by Simon Black
In
the mid-1800s, a cousin of Charles Darwin by the name of Francis Galton
wrote a series of works expanding on an old idea of selective breeding in
human beings.
Galton’s
theory became known as eugenics. At its core, eugenics was underpinned by
an assumption that talent and genius were hereditary traits, and that
deliberate breeding could improve the human race.
Within
decades, intellectuals were spending their entire careers studying these
ideas, quickly spawning a number of different fields dedicated to ‘racial
sciences.’
Scholars
began closely examining racial differences and building volumes of
statistics on everything ranging from intelligence to reproduction
to genetic effectiveness in combating disease.
‘Scientists’
would scurry about taking cranial measurements, sizing up jaw lines,
calculating forehead slopes, and estimating nose angles… all of which
became ‘evidence’ of racial superiority.
It became clear that one race was superior to another because the science of the day said that it was true. And they had the statistics and equations to prove it.
This
faux-science became the moral justification for racial segregation and
imperialistic expansion.
After
all, one could hardly feel bad about conquering and enslaving an entire
nation if the science proves that they’re an inferior race.
Nazi
officials took these ideas and perverted them even further, wrapping
horrific crimes in a blanket of science.
Today,
it’s nice to know that human beings are a lot more enlightened. We know
that the dimensions of someone’s skull or nose don’t matter much in the
way of intelligence or integrity.
And
we can wonder with absolute incredulity how anyone could have passed off
such nonsense as science.
Here’s
the irony, though. In the future, they’ll wonder the same thing about us.
The difference is that our faux-science is economics.
In
the future, they’ll wonder with utter incredulity how these ridiculous
assertions about conjuring money out of thin air and borrowing your way
out of debt could possibly pass as science.
They’ll
be mystified at how political leaders listen to these modern
day soothsayers, directing national policy and robbing wealth from
hundreds of millions of people based on this faux-science.
And
they’ll be completely floored when they see that we actually award our
most esteemed prizes to these men who tell us that we can spend our way
out of recession and tax our way into prosperity.
To
give you an example, I’ve just finished Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz’s
new book The Price of Inequality in which he writes something that may be
the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard from an economist:
“[T]he
success of [Apple and Google], and indeed the viability of our entire
economy, depends heavily on a well-performing public sector. There are
creative entrepreneurs all over the world. What makes a difference. . . is
the government.”
Yes,
in the eyes of our most decorated ‘scientists’, the brilliance and guile
of Ingvar Kamprad, Sam Walton, Ray Kroc, Asa Candler, Richard Branson,
Steve Jobs, and millions of others are far less important than an
effective government bureaucracy.
His
entire book, in fact, is an impassioned argument for even more government
control and redistribution of wealth. Right… