Is Thinking Obsolete?
By Thomas Sowell
Many people in
Europe and the Western Hemisphere are staging angry protests against Israel's
military action in Gaza. One of the talking points against Israel is that far
more Palestinian civilians have been killed by Israeli military attacks than
the number of Israeli civilians killed by the Hamas rocket attacks on Israel
that started this latest military conflict.
Are these
protesters aware that vastly more German civilians were killed by American
bombers attacking Nazi Germany during World War II than American civilians
killed in the United States by Hitler's forces?
Talk show host
Geraldo Rivera says that there is no way Israel is winning the battle for world
opinion. But Israel is trying to win the battle for survival, while surrounded
by enemies. Might that not be more important?
Has any other
country, in any other war, been expected to keep the enemy's civilian
casualties no higher than its own civilian casualties? The idea that Israel
should do so did not originate among the masses but among the educated
intelligentsia.
In an age when
scientists are creating artificial intelligence, too many of our educational
institutions seem to be creating artificial stupidity.
It is much the
same story in our domestic controversies. We have gotten so intimidated by
political correctness that our major media outlets dare not call people who
immigrate to this country illegally "illegal immigrants."
Geraldo Rivera
has denounced the Drudge Report for carrying news stories that show some of the
negative consequences and dangers from allowing vast numbers of youngsters to
enter the country illegally and be spread across the country by the Obama
administration.
Some of these
youngsters are already known to be carrying lice and suffering from disease.
Since there have been no thorough medical examinations of most of them, we have
no way of knowing whether, or how many, are carrying deadly diseases that will
spread to American children when these unexamined young immigrants enter
schools across the country.
The attack against
Matt Drudge has been in the classic tradition of demagogues. It turns questions
of fact into questions of motive. Geraldo accuses Drudge of trying to start a
"civil war."
Back when
masses of immigrants from Europe were entering this country, those with
dangerous diseases were turned back from Ellis Island. Nobody thought they had
a legal or a moral "right" to be in America or that it was mean or
racist not to want our children to catch their diseases.
Even on the
less contentious issue of minimum wage laws, there are the same unthinking
reactions.
Although
liberals are usually gung ho for increasing the minimum wage, there was a
sympathetic front page story in the July 29th San Francisco Chronicle
about the plight of a local non-profit organization that will not be able to
serve as many low-income minority youths if it has to pay a higher minimum
wage. They are seeking some kind of exemption.
Does it not
occur to these people that the very same thing happens when a minimum wage
increase applies to profit-based employers? They too tend to hire fewer
inexperienced young people when there is a minimum wage law.
This is not
breaking news. This is what has been happening for generations in the United
States and in other countries around the world.
One of the few
countries without a minimum wage law is Switzerland, where the unemployment
rate has been consistently less than 4 percent for years. Back in 2003, The
Economist magazine reported that "Switzerland's unemployment neared a
five-year high of 3.9% in February." The most recent issue shows the Swiss
unemployment rate back to a more normal 3.2 percent.
Does anyone
think that having minimum wage laws and high youth unemployment is better? In
fact, does anyone think at all these days?
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