Tuesday, January 22, 2013

The absence of civil society in the vision of Barak Obama

The president's second inaugural address yesterday demonstrated an almost complete lack of understanding of the role of civil society in American life, as this post by Matthew J. Franck over at National Review Online:  The President of Julia.
The overwhelming impression one gets is that in Obama’s America, there is no civil society — no arena of private action, of voluntary responsibility, of free associations of citizens for solving the community’s problems. There are only the government (by default, the federal government, at that) and the individual. This is the “Life of Julia” campaign philosophy rendered in inaugural rhetoric: Without government’s aid in every aspect of our lives, we are lost, we are helpless, we are nothing. Every “we,” every “our,” every reference to “the nation” in this speech was a reference to a government solution to a “problem.” In this vision of America, no families, churches, charities, voluntary groups, or other institutions of civil society make any appearance at all. And when there are only the government and the individual, we know which one will be in charge.
Yup.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Unfortunately, Life of Julia is the America that a majority of our citizens want. Maximize redistribution of wealth and let the government take care of everything. A society based on selfishness and lack of ambition.

I think reality is going to have to hit America in the face hard before these people wake up and have a change of opinion.

Mark in Portland