Boston Herald

We should be booming, instead U.S. is stagnating

- By Ben Shapiro Ben Shapiro is a syndicated columnist.

This week, the Biden administra­tion received just the latest slap in the face from cruel reality: An economic report showing just 194,000 jobs added in the month of September, short of the 500,000 jobs forecast by most economists. The unemployme­nt rate dove to 4.8% from 5.2% — not as a result of job gains, but as a result of more and more Americans dumping out of the work force. Meanwhile, inflation continued to pick up steam, with domestic labor shortages exacerbati­ng supply-chain bottleneck­s.

How should we explain the bizarre spectacle of a nation that should be booming stagnating instead?

For the Biden team, the answers range from the completely idiotic (lack of government stimulus, after the greatest single spending binge in world history) to the merely foolish (the delta variant, the caseload from which has taken a nosedive). The actual answer, however, is simple: We have spent a year training Americans to believe that work is alternatel­y unsafe, unavailabl­e or unnecessar­y.

First, we have trained vaccinated Americans to believe that they are unsafe. According to a CBS News poll in July, just 48% of those who were unvaccinat­ed said they were worried about infection from the delta variant, compared with 72% of fully vaccinated Americans — this despite the fact that vaccinated Americans are rarely hospitaliz­ed and nearly never die from COVID19. Yet Biden himself continues to trot out the lie that the vaccinated are not safe from the unvaccinat­ed: In early September, he pushed for a national workplace vaccine mandate, claiming that it was necessary in order to “protect vaccinated workers from unvaccinat­ed coworkers.” But that’s precisely what the vaccine was for. It’s no surprise, then, that so many vaccinated people are instead hesitant to go back to the office.

Second, we have barred the unvaccinat­ed from going back to work. Biden suggested that vaccine mandates would heighten employment by making the vaccinated feel safe. But that obviously hasn’t worked. Thousands of Americans have been laid off thanks to vaccine mandates, including in crucial industries like health care and air travel.

Most importantl­y, we have trained Americans to believe that work is unnecessar­y. As jobs go unfilled, a certain contingent of politician­s celebrates — they say that workers have been unchained from their jobs, and that this is a net positive. In August 2020, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., told Vice, “Only in America, when the president tweets about liberation, does he mean ‘go back to work’ … I think a lot of people should just say no. We’re not going back to work.” Paying people to stay home, in this view, is merely incentiviz­ing businesses to pay more for fewer hours, thus making life better for those who choose to work; for everyone else, the government dole.

Now, most Americans have rejected this last lesson. Most Americans want to work; most Americans are in fact working. Hence the unpopulari­ty of the Biden administra­tion spending plans, which most Americans feel artificial­ly suppress economic growth and stifle opportunit­y.

Biden promised he wouldn’t shut down the economy or the country — he’d shut down the virus. Instead, thanks to his progressiv­e priorities, he’s made the pandemic a problem with no logical endpoint in sight, shutting down the economy and the country in the process — all in pursuit of his transforma­tional vision. The current labor shortage is a feature of the plan, not a bug.

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