By Eddie Howell
William Graham Sumner
[I am re-publishing this article from November 2009 because I feel the issues discussed are very relevant in
this election season when Democrats/Socialists are making such wild leftist promises]
In this article, I quote rather freely from William Graham Sumner’s
essay, “The Forgotten Man.” It is well worth reading the whole essay,
and whether you agree with Sumner or not, you can see that his position
is reasoned and consistent. He describes the person who is truly
forgotten in all the government’s glorious spending programs to benefit
the “less fortunate,” the various “petted classes,” as Sumner called
them.
William Graham Sumner (1840-1910) was born in New Jersey,
moved with his family to Connecticut, where he attended public schools
and Yale College. “After graduation, he studied ancient languages and
history at Göttingen (1864) and theology and philosophy at Oxford
(1866). The following year he was appointed tutor at Yale and then was
ordained in the Protestant Episcopal Church. In 1869 he left Yale to be
rector of churches in New York City and Morristown, N. J. In 1872 he
became the first professor of political and social science at Yale - a
position he long held.” He was a sociologist and a proponent of
free-market capitalism and severe critic of government social programs
and imperialism. His major work was Folkways, analyzing social life in terms of mores, institutions and values. [1]
The
Forgotten Man (1883) is described in his essay of that name. His
Forgotten Man is still very much the forgotten one today, the one, C,
who, when A and B get together to decide what should be done for the
suffering X, is compelled by the resulting law to also do for X what A
and B have determined. He is never thought of, yet he is the one who
sacrifices and pays for the “help” that is to be given to X.
Who Are We “Helping”? And Who Pays for It?
Sumner writes:
“The
notion is accepted as if it were not open to any question that if you
help the inefficient and vicious you may gain something for society or
you may not, but that you lose nothing. This is a complete mistake.
Whatever capital you divert to the support of a shiftless and
good-for-nothing person is so much diverted from some other employment,
and that means from somebody else. I would spend any conceivable amount of zeal and eloquence if I possessed it to try to make people grasp this idea.
Capital is force. If it goes one way it cannot go another. If you give a
loaf to a pauper you cannot give the same loaf to a laborer. Now this
other man who would have got it but for the charitable sentiment which
bestowed it on a worthless member of society is the Forgotten Man. The
philanthropists and humanitarians have their minds all full of the
wretched and miserable whose case appeals to compassion, attacks the
sympathies, takes possession of the imagination, and excites the
emotions. They push on towards the quickest and easiest remedies and
they forget the real victim.
“Now who is the Forgotten Man?
He is the simple, honest laborer, ready to earn his living by
productive work. We pass him by because he is independent,
self-supporting, and asks no favors. He does not appeal to the emotions
or excite the sentiments. He only wants to make a contract and fulfill
it, with respect on both sides and favor on neither side. He must get
his living out of the capital of the country. The larger the capital is,
the better living he can get. Every particle of capital which is wasted
on the vicious, the idle, and the shiftless is so much taken from the
capital available to reward the independent and productive laborer. But
we stand with our backs to the independent and productive laborer all
the time. We do not remember him because he makes no clamor; but I
appeal to you whether he is not the man who ought to be remembered first
of all, and whether, on any sound social theory, we ought not to
protect him against the burdens of the good-for-nothing. In these last
years I have read hundreds of articles and heard scores of sermons and
speeches which were really glorifications of the good-for-nothing, as if
these were the charge of society, recommended by right reason to its
care and protection. We are addressed all the time as if those who are
respectable were to blame because some are not so, and as if there were
an obligation on the part of those who have done their duty towards
those who have not done their duty. Every man is bound to take care of
himself and his family and to do his share in the work of society. It is
totally false that one who has done so is bound to bear the care and
charge of those who are wretched because they have not done so. …” [2]
(emphasis added)
Do Sumner’s Arguments Apply Today?
