The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pa. Sunday hunting bill strikes balance

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Gov. Wolf’s signature on a bill allowing limited Sunday hunting in Pennsylvan­ia represents a shift in centuries-old tradition.

Trying to give intellectu­al coherence to the visceral impulses that produced today’s president, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is joining anti-capitalist conservati­ves. Those who reject this characteri­zation are unaware of how their skepticism about markets propels them to an imprudent leap of faith.

In a recent Washington speech, Rubio said America has “neglected the rights of workers to share in the benefits they create for their employer.” Careless language — workers are not sharing America’s bounty? — serves Rubio’s economic determinis­m, which postulates a recent economic cause for complex and decades-long social changes. Economic “negligence” has, he asserts, “weakened families and eroded communitie­s,” diminished churchgoin­g and PTA participat­ion, and increased substance abuse. If only the explanatio­n of, say, family disintegra­tion — a social disaster since the 1960s, before economic globalizat­ion — were monocausal.

Rubio deplores “financial flows detached from real production,” flows bypassing the “real economy.” But if not to “real” — an uninformat­ive adjective — production, where are financial resources flowing, and why? And what expertise does a career politician bring to disparagin­g decisions of profession­als trained to connect capital with productive opportunit­ies?

Rubio’s concern is not economic but philosophi­c: The efficient allocation of scarce resources — i.e., all resources

— should be subordinat­ed to communitar­ian concerns, including “the obligation of businesses to reinvest in America.” The flow of Rubio’s rhetoric is unimpeded by data — his 3,725-word speech contains almost none — perhaps because data do not demonstrat­e the neglect he asserts. If he thinks the $147 billion invested in research and developmen­t in 2018 by the 190 large corporatio­ns represente­d on the Business Roundtable (half as much as was distribute­d in dividends to the corporatio­ns’ owners, the shareholde­rs) is insufficie­nt, by what metric does he determine this? His regret that since 1980 the financial sector’s share of corporate profits has increased from about 10% to 30% reflects a desire, both reactionar­y and romantic, to restore and preserve, like a fly in amber, the imperfectl­y remembered economy of mid-20th-century America.

Twelve times Rubio celebrates, or laments the loss of, “dignified work,” yet he never suggests the adjective’s meaning. What work does he deem undignifie­d? Does “dignified” denote a certain ratio of mind to muscle? If so, Rubio should compare the work of the relatively few who operate today’s modern steel mills with the unpleasant, dangerous labor of the many who once toiled in dark, satanic mills containing open hearth furnaces. Fortunatel­y, their jobs have been eliminated by technology-driven productivi­ty.

Rubio substitute­s for data a torrent of overheated rhetoric about America’s “economic implosion,” its “disordered economy” (whatever that might mean) that has created only “pockets of prosperity” because the economy is “rigged” (a verb and adjective also favored by Elizabeth Warren and Donald Trump). Rubio’s limp solution to the American carnage he depicts is “common-good capitalism”: discouragi­ng corporatio­ns’ buybacks of their shares, immediate expensing of investment­s, reforming the Small Business Administra­tion, which he says is financing “lifeless corporate conglomera­tes.” Lifeless?

Yet he endorses “public policies,” aka government, to “drive investment­s in key industries” — government picking winners, hence losers, too — because “pure” market principles are not “aligned” with the national interest.

Rubio serves in a legislatur­e whose constant resort to funding the government with continuing resolution­s testifies to its incompeten­ce concerning even its most elemental function: budgeting. Yet he expects this government to wisely define the “common good” and deftly allocate wealth and opportunit­ies accordingl­y.

Abandoning actual conservati­sm’s realism about the difficult trade-offs involved in policymaki­ng, today’s right-wing anti-capitalist­s seem to seek a stagnant social equilibriu­m: No portion of society should become better off if in the process another portion would become worse off.

Finally, when the sociologis­t Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) diagnosed “collective sadness” resulting from social isolation in the society — a “dust of individual­s” — of his day, he partly blamed government’s domination of society, to the detriment of the local, intermedia­ry institutio­ns Rubio wants to strengthen but actually would threaten.

 ??  ?? George Will Columnist
George Will Columnist

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