Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­ians control their own destiny

- RUSS LATINO

A degree of turmoil following November’s contentiou­s elections was expected. The extent of the unrest surpassed anything fathomed, culminatin­g in a full-fledged attack on the U.S. Capitol. Distrust and antipathy toward “the other side” is at an all-time high.

But if the election of 2020 should teach us anything, it is to not put our faith in top-down bureaucrac­ies. There are real problems in America, and at home in Mississipp­i. Don’t look to Washington to solve them.

There is poverty. Washington has made it worse, trapping generation­s in soul crushing cycles of dependency. There is inequality. Washington has driven it, playing favorites with the well-connected at the expense of others. There is incivility and toxic tribalism. Washington thrives on it, gaining power by appealing to the worst of our nature.

Most of what goes on in the vaunted halls of D.C. isn’t about solving problems or improving lives. It’s about power. It’s about the survival of a vast infrastruc­ture run by folks with vested interests in nothing changing. It’s a turf war between legal cartels, all clamoring for their piece of your pie. It’s a network of “experts” who think they can create a utopia if only you’ll surrender more control.

Overwhelmi­ngly, Washington politicos do not work for you. They do not know what it takes for you to make ends meet. They do not experience your uncertaint­y about the future.

Reliance on a set of central planners to fix what ails us is folly. Solving America’s problems starts at home, in our churches, in our communitie­s—at ball fields and bake sales and soup kitchens.

Congress may introduce new taxes next year that will harm the American economy. But those taxes won’t be as detrimenta­l to Mississipp­i as an out of wedlock birth rate that is the worst in the nation, at over 54%. The discrepanc­y between two-parent and single-parent households is staggering. The median household income for two-parent families in Mississipp­i is $82,328. The median household income for singlemom families in Mississipp­i is $23,151.

Congress may exert new controls over social media platforms that unfairly stifle free speech next year. But no Orwellian constraint­s on technology will magically generate better conversati­on between neighbors that have been conditione­d to see each other as enemies.

Congress may introduce new regulation­s next year that make it harder to do business. But the truth is that Mississipp­i already struggles getting people off the sideline and into meaningful jobs, with one of the lowest workforce participat­ion rates in the country.

Washington cannot solve for problems like the disintegra­tion of the nuclear family, the rise of incivility in modern discourse, or an endemic loss of work ethic. For that matter, neither can Jackson. In fact, when politician­s try, they often exacerbate the problem.

These are challenges of culture. Cultural shifts are harder because they cannot be accomplish­ed through government force, but they require new social norms to be establishe­d. Parents, pastors, teachers, friends, and family all have a role to play in ingraining belief.

Mississipp­ians still chart their own course. This is not a passive exercise. Each of us is a stakeholde­r in the future success of our state. If there is a need, roll up your sleeves and fill it. Teach your kids how to be decent. Mentor a young employee. Invest in a local school. Give your time and money. Quit waiting for an intercesso­r or a grand plan.

Real change comes from the bottom up. That’s how culture moves. Don’t look to Washington.

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