Greed is evil, but is money? Remember the saying, "The love of
money is the root of all evil?" I think that's even scriptural. Here the
word "love" is key as in "love of money." That "love of money" is what
leads to greed, not the money or having money itself.
Money can
lead one to being evil but having money doesn't make everyone who has it
evil. Only evil people are greedy with money. We have plenty of wealthy
people who are not greedy. Some wealthy people are among the kindest
and most generous and charitable among us. There is nothing evil or
greedy about them. Still, others blessed with wealth do meet that evil
and greedy profile that all good people despise.
A good analogy is
those leftists who declare that guns are evil. Guns don't kill but some
people who have guns do kill. However, the overwhelming majority of gun
owners are not killers. There are probably far more violent people who
don't own guns then those who do.
They're also plenty of people of
modest means who are extremely greedy and selfish. Most of us know
people like that and have witnessed and/or experienced it far to often.
It's about what is in your heart, not what is in your possession. We
ought never lose sight of that.
Money is a necessity but like food
and water, too much of it will make you fat and unhealthy and will
eventually kill you, but not enough of it can kill you too. Think about
it, it's true.
Here's how I view it. Greed is bad. Ambition is
good. Charity is good but "transferring wealth" is bad. Charity is
freely giving to the needy and destitute but "transferring wealth" is
just plain ol' theft through legal coercion and mandate. It's repugnant
and evil. It is the essence of "greed."
It's not wrong to aspire
to a better life. It is wrong to aspire to a better life at someone
else's expense (i.e. transferring wealth) instead of taking advantage of
opportunity and earning it yourself. If you didn't earn it, you don't
deserve it and you are certainly NOT entitled to it. If you get
something that you didn't earn then show a lot of gratitude because your
benefit is a gift, not a right. An obvious exception is children, all
of whom are dependent minors who always deserve to be cared for. They
will grow in to their responsibility like everyone else.
Those who
are poor through no fault of their own should be helped. That's what
genuine charity is all about. Good people don't object to such charity,
they embrace it and give freely and often. It's the "Christian thing" to
do. However, if you dropped out of school, became a drug addict or an
alcoholic, choose to break the law and develop a criminal record, got
bad grades and flunked out of school because you were to lazy to study,
if injured yourself because you elected to do something stupid, if you
got an STD because you were promiscuous, or if you failed to show up for
work or didn't earn your pay while at work and got fired, etc. etc.,
then that's on you. Your bad luck was self-made. It's your own damn
fault. You don't deserve charity. The only thing you earned and deserve
is a whole lot of ridicule and a good swift kick in the posterior.
Perhaps you deserve a "second chance" or even a "third chance" to "earn"
and get it right, but you are not entitled to anything.
To take
from hard working Americans who weren't lazy, who did study hard, who
played by the rules, obeyed the law, who saved and sacrificed, who had a
good work ethic, who served their country, who behaved responsibly,
etc. etc., and then force them to "share their wealth" with these others
who elected to do the opposite is both immoral and sinful. It is wholly
unfair and completely unjust.
Inheritance is neither earned or
deserved although far to many people believe that it is. If you feel
"entitled" to your inheritance then you are an especially greedy person.
You may have a legal right to your inheritance in much the same way as a
lottery winner has a right to his or her winnings, but neither of your
earned it. Both of you just got lucky. You are not "entitled" to it.
With two exceptions that I will discuss later, entitlements should not
be "won," the should always be "earned." An example of earned is a
pension "earned" for work. If you did the work, met your contractual
obligations, then you are indeed "entitled" to the benefit.
Think
about this, just because your parents worked hard and earned a small
fortune, how does that in anyway "entitle" you to what they have? It's
not yours. You didn't earn any of it. How dare you think that you have a
birthright to it?
Certainly, if your parents want to "will" their
fortune to someone that is entirely there business. It's their money so
they can do what ever they want with it. Just be mindful that
inheritance is still a gift, not an entitlement, and should be received
with gratitude. You don't deserve boasting rights if you become rich
through inheritance. Pride like that is a sin. You should feel
especially humbled when you receive such good fortune.
Of course,
the state has even less right to your parents' wealth then you do. For
this reason alone inheritance is a good thing, no doubt about it.
Without inheritance anything left behind by an industrious and
successful hard workers would end up in the coffers of government. There
it would quickly disappear, spent by corrupt politicians who clearly
didn't earn any of it, and who will never feel a shred of gratitude or
humility upon receiving it. Politicians, with very few exceptions, have
largely become among the most selfish, corrupt and greedy group of
people in human history.
People who paid in to social security and
MEDICARE are "entitled" to compensation when they reach the appropriate
age. They earned it. They fulfilled their obligations as citizens to
both trust funds. That makes it an "entitlement." However, those who did
not contribute to the social security or MEDICARE trust funds should
not be in anyway entitled to social security compensation or MEDICARE.
