The Moral High Ground

Megan McArdle (yes, I’ve been reading the Atlantic today) lets the air out of the redistribution-is-charity balloon:

It is common to hear Democrats/progressives complain that Republicans/conservatives/libertarians are selfish because they want to cut taxes instead of spending that money on national health insurance or expanded welfare benefits or some other social program.

But this makes absolutely no sense. Democrats are not advocating spending their own money on the poor; they’re advocating spending the money of a very small group of voters who lean Republican. One might argue that this very small group of voters is selfish, but they are not the majority, or even a plurality, of Republicans staunchly opposed to taxes. Or other people opposed to taxes.

…The majority of people opposed to purchasing the higher-taxes/lower-social-spending combo pack may be wrong on some utilitarian basis, but whatever their sins, they are not the sin of selfishness.

Yet public debate often features an underlying moralistic current in which Democrats act as if they have captured the moral high ground on matters of the public purse–as if advocating public charity were some lesser form of engaging in private charity. It isn’t.

This, of course, hasn’t stopped any Democrat from using "for the children!," and the implication that comes with it that Republicans are just miserly, uncharitable people, like a big, spiked baseball bat on the GOP.