Great editorial by Ed West writing in the UK Telegraph. Is it possible to be a social leftist and a fiscal conservative? Or does the former impact the latter negatively? West’s editorial assesses the impact of feminism and sex education on government budgets, which receive much funding from the productive private sector.
First, Britain’s social program for unwanted children is seeing record enrollment:
Last night’s Rageh Omaar programme, Lost in Care, is timely. The number of unwanted children in Britain has reached 80,000, and that figure was calculated before the recent Baby P surge. Of those unwanted kids, 10,000 live in children’s home.
And what are the costs to the taxpayer for this skyrocketing number of unwarranted children?
The show reminded us how awful the statistics are for care home children; only 13 per cent get good GCSEs [high school diplomas] and almost half achieve no qualifications. One in four prisoners were in care, as were one in three homeless. and one in five girls in care are pregnant within a year of leaving. No wonder there is currently a desperate drive to find more foster parents, a calling that is seriously heroic.
Well, I already talked about how leftist domestic policies destroy marriage here (socialism), here (same-sex marriage) and here (no-fault divorce). But the interesting thing is the cost of the anti-family, anti-child policies of the left. They were in such a rush to rebel against social conservatives, that it never occurred to them that those moral rules were in place to protect the interests of all parties.
Recklessly impregnating someone or getting pregnant without the ability or willingness to look after that child ruins another person’s life, and also costs the state £25,000 a year for that matter.
This is the problem with people who enact policies based on the need to feel compassionate and superior, while disregarding the logical consequences. Should we really be voting in people who undermine traditional morality run our government? If we do, it will cost us. To see more about how leftist policies increased the size of government and raised tax rates, see this previous post.
For more news from abroad, check out my recent post on the state of free speech in Canada, the United Kindom and Cuba.
UPDATE: Just noticed this over at OneNewsNow: Obama would ax abstinence-only funding.
Excerpt:
If Congress approves President Obama’s budget requests, there will be no more federal funding of abstinence-only education programs.
Barack Obama has recommended completely zeroing out Title V abstinence programs to states, as well as abstinence education programs to community-based organizations (CBAE) and replacing them with more than $100 million for contraceptive-based sex-education programs. The massive omnibus bill signed by the president had already reduced funding to abstinence programs by $14 million.
And then there is this story from mensactivism.org, entitled “Number of Unwed Moms in the U.S. Rising.
Story here. Excerpt:
‘(AP) The percentage of births to unmarried women in the United States has been rising sharply, but it’s way behind Northern European countries, a new U.S. report on births shows.
Iceland is the leader with 6 in 10 births occurring among unmarried women. About half of all births in Sweden and Norway are to unwed moms, while in the U.S., it’s about 40 percent.
France, Denmark and the United Kingdom also have higher percentages than the United States, according to the report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.’
Oh, well. Ideology beats out fiscal prudence, I guess. I don’t think that immorality of the parents is too good for the children who are affected, either. Bible: 1, Atheists: 0.
Your conflation of nebulously undefined “leftist” politics with atheism is tenuous at best. For example, in Latin America, leftism and Christianity are found to be closely intertwined. (see “liberation theology” for one example, and Costa Rican politics wherein the Communists and the Catholics are political allies for another). You do not make a significant connection between unwed and unwanted births, instead conflating two separate statistics related more by semantics than anything else.
Since tax rates are lower than under the Reagan Administration — and, indeed, far lower than under Nixon or especially Eisenhower — you have some more heavy lifting to do.
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It’s true, some of my favorite libertarians are non-theists, and on the other side of the aisle there seems to be a lot of liberation theology. Perhaps I overstated by case there, although I don’t consider liberation theology to be connected in any meaningful way with Bible-believing Christianity. Don’t forget about the Jay Richards book. Christianity goes better with capitalism!
Thanks for your comment.
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