[Vision2020] Fwd: Earth Policy news - Record Heat Wave in Europe Takes 35,000 Lives
Dale Courtney
dmcourtn@moscow.com
Sat, 11 Oct 2003 11:05:02 -0700
> >Visionaries:
>
>
> This article may be of interest.
>
> Rep. Tom Trail
>
> >
> >RECORD HEAT WAVE IN EUROPE TAKES 35,000 LIVES Far Greater Losses May
> >Lie Ahead http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update29.htm
Tom,
You may find this commentary of interest as well. It asks the question "what
back-woods country could have 15,000 people die due to heat wave *far* less
significant than anything Phoenix and Las Vegas experience yearly.
Best,
Dale
>COMMENTARY from The Commonwealth Foundation
>
>
>French Fried by the Welfare State
>By Lawrence W. Reed
>
>"Heat Wave Toll Nearly 15,000" blared a recent headline. Must be some
>far-off, little-known, God-forsaken corner of the planet nobody ever
>heard of, I figured. Nope. It was France.
>
>Consider the enormity of what happened in August. When the sun came out
>and the temperatures rose to something below what El Paso endures for
>four months of every year, a staggering 14,802 mostly elderly people in
>France died. The proportional equivalent in the United States, where a
>hundred deaths from heat would provoke a congressional inquiry, would
>be 72,000. That's a population the size of the city of Bethlehem,
>Pennsylvania.
>
>How is it possible for a heat wave to wipe out 15,000 people in a
>modern nation--a nation that takes great pride in having fashioned one
>of the world's most extensive welfare "safety nets"?
>
>When the Soviets blamed endless food shortages on 75 years of bad
>weather, honest people knew otherwise. Marx and Lenin were the
>culprits, not Mother Nature. Communism and famine are virtual synonyms.
>France now offers us proof that death and the welfare state can mean
>the same thing too. Indeed, perhaps the welfare state was so named
>because in reality, the bureaucracy does well while the rest of society
pays the fare.
>
>France has a costly network of publicly funded benefits that begin
>flowing from the bosom of the national nanny at birth. When a woman has
>her first child, she gets a check. Each successive child generates an
>increase in her monthly allowance, courtesy of the taxpayers. When the
>child retires six decades and a plethora of other handouts later, he
>gets a generous state pension. The message each French citizen gets for
>a lifetime is that government is there to take care of him. Human needs?
>That's the assignment of some department somewhere in Paris. So when
>thousands of elderly were roasting in August, their friends and
>relatives took a vacation. Why should they assume a responsibility that
>the state has assumed for them?
>
>A hundred years ago the French economist, Paul Leroy-Beaulieu, wrote
>that taxes above 12 percent of national income would be "exorbitant"
>and destructive. Today, the French welfare state extracts around 45
>percent of the nation's GDP. After Paris bludgeons its subjects with
>one of the highest per-capita tax bills in Europe, there's not much
>left for ordinary people to take care of their elderly even if they wanted
to.
>
>Americans have erected a welfare state as well, but not one so far
>along that our penchant for rugged individualism, personal
>responsibility, and strong families has vanished. Many Europeans see us
>as heartless and uncaring because we don't expect Uncle Sam to coddle
>us from cradle to grave. But because we still largely take care of
>ourselves and of those around us, we don't drop dead by the tens of
>thousands when the temperature goes up.
>
>If the French really want to learn from their awful experience this
>summer, they don't need another government commission. They should take
>heed of one of their own, albeit a Frenchman of long ago. When social
>commentator Alexis de Tocqueville visited a young, bustling America in
>the 1830s, he cited the vibrancy of civil society as one of this
>country's greatest assets. He was amazed that Americans were constantly
>forming "associations" to advance the arts, build libraries and
>hospitals, and meet social needs of every kind. If something good
>needed to be done, it rarely occurred to our forebears to expect
>politicians and bureaucrats, who were distant in both space and spirit,
>to do it for them. "Amongst the laws which rule human nature," wrote
>Tocqueville in Democracy in America, "there is none which seems to be
>more precise and clear than all others. If men are to remain civilized,
>or to become more so, the art of associating together must grow and
improve..."
>
>More recently, Americans have been lectured to by certain haughty,
>self-righteous French about one thing or another, and usually in
>condescending tones. Well, when 15,000 of their countrymen are
>abandoned and drop dead from a little heat, it's time the sanctimonious
>ones (not to be confused with the many citizens of France who are
>perfectly fine and friendly folks) sit back and listen to a lecture
themselves.
>
>How can France revive the attitudes and institutions that form the
>foundation of a strong civil society--a society composed of children
>who eventually do grow up to be independent, self-respecting adults?
>
>Certainly, the French can never do so by blindly embracing government
>programs that crowd out private initiatives or by impugning the motives
>of those who raise legitimate questions about those government programs.
>They cannot restore civil society if they have no confidence in
>themselves and believe that government has a monopoly on compassion.
>They'll never get there if they overtax people's earnings and then,
>like children who never learned their arithmetic, complain that people
>can't afford to meet certain needs.
>
>For all people interested in the advancement and enrichment of culture,
>these are crucial observations with far-reaching implications. The
>French are high on "culture" but cultural progress should not be
>defined as taking more and more of what other people have earned and
>spending it on "good" things through a government bureaucracy. Genuine
>cultural progress occurs when individuals solve problems without
>resorting to politicians or the police and bureaucrats they employ.
>
>The French can advance civil society only when they get serious about
>replacing government programs with private initiative, when discussion
>gets beyond such infantile reasoning as, "If you want to cut government
>subsidies, you must be in favor of starving the elderly." Civil society
>in France will blossom when the French come to understand that "hiring"
>the expensive middleman of government is not the best way to "do good,"
>that it often breaks the connection between people in need and caring
>people who want to help. They'll make progress when the "government is
>the answer" cure is recognized for what it is--false charity, a copout,
>and a simplistic non-answer that doesn't get the job done well, even
>though it makes its advocates smug with self-righteous satisfaction.
>
>What happened in France this summer should be laid squarely at the
>doorstep of the French welfare state and its horrid social pathologies.
>The wisdom of Henry David Thoreau comes to mind: "If I knew for certain
>that a man was coming to my house to do me good, I would run for my
>life."
>
># # #
>
>Lawrence W. Reed, born and raised in Beaver Falls, is president of the
>Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational institute
>in Midland, Michigan. Justin Marshall, a Mackinac Center colleague,
>assisted in the preparation of this commentary. Reprinted with
>permission by The Commonwealth Foundation. For more information, visit
>www.CommonwealthFoundation.org.
>