A truly fascinating AP article was published by The Advocate on Tuesday. Its focus is the connection between religion and giving, but the political correlations and implications are provocative and defining.
"BOSTON (AP) — States with the least religious residents are also the stingiest about giving money to charity, a new study on the generosity of Americans suggests.
"The study, released Monday by the Chronicle of Philanthropy, found that residents in states where religious participation is higher than the rest of the nation, particularly in the South, gave the greatest percentage of their discretionary income to charity...."
Red States v. Blue States: Who Gives More |
Attempting to provide a balanced view, the AP story contains the following illuminating explanation/rebuttal to the study's religious conclusion:
"Alan Wolfe, a political science professor at Boston College [pardon my editorial emphasis], said it's wrong to link a state's religious makeup with its generosity.
"'People in less religious states are giving in a different way by being more willing to pay higher taxes so the government can equitably distribute superior benefits,' Wolfe said. 'And the distribution is based purely on need, rather than religious affiliation or other variables, said Wolfe, also head of the college's Boisi Center for Religion and Public Life.'
Wolfe said people in less religious states 'view the tax money they're paying not as something that's forced upon them, but as a recognition that they belong with everyone else, that they're citizens in the common good. ... I think people here believe that when they pay their taxes, they're being altruistic.'"
Here we have the quintessential expression of the liberal ideal. Government is better at spending our money than we are. It is fairer - in fact, better - if the taxpayer just lets government collect all of the money and distribute it.
This statement would have sounded insane to the voters who elected Ronald Reagan in 1980. No candidate, regardless of their belief in the idea, would have dared say it out loud. Today, however, it's apparently a viable political concept. Whether Americans actually believe this or not is, in fact, the defining political question of this era in our history.