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- <text id=92TT1194>
- <title>
- June 01, 1992: In Defense of Good Intentions
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 01, 1992 RIO:Coming Together to Save the Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 90
- In Defense of Good Intentions
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> "For many years we tried many different programs. All of
- them -- let's understand this -- had noble intentions."
- </p>
- <p> -- President Bush in Los Angeles, May 9
- </p>
- <p> These days one of the worst things you can be accused of
- is good intentions. George Bush imputes good intentions to the
- antipoverty efforts of the 1960s and '70s as a preface to
- saying they've backfired. Bush's Republican rival, Patrick
- Buchanan, then trumps him by pre-emptively tarring any new
- antipoverty efforts with the same brush. "In the wake of Los
- Angeles," Buchanan declares, "everyone has a `solution' to the
- `problem.' And these solutions come from earnest and
- well-intentioned men and women." Officer, stop that man! He's
- armed with good intentions.
- </p>
- <p> A check through Nexis, the computerized news-media
- database, confirms that virtually every time someone is
- described as having "good" or "noble" or "best of" intentions,
- that person is about to be accused of doing something wrong. It
- may just be improperly removing a hook from a fish ("Good
- intentions notwithstanding, the result of such handling can be
- a severely injured fish . . ."). But most often since the Los
- Angeles riot, the subject has been the cities and the
- underclass.
- </p>
- <p> Good intentions do sometimes go awry, in helping the poor
- as in any other human endeavor. Go see the current movie of
- E.M. Forster's Howards End -- or read the novel -- for an
- exploration of that theme. But the reflexive crediting of "good
- intentions" has become a standard throat-clearing exercise by
- those who wish to attack government antipoverty programs. This
- serves their rhetorical purposes in two ways.
- </p>
- <p> First, while good intentions might seem like an admirable
- thing to have, the phrase also conjures up an image of
- woolly-minded naivete. Those dear old liberals, sitting in their
- ivory-tower rocking chairs, knitting vast social-welfare
- blankets from skeins of good intentions and taxpayer money --
- What do they know about the real world? The implication is that
- good intentions are not merely insufficient but even detrimental
- to the hard business of facing up to the hard truths about
- poverty and race. Good intentions are for sissies.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, crediting others with good intentions is
- a subtle way of claiming them for yourself. After all, it is
- hardly necessary to vouch for the good intentions of Lyndon
- Johnson, who wanted to spend billions fighting poverty. The one
- who needs credit for good intentions is Bush, who says such
- efforts are unnecessary or even destructive and -- by a
- remarkable coincidence -- the true solutions to the problems of
- the ghetto are those that ask virtually nothing of the white
- middle class. Naturally Bush would like to stipulate good
- intentions all around.
- </p>
- <p> It is shocking to read President Johnson's words from the
- 1960s. He spoke bluntly about "white guilt" and "equality [of]
- result." These phrases violate the taboos of 1992's conservative
- political correctness. And of course anything as grandiose as
- a "war on poverty" is unthinkable today. Why is that? People say
- we have lost the economic optimism and national self-confidence
- of the 1960s. But the 1980s were also a period of national
- economic optimism, yet that is when the War on Poverty was
- officially declared unwinnable. And even the sad-sack 1990s are
- objectively richer than the 1960s. The difference must be a
- matter of good intentions.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, there is some hard-earned pessimism about
- government programs at work. But much of the pessimism is mere
- posturing. Bush and others have said repeatedly in recent weeks
- that the government has spent "$3 trillion over 25 years"
- fighting poverty, with the implication that this money has been
- lavished on the underclass. According to the White House's own
- figures, most of this mystical $3 trillion went for such
- non-underclass and politically sacrosanct programs as Medicare
- (more than a trillion) and veterans' benefits ($287 billion).
- The good intentions of anyone who talks about $3 trillion spent
- fighting poverty are suspect from the start.
- </p>
- <p> Like Jimmy Carter after the Soviet invasion of
- Afghanistan, Bush would like it known that after Los Angeles,
- the scales fell from his eyes. "The time really has come to try
- a new way . . . making our commitment to end poverty and despair
- greater than ever before." However, the distinguishing feature
- of the conservative antipoverty agenda that Bush has now
- embraced is not its newness -- or even its rightness or
- wrongness -- but its cheapness. At the state level, in the name
- of welfare "reform," benefits are simply being slashed. The cost
- of "enterprise zones" is hidden in the form of tax cuts (with
- the usual claim that these cuts will pay for themselves).
- </p>
- <p> Some favorite conservative nostrums would actually cost
- plenty, such as privatizing public housing or changing current
- welfare rules that penalize people for taking a job, saving
- money or keeping their families intact. But conservatives
- usually pretend the cost doesn't exist. It isn't recalcitrant
- liberals standing in the way of such reforms. It is a national
- reluctance to spend the money nurtured by conservatives
- themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Fine words butter no parsnips, as the Brits like to say.
- The test of good intentions is a willingness to put yourself
- out for them. Yet the political message Bush and company are
- sending is: You have already put yourselves out too much. After
- Los Angeles, it's a comforting message. What a relief to be
- told that good intentions are futile.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-