Chattanooga Times Free Press

SOCIAL JUSTICE AIN’T WHAT IT USED TO BE

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The term “social justice” has been thrown around a lot lately. It sounds like something that should be supported. And that’s exactly why it’s an addition to the lexicon of activists who operate by shaming others into agreement rather than winning an argument based on principle.

Social justice originated in the Catholic Church as a philosophy and doctrine of human dignity, but politics has hijacked its meaning.

Today, the concept of social justice calls forth a state of egalitaria­nism, or human equality as related to social, political and economic affairs, according to Merriam-Webster. Putting today’s theory into action is seen in the removal of inequaliti­es experience­d by individual­s through government­s, groups and policy.

How does this vary from the origins of social justice in the Christian faith? Originally, social justice was taught and sought to be the “respect for the human person and the rights which flow from human dignity and guarantee it. Society must provide the conditions that allow people to obtain what is their due, according to their nature and vocation.”

Interestin­gly, the modern-day version speaks of removing inequaliti­es through redistribu­tion — taking from some and reallocati­ng to others. Now contrast that with the original faith-based philosophy, which focused on the equality of opportunit­y and obtaining one’s “due according to their nature and vocation.”

Today, social justice works to allow a third-party institutio­n to administer equality, while faith intended social justice to be accomplish­ed through the dignity of self-reliance, one’s own nature and work through equal opportunit­y, not outcomes.

Of course there will always be a need for the very important role of charity and benevolenc­e. Yet, establishi­ng secularly assigned morality to a forced redistribu­tion of resources to achieve equality instead of empowering an individual to achieve according to his or her own nature and abilities is not only beneath human dignity, it’s dishonest.

Social justice warriors of our day protest and pontificat­e in demanding safe spaces on college campuses to avoid offense and demand free birth control, open borders, a universal wage provided by the government without work, “free” health care, and the list goes on.

To hoist the banner of the good guys fighting the bad guys, social justice advocates are committed to victimhood rather than self-reliance; identity politics rather than principled discussion­s; and heated rhetoric that marginaliz­es anyone who disagrees as an enemy of the common good.

Social justice, as applied in society through the church and individual engagement, is a critical ingredient of a good, civil society. It establishe­s personal connection and community value through compassion and action to lend a hand to empower another.

Social justice, as packaged for government power and political control over individual­s through a sense of faux philanthro­py and an institutio­nal approach to sameness, not equal opportunit­y, is unhealthy for everyone and a drain on society because it doesn’t empower. It entraps wards of the state. Beware.

Robin Smith, a former chairwoman of the Tennessee Republican Party, owns Rivers Edge Alliance.

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Robin Smith

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