The
injustice of overburdening the Forgotten Man is obvious, yet it is the
pattern of all legislative welfare and philanthropic programs. People
today are taught to have a sense of entitlement to government
assistance. If they decide not to fulfill their duties to work for their
living and live responsibly, it must be society’s fault, and the C’s of
the world must be ordered to help them.
As I mentioned in a
previous article, during FDR’s reign, the “forgotten man” label was
applied to the aggrieved X, leaving C as forgotten as ever. [3]
The
current Administration, under Barack Obama, is trying to squeeze
everything possible out of C to transfer much of his substance to
government, thence to Obama’s favored X’s, the permanent
government-dependent underclass the government has created, as well as
socialist activist groups like ACORN, big labor unions, big banks, trial
lawyers, environmental activists, etc. Some of the C’s of our society
are beginning to band together in protests such as Tea Parties, marches,
and so on. They will either have influence or be wiped out economically
and socially. It should be noted that in the rare event that C raises
any objection or complaint, he/she is criticized by government and their
media lackeys as a member of an “unruly mob,” too unsophisticated to
understand what the elites know is good for society.
The
liberals’ conception of fairness is “equality” which, if it were
realized, would result in all being impoverished in every way. We
already have too much of the socialists’ “trickle-up poverty.”
Most
Americans really do not mind paying taxes for the legitimate functions,
i.e., constitutional responsibilities, of government, but are not
nearly so much in favor of the socialist welfare state, and the enabling
of people addicted to irresponsible behavior. The main people in favor
of the welfare state are those who would receive benefits, those who
would administer the system, certain politicians, and those who want to
be helpful, but neglect to consider the social and human costs, as well
as the economic costs of government social welfare. That said, almost
all agree that a (at least) minimal safety net is needed to help those
who are actually unable to support themselves. The problem arises when
this is exaggerated.
As for government relief efforts, one might
point to the government’s efforts after Hurricane Katrina. No, I don’t
mean FEMA’s slow response at the beginning, but their continuing efforts
to provide help for years afterward to people who should have been left
to care for themselves sooner. Also, while the Katrina victims were
truly suffering, many other people were suffering in an equally bad or
worse way, who received no government help whatsoever, nor did they ask
for any.
Similarly, the families of those lost in the 9/11
attacks were (I think) very generously compensated by the government.
Money can’t replace a lost loved one, but on any given day, a number of
people die tragically and their families get nothing from the
government, nor do they ask for anything.
I don’t mean to suggest that it was wrong to want to help these people, but that it should be seen in perspective.
Government
entitlements that are well-established threaten to greatly damage our
economy in future years, because these obligations are unsustainable and
can never finally be met. In addition, they unjustly burden the
taxpayers every year. Younger payers of these taxes cannot realistically
expect to benefit from these programs. They are among the forgotten men
and women.
Conclusion, Again Quoting Sumner
“It
is plain enough that the Forgotten Man and the Forgotten Woman are the
very life and substance of society. They are the ones who ought to be
first and always remembered. They are always forgotten by
sentimentalists, philanthropists, reformers, enthusiasts, and every
description of speculator in sociology, political economy, or political
science. If a student of any of these sciences ever comes to understand
the position of the Forgotten Man and to appreciate his true value, you
will find such student an uncompromising advocate of the strictest
scientific thinking on all social topics, and a cold and hard-hearted
skeptic towards all artificial schemes of social amelioration….” [4]
[1] William Graham Sumner biography, Answers.com, at http://www.answers.com/topic/william-graham-sumner
[2] William Graham Sumner, “The Forgotten Man,” 1883, The Forgotten Man and Other Essays, The Online Library of Liberty, at
http://oll.libertyfund.org/index.php?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php&title=1654&search=%22Forgotten+Man%22&chapter=108194&layout=html#a_2270750.
[3] Henry Hazlitt, Economics in One Lesson, Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2008. Originally published by Harper & Brothers, 1946, page 179
[4] Sumner, see [2].
Photo: Portrait of William Graham Sumner from The Warren J. Samuels Portrait Collection at Duke University. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License.