The 20 Greatest Quotes From Walter Williams - John Hawkins
The 20 Greatest Quotes From Walter Williams
John Hawkins | Jun 18, 2013
Walter Williams is a veteran, a professor of economics at
George Mason University, a syndicated columnist, a fill-in host for
Rush Limbaugh and an author of eight books. Williams has one of the
finest minds in America as you're about to see as you read these
quotations.
20) How many times have we heard “free tuition,”
“free health care,” and free you-name-it? If a particular good or
service is truly free, we can have as much of it as we want without the
sacrifice of other goods or services. Take a “free” library; is it
really free? The answer is no. Had the library not been built, that $50
million could have purchased something else. That something else
sacrificed is the cost of the library. While users of the library might
pay a zero price, zero price and free are not one and the same. So when
politicians talk about providing something free, ask them to identify
the beneficent Santa Claus or tooth fairy.
19) During the first Reagan administration, I
participated in a number of press conferences on either a book or
article I’d written or as a panelist in a discussion of White House
public policy. On occasion, when the question-and-answer session began,
I’d tell the press, “You can treat me like a white person. Ask hard,
penetrating questions.” The remark often brought uncomfortable laughter,
but I was dead serious. If there is one general characteristic of white
liberals, it’s their condescending and demeaning attitude toward
blacks.
18) Legality alone is no guide for a moral people.
There are many things in this world that have been, or are, legal but
clearly immoral. Slavery was legal. Did that make it moral? South
Africa’s apartheid, Nazi persecution of Jews, and Stalinist and Maoist
purges were all legal, but did that make them moral?
17) Households earning $250,000 and above account for
25 percent, or $1.97 trillion, of the nearly $8 trillion of total
household income. If Congress imposed a 100 percent tax, taking all
earnings above $250,000 per year, it would bring in about $1.9 trillion.
That would keep Washington running for 190 days, but there’s a problem
because there are 175 more days left in the year.
The profits of the Fortune 500 richest companies come to $400
billion. That would keep the government running for another 40 days, to
mid-July.
America has 400 billionaires with a combined net worth of $1.3 trillion.
If Congress fleeced them of their assets, stocks, bonds, yachts,
airplanes, mansions and jewelry, it would get us to at least late fall.
The fact of the matter is there are not enough rich people to come
anywhere close to satisfying Congress’ voracious spending appetite.
16) I don’t blame only politicians. For the most
part, they’re only the instruments of a people who have growing contempt
for our Constitution. You say, “Hold it, Williams. Now you’ve gone too
far!” Check it out. How many votes do you think a James Madison-type
senatorial candidate would get if his campaign theme was something like
this: “Elect me to office. I will protect and defend the U.S.
Constitution. Because there’s no constitutional authority for Congress
spending on the objects of benevolence, don’t expect for me to vote for
prescription drugs for the elderly, handouts to farmers and food stamps
for the poor. Instead, I’ll fight these and other unconstitutional
congressional expenditures.” I’ll tell you how many votes he’ll get: It
will be Williams’ vote, and that’s it.
15) Three-fifths to two-thirds of the federal budget
consists of taking property from one American and giving it to another.
Were a private person to do the same thing, we'd call it theft. When
government does it, we euphemistically call it income redistribution,
but that's exactly what thieves do -- redistribute income.
14) If we look to benefits only, we'll do darn near
anything because there's always a benefit. The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration reported that there were 43,443 highway fatalities
in 2005. If we had a maximum speed law of 15 mph, the death toll
wouldn't be nearly as high, probably not even as high as 500. You say,
"Williams, that's a crazy idea!" You're right, but let's not call it
crazy; it's more accurate to say: saving some 43,000 lives aren't worth
the cost and inconvenience of a 15 mph speed limit.
13) The last election campaign featured great angst
over the loss of manufacturing jobs. The number of U.S. manufacturing
jobs has fallen, but it has little to do with outsourcing and a lot to
do with technological innovation — and it’s a worldwide phenomenon.
During the seven years from 1995 through 2002, Drezner notes, U.S.
manufacturing employment fell by 11 percent. Globally, manufacturing
jobs fell by 11 percent. China lost 15 percent of its manufacturing
jobs, and Brazil lost 20 percent. But guess what. Globally,
manufacturing output rose by 30 percent during the same period.
