Getting used to it.....
Back at Millville Grade School, my old buddy
Stinky Wilmont was one that would try about anything. Cigarettes or chewing
tobacco, moonshine or green persimmons, Stinky was willing to give it a shot.
Sometimes it took more than one try. He said he thought a person could get used
to about anything if he gave it enough time. I suppose he was right about that,
but I was never convinced getting used to something was always in our best
interest.
I don’t know if Stinky would appreciate the
sentiment or not, but I thought about him the other day when I saw a dead
buzzard in the road on my way home from work. Several years ago, buzzards
usually lived in the woods, and it was hard to get close enough to one to even
tell what they looked like. Then a few
years ago, a flock of them took up residence in the pine trees in a neighbor’s
front yard at the edge of Hagerstown.
While they remained skittish around people
and vehicles for a while, after a time they grew more accustomed to both, and
instead of flying away from the road kill du jour at the first sight of a car
approaching, they would continue to dine until it got closer and closer before
they would abandon their meal and fly off, and eventually reached the point of
tolerance where they would simply hop to the edge of the road as the vehicle
passed, and then hop back to the table, such as it was. You might think that
after a buzzard saw a few of his buddies on the other end of the food chain, he
might become a little more skittish again, but so far that hasn’t seemed to be
the case.
I’ve also noticed that people can get used to
government the same way those buzzards got used to cars. I don’t think it
happened all at once. Kind of like the income tax. The government used to
introduce a minimal income tax on certain citizens in order to temporarily fund
a war or some other special occasion, and then remove it when it wasn’t needed
anymore. Then in 1913, the government decided to make the income tax permanent.
It started out at 1% on certain incomes, and like all government programs, grew
in scope and complexity, until it reached where it is today. People and
businesses stand quietly as the government whisks by, taking a third of what
they earn. I’m pretty sure if the first rate would have been 35%, we wouldn’t
have just sat there and let it happen like it did.
I don’t think it ruffled our feathers enough
when the government introduced Medicare, but then again, it was just health
insurance for old people that needed it at the time, and it only cost about
$1.50 a month. By the time it morphed into what it is today, the single largest
contributor to the federal deficit with unfunded liabilities of nearly $40
trillion, we had grown so accustomed to it, that, like the income tax, we
couldn’t even consider that there might be a better way of doing things.
In the last several years, we’ve become used
to a seemingly unlimited federal government, an incomprehensible federal debt,
an ever increasing loss of individual freedoms, and a foreign policy that has
led us into perpetual war. Pretty soon, because of that unlimited government
and its incomprehensible debt, those of us who pay taxes are going to have to
get used to paying even more taxes, and those of us who depend on the
government to take care of us are going to have to learn to get by on a lot
less.
I suppose Stinky might have been right. Maybe
we can get used to about anything.
But I get the feeling the buzzards are
circling, and I’m not sure we can get used to that. And I’m not sure it’s in
our best interest if we do.
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