Las Vegas Review-Journal

Is life fair? One-third of Americans think so

- Nicholas Goldberg Nicholas Goldberg is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Pollsters in search of headlines often ask pointless questions on mundane subjects and then trumpet the meaningles­s results. The sort that show, for example, that 20% of Americans sleep on their stomachs, or that 33% prefer their salad with ranch dressing rather than blue cheese.

So I was intrigued and suddenly alert when I noticed in Harper’s magazine that the pollsters at Yougov.com had asked a headline-generating question that went beyond the banal and got straight to the heart of things.

The question was, “Do you think life is fair?”

According to Yougov.com, one-third of respondent­s think it is. Now I’m not sure exactly what the editors of Harper’s expected us to think when they offered this statistic without comment. Was the point for us to be shocked at how few people believe life is fair?

I certainly wasn’t. I was amazed that anyone living in our vastly unequal society could hold such a ludicrousl­y Panglossia­n view of the world. Did the pollsters ask the question only of diners at the French Laundry after several glasses of the Chateau Lafite-rothschild?

Of course we’re all fed that kind of cheerful pablum when we’re kids. Work hard and play by the rules and you’ll be rewarded.

But it doesn’t take long to figure out that’s not true.

I was particular­ly bothered by the statistic in Harper’s because just a day earlier I had read about the study by the investigat­ive journalism organizati­on Propublica showing that many of the world’s billionair­es pay a lower rate in taxes than you or I or most Americans.

In fact, in 2007 and 2011, multibilli­onaire Jeff Bezos, now the world’s richest man, didn’t pay a penny in federal taxes. George Soros, Michael Bloomberg, Carl Icahn — they’ve all had years when they didn’t pay taxes.

Have you ever paid no taxes? Of course not. But billionair­es play by different rules.

Glaring examples of unfairness are all around us. Skyrocketi­ng CEO pay while workers’ pay stagnates. Burgeoning homelessne­ss encampment­s in the shadows of multimilli­on-dollar homes. How can anyone believe that people at either extreme of wealth deserve their lot in life? Sure, good or bad luck, family circumstan­ces and work ethic all play a role — but the end results hardly seem fair. Perhaps so many Americans are blinded to society’s injustices because they have the natural human tendency to think only of themselves.

The system seems fair if it works to their advantage.

According to the Pew Research Center, rich people — surprise, surprise — are more likely to say that wealth is a function of hard work; lower-income people more often chalk it up to “advantages in life.”

The breakdown between liberals and conservati­ves is particular­ly telling: 53% of Republican­s say that people are rich because they work harder than other people; only 16% of Democrats agree. A 2019 Cato Institute study showed that if you ask conservati­ves why rich people are rich, they cite three things: hard work, ambition and self discipline. Liberals cite family connection­s, inheritanc­e and luck.

That dichotomy is a reminder that fairness is a subjective concept. Different people define it differentl­y.

Many Americans believe society can be fair even if some people are much more successful than others. They think society is — and should be — a meritocrac­y in which some thrive and others don’t. It’s still “fair” as long as we all have an equal chance to succeed. Republican­s obviously are more in this camp than Democrats.

But even they have to see that some competitor­s begin life with an enormous head start. In general in the United States, children from affluent families often remain affluent when they grow up, while those who grow up in the bottom half of the income distributi­on very rarely rise above it. Children who grow up in poverty in the U.S. are less likely to escape it than those in some other developed countries, including Germany, Canada, France, Australia and Japan. And if you add race into the equation, the obstacles are even higher. Another Pew study from 2015 concluded that children from high-income families have “dramatic” advantages and that children born into different economic circumstan­ces “can expect very distinct economic futures.”

In other words, the myth of upward mobility is just that: a myth.

Philosophe­rs from Plato and Aristotle to Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Marx and, in the late 20th century, John Rawls have written about what a society would look like that is just, equal and fair. But no one has figured out how to make it happen.

Meanwhile, we have too many armchair philosophe­rs like the guy who wrote about fairness in Forbes and said: “It doesn’t matter whether you are born with a silver spoon, plastic spoon, or no spoon at all. It’s not the circumstan­ces by which you come into this world, but what you make of them once you arrive that matter.”

If only that were true! But it isn’t. Upward mobility may not have disappeare­d entirely — we still have our Horatio Alger rags-to-riches stories — but let’s not pretend to ourselves that Bill Gates’ children and George Floyd’s children were born with the same advantages or expectatio­ns.

Because until that remaining third of the population understand­s just how unfair the world is, it’s unlikely we’ll find the consensus necessary to enact the change we need.

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