Technological progress is the primary cause for the decrease in
manufacturing jobs.
12) A more insidious effect of minimum wages, as
racists everywhere know, is that it lowers discrimination costs. Say a
white and a black were equally productive and an employer prefers white
workers to black workers. Since he has to pay $9 an hour no matter whom
he hires, the cost of discriminating against the black worker is zero.
But if it were legal for the black worker to offer a lower price,
there’d be a cost to discrimination.
11) Many law professors, and others who hold contempt
for our Constitution, preach that the Constitution is a living
document. Saying that the Constitution is a living document is the same
as saying we don’t have a Constitution. For rules to mean anything, they
must be fixed. How many people would like to play me poker and have the
rules be “living?” Depending on “evolving standards,” maybe my two pair
could beat your flush.
10) The human experience should have taught us that
just getting rid of a particular dictatorship is only half the struggle.
We must always ask what’s going to replace it.
9) You say, "Williams, you're just old-fashioned and
out of touch with modern society." Maybe so, but I think that a
society's first line of defense is not the law but customs, traditions
and moral values. These behavioral norms -- transmitted by example, word
of mouth, religious teachings, rules of etiquette and manners --
represent a body of wisdom distilled over the ages through experience
and trial and error. They include important legal thou-shalt-nots --
such as shalt not murder, steal, lie or cheat -- but they also include
all those civilities one might call ladylike or gentlemanly behavior.
Police officers and courts can never replace these social restraints on
personal conduct. At best, laws, police and the criminal justice system
are a society's last desperate line of defense.
8) The civil rights struggle is over, and it has been
won. At one time, black Americans did not have the same constitutional
protections as whites. Now, we do, because the civil rights struggle is
over and won is not the same as saying that there are not major problems
for a large segment of the black community. What it does say is that
they’re not civil rights problems, and to act as if they are, leads to a
serious misallocation of resources
7) Maybe your college professor taught that the
legacy of colonialism explains Third World poverty. That’s nonsense as
well. Canada was a colony. So were Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong.
In fact, the richest country in the world, the United States, was once a
colony. By contrast, Ethiopia, Liberia, Tibet, Sikkim, Nepal and Bhutan
were never colonies, but they are home to the world’s poorest people.
6) People who denounce the free market and voluntary
exchange, and are for control and coercion, believe they have more
intelligence and superior wisdom to the masses. What's more, they
believe they've been ordained to forcibly impose that wisdom on the rest
of us. Of course, they have what they consider good reasons for doing
so, but every tyrant that has ever existed has had what he believed were
good reasons for restricting the liberty of others.
5) In general, presidents and congressmen have very
limited power to do good for the economy and awesome power to do bad.
The best good thing that politicians can do for the economy is to stop
doing bad. In part, this can be achieved through reducing taxes and
economic regulation, and staying out of our lives.
4) Poverty in Egypt, or anywhere else, is not very
difficult to explain. There are three basic causes: People are poor
because they cannot produce anything highly valued by others. They can
produce things highly valued by others but are hampered or prevented
from doing so. Or, they volunteer to be poor.
3) What's just has been debated for centuries, but
let me offer you my definition of social justice: I keep what I earn and
you keep what you earn. Do you disagree? Well, then, tell me how much
of what I earn belongs to you - and why?
2) Suppose I hire you to repair my computer. The job
is worth $200 to me and doing the job is worth $200 to you. The
transaction will occur because we have a meeting of the mind. Now
suppose there’s the imposition of a 30 percent income tax on you. That
means you won’t receive $200 but instead $140. You might say the heck
with working for me — spending the day with your family is worth more
than $140. You might then offer that you’ll do the job if I pay you
$285. That way your after-tax earnings will be $200 — what the job was
worth to you. There’s a problem. The repair job was worth $200 to me,
not $285. So it’s my turn to say the heck with it. This simple example
demonstrates that one effect of taxes is that of eliminating
transactions, and hence jobs.
1) Here’s Williams’ roadmap out of poverty: Complete
high school; get a job, any kind of a job; get married before having
children; and be a law-abiding citizen. Among both black and white
Americans so described, the poverty rate is in the single digits.
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