Hamilton Journal News

Biden wants to usher in a new era of big government

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

When I began my work 25 years ago, my vision for fixing our poor, broken communitie­s was driven by my belief in America and what made it successful.

It’s what I call the 3 C’s: the principles of Christiani­ty, the virtues of capitalism and the rule of law outlined in our Constituti­on.

After the civil rights movement, big government was deemed necessary to turn poor communitie­s around.

When then-President Johnson affixed his signature to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the given assumption was that, although there was new law protecting freedom — civil rights — for all, low-income Black Americans were not prepared to be free and capable of being free.

A new era of big government ushered welfare-state socialism into these communitie­s. Despite tens of trillions of federal expenditur­es targeted toward these communitie­s since the 1960s, poverty rates are practicall­y unchanged. But major new problems were created — the decimation of families. Single-parent homes and out-of-wedlock births have tripled.

Now, today, President Biden and his party aspire to the opposite of what I have fought for.

Instead of wanting to bring the capitalism of the healthy parts of America to the broken parts of the country, they want to bring the failed welfare-state socialism of the broken parts of the country to the rest of the country.

The $6 trillion spending blowout of the first 100 days of the Biden administra­tion, sold under the guise of COVID-19 recovery, has been about using the crisis to sell a new era of welfare-state big-government socialism that will fundamenta­lly change our country forever.

The U.S. economy was already on the way to recovery in the latter half of last year, and in the first quarter of 2021, it surged 6.4%, taking our gross domestic product almost to where it was preCOVID-19.

Each year, the Fraser Institute publishes its Economic Freedom of the World report, which consistent­ly shows nations with more economic freedom — smaller government, lower taxes, less regulation — have the highest incomes and lowest poverty rates.

In his address to Congress, the president assured the American people that he can finance all this big government by getting the wealthy and big corporatio­ns to pay their “fair share.”

But facts about who foots the tax bill tell a different story.

According to the nonpartisa­n Tax Foundation, in 2018, the top 1% of all taxpayers paid 40.1% of all taxes. The top 50% of taxpayers paid 97.1% of all federal taxes. The bottom 50% paid the last 2.9%.

What about corporatio­ns?

Corporate income taxes simply punish labor with lower wages and customers with higher prices. Boston University economist Laurence Kotlikoff estimates a 0%corporate tax rate, which would focus taxes only on individual­s, would increase wages 12%.

Giving the nation a civics lesson worthy of one of our failing public schools, President Biden used the opening words of the preamble to the Constituti­on — “We the People ...” — to justify big government.

But that preamble says that the Constituti­on was establishe­d to “secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.”

Sen. Tim Scott, in his response, noted what he experience­s, and what I have experience­d all my working life: Blacks who speak about freedom and biblical values are met with derision and ridicule.

Scott spoke truth. America is about freedom under God. Achieving this is today’s great challenge.

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