If they are indigent and sick, let them receive MEDICAID, a welfare
program, to set them aside from everyone else who actually "earned"
their entitlement.
Whenever congress or the president "transfers
money" out of the social security trust fund, or the MEDICARE trust
fund, to anyone who did not contribute to these funds it is nothingness
than an outright act of theft and it should be identified as such. Any
law that legalizes such theft should be immediately replaced with new
moral and ethical laws that hold lawmakers criminally accountable and
civilly liable whenever they do this.
Even when one does the right
thing, works hard and raises his or her kids to be good, decent law
abiding citizens who contribute to the country and our economy instead
of sponging off of it, that parent has no monetary claim if their child
becomes successful. All you "deserve" is a sincere "pat on the back," an
"Atta Boy" or an "Atta Girl," for being a good parent. They also get
the joy that should naturally come from your child's success and the
comfort in knowing you don't have to worry about them.
Being a
good parent and raising your kids right is your duty as a parent. No
child deserves less from his or her parent. Parenting was your job;
parenting is a hard job to be sure, and sometimes even a thankless job,
but remember your child didn't employ you to become their parent, you
did that. You're being a good parent in no way entitles you to share in
your child's fame or fortune. You earned yours and they earned theirs.
You both earned and received what you deserved - end of story.
We
see so many parents and other family members "latch on" to the success
of a family member as if it were their own success and they feel a sense
of "entitlement" to their family members success, again as if it were
their own. Common sense tells you that is not true. Sometimes a parent
will say, "I gave him/her birth" or "I raised him/her" so they couldn't
have done it without me. That's pure BS! If that were true then all
their children would have enjoyed the same success without fail. If that
parent knew how to "do it," to become successful, then they would have
done it for themselves and they would not need to share in the success
and prosperity of their child as if it were their own.
Sure, some
parents genuinely go above and beyond, even labor and sacrifice to help
their child succeed, often under very difficult circumstances. That's
different. Those parents deserve more then just a little gratitude.
Their child knows it too. He/she deeply loves them for that. Out of
gratitude their child will usually do everything they can for that
parent even though the parent doesn't ask for anything or expect
anything. Even then, it's a gift, not an entitlement. If the successful
child wants to voluntarily "share his/her wealth" with their parents or
other family members out of "gratitude," then that's appropriate. But
for the parent to feel "entitled " to a portion of what their adult
child earned is "greed" at a shameful extreme. Siblings and extended
family don't have a birthright to an anything. They didn't "earn" any
part of their family members success and are therefore "undeserving" and
not "entitled." They should just feel happy for their relatives'
success.
This is also how liberal progressives relate to our
country and it's all wrong. When the country as a whole is successful
they seem think they have a "birth right" or a "right of citizenship" to
"share in the wealth' even if they didn't do a anything to contribute
to that success. They're just a bunch of freeloading leeches. That's
wrong! That's socialism!
Unfortunately, that is also precisely
what President Obama is trying to do. It's what liberal's and socialists
routinely do. They want other peoples money and they want to spend or
transfer others peoples money, but they are rarely generous with there
own wealth. Note that charitable contributions by President Obama and
Vice-President Biden in 2008 was not only laughable, it also proved to
be an embarrassment for both of them. They seemingly knew little or
nothing about "personal generosity." They only knew how to spend and
share "your money."
Naturally those who earned what they have
object to such "transference of wealth" at their expense. As explained
before, the involuntary "transfer of wealth" is the essence of "greed."
It also helps to explain President Obama's sudden and massive drop in
the polls.
We must break free from this trend toward socialism as
demonstrated through this horrific spending and "transference of
wealth." We must free our society of this "entitlement mentality." Here
are what Americans are actually "entitled" to and nothing more or less:
1. Equal opportunity
2. All the freedoms and rights that are guaranteed in our constitution and bill of rights.
2. All the freedoms and rights that are guaranteed in our constitution and bill of rights.
Nothing else is or should be an entitlement for any American unless it is "earned."
///END///
Author/Poet Biographical Sketch: Ed Coet is a retired US Army
officer and professional educator. Currently the editor of the Blue Fog
Journal, Ed Coet is also a widely published freelance writer and poet.
Ed's short stories and poems were published in over 30 magazines and
journals world wide. Ed's anthology credits include Namaste Fiji - The
International Anthology of Poetry Book, The "Breaking Silences" Poetry
Book Collection, the 2007 Scars Poetry Collection Book - We The Poet's,
"A Hudson View" Poetry Digest - Winter 2008 International Collection and
South African Poet's Printery's, "Tonight, An Anthology of World Love
Poetry." Ed Coet's book, "Poet Coet," is now available at major on-line
book outlets such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/3527629

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