Steven Moore writes in WSJ and suggests a Fairness Test.
Should a group be penalized in any way to benefit another?
Links:
SOTU Address: fairness
used extensively
Stephen Moore raises good questions and offers excellent data in
raising the concern that trying to be “fair” by favoring one group over
another does indeed lead to some serious unfairness as outcomes.
So try a definition and see what you think.
Is it fair that some of Mr. Obama's largest campaign contributors
received federal loan guarantees?
By STEPHEN MOORE
President Obama has frequently justified his policies—and judged
their outcomes—in terms of equity, justice and fairness. That raises an
obvious question: How does our existing system—and his own policy
record—stack up according to those criteria?
Is it fair that the richest 1% of Americans pay nearly 40% of all
federal income taxes, and the richest 10% pay two-thirds of the tax?
Is it fair that the richest 10% of Americans shoulder a higher share
of their country's income-tax burden than do the richest 10% in every
other industrialized nation, including socialist Sweden?
Is it fair that American corporations pay the highest statutory
corporate tax rate of all other industrialized nations but Japan, which
cuts its rate on April 1?
Is it fair that President Obama sends his two daughters to elite
private schools that are safer, better-run, and produce higher test
scores than public schools in Washington, D.C.—but millions of other
families across America are denied that free choice and forced to send
their kids to rotten schools?
Is it fair that Americans who build a family business, hire workers,
reinvest and save their money—paying a lifetime of federal, state and
local taxes often climbing into the millions of dollars—must then pay an
additional estate tax of 35% (and as much as 55% when the law changes
next year) when they die, rather than passing that money onto their
loved ones?
Is it fair that Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, former Democratic
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, former Ways and Means Chairman
Charlie Rangel and other leading Democrats who preach tax fairness
underpaid their own taxes?
Is it fair that after the first three years of Obamanomics, the poor
are poorer, the poverty rate is rising, the middle class is losing
income, and some 5.5 million fewer Americans have jobs today than in
2007?
Is it fair that roughly 88% of political contributions from
supposedly impartial network television reporters, producers and other
employees in 2008 went to Democrats?
Is it fair that the three counties with America's highest median
family income just happen to be located in the Washington, D.C., metro
area?
Is it fair that wind, solar and ethanol producers get billions of
dollars of subsidies each year and pay virtually no taxes, while the oil
and gas industry—which provides at least 10 times as much energy—pays
tens of billions of dollars of taxes while the president complains that
it is "subsidized"?
Is it fair that those who work full-time jobs (and sometimes more)
to make ends meet have to pay taxes to support up to 99 weeks of
unemployment benefits for those who don't work?
Is it fair that those who took out responsible mortgages and pay
them each month have to see their tax dollars used to subsidize those
who acted recklessly, greedily and sometimes deceitfully in taking out
mortgages they now can't afford to repay?
Is it fair that thousands of workers won't have jobs because the
president sided with environmentalists and blocked the shovel-ready
Keystone XL oil pipeline?
Is it fair that some of Mr. Obama's largest campaign contributors
received federal loan guarantees on their investments in renewable
energy projects that went bust?
Is it fair that federal employees receive benefits that are nearly
50% higher than those of private-sector workers whose taxes pay their
salaries, according to the Congressional Budget Office?
Is it fair that soon almost half the federal budget will take income
from young working people and redistribute it to old non-working people,
even though those over age 65 are already among the wealthiest
Americans?
Is it fair that in 27 states workers can be compelled to join a
union in order to keep their jobs?
Is it fair that nearly four out of 10 American households now pay no
federal income tax at all—a number that has risen every year under Mr.
Obama?
Is it fair that Boeing, a private company, was threatened by a
federal agency when it sought to add jobs in a right-to-work state
rather than in a forced-union state?
Is it fair that our kids and grandkids and great-grandkids—who never
voted for Mr. Obama—will have to pay off the $5 trillion of debt
accumulated over the past four years, without any benefits to them?
Mr. Moore is a member of the Journal's editorial board.