be seen in our love affair with
“selfies.” We protect our children against failure by rewarding them for
participation, not for victories. We shun responsibility. Dependency has
replaced self-reliance.
Ironically,
governmental intrusion did not lead to more trust in Washington ; but it has generated more
certainty on the part of its proponents. The “Life of Julia” was created by
those who were certain that what they were doing would be good for the people,
but the consequence was less trust in the benevolence of government; so the
video was pulled. The same was true of that insufferable man-child, “Pajama
Boy,” poster boy for the Affordable Care Act. Trust in government declined as
its reach became more pervasive. In part, I suspect, that is because the more
important government becomes to the economy, the more vulnerable it is to
corruption and crony capitalism. The United Nations, according to a recent
article in the New Yorker, estimates that corruption adds a ten percent
surcharge to the cost of doing business “in many parts of the world.” That is
true for the United States ;
though perhaps at a lower cost – but perhaps not? According to the World Bank, the
U.S.
ranks 41st in terms of enforcing contracts and 46th in
starting a business. Complexity in regulation and the tax code, which lead
directly to crony capitalism and corruption, adds to uncertainty and decreases
trust.
Education
plays a role. In the past few years, with the cost of education rising and job
opportunities declining, STEM programs (the study of science, technology,
engineering and math) have become the rage. Politicians on both sides of the
aisle are united in attempting to get young people trained in some utilitarian field,
to provide some certainty in terms of making a living. Practicality, it is
assumed, is more critical to one’s financial success than is the study of dead
poets or philosophers. There is some measure of truth in what they say, but the
study of philosophy, for example, is not designed to make one a philosopher. It
is meant to help conceptualize, to compare and to contrast, to think
independently. Writing in Saturday’s Wall Street Journal, Christopher
Scalia, a professor at the University
of Virginia at Wise, wrote
that in terms of unemployment graduates with degrees in the liberal arts were
not statistically worse off than those with degrees in mathematics or the
sciences. But they have learned something different and important. The
professor quoted Thomas Jefferson who understood that a study of the humanities
is linked to the vitality of a democratic government and the survival of a free
people.
From
uncertainty can spring a healthy skepticism, that allows us to question and to
grow; or it can generate doubt, which may emasculate experimentation and advancement.
Uncertainty that stems from a lack of trust, as regards our government, is
damaging, to the nation and to us individually, for it vitiates confidence. We
can never banish uncertainty, any more than we can foresee the future. Nor should
we want to. While blind certainty in government is the path to despotism,
restoring trust in government is a goal worthy of a free people.
Labels: TOTD
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