I have typically been an outsider when it comes to making small talk with my peers. I found this especially true while attending college. During a lecture by an adjunct professor he made a reference to a popular TV show. As I looked around I saw eyes grow wide as students began to grasp the concept. I had to sheepishly raise my hand and ask, ”Who are we talking about and how do they relate to John Locke?” With the looks I received I might as well have asked “Who is John Gault?”
As I have tried to build relationships with work peers I have tried to use TV to build common ground. Well it turns out most of the people who work for my employer have never heard of Kudlow and Company or they just try to change the subject when I bring up Glen Beck. During my most recent relocation these were the two TV shows I regularly enjoyed while living in temporary housing. I particularly enjoy the Kudlow Creed which is “Free market capitalism is the best path to prosperity!”
President Bush made the following comments during a meeting with foreign leaders this past week, “At its most basic level, capitalism offers people the freedom to choose where they work and what they do … the dignity that comes with profiting from their talent and hard work. … The free-market system also provides the incentives that lead to prosperity — the incentive to work, to innovate, to save and invest wisely, and to create jobs for others.” Compare this to the remark made by another politician “The problem with the wealthy is that they believe they have the right to keep the money they earn.”
We have seen the departure from Free Market Principles this past month; over the course of the next few years we as a nation must decide whether we want a system that rewards on merit or if we’ll elect to abdicate our rights to prosperity for temporary feelings of security. To quote Kudlow one more time, “Either you believe in markets, or you believe in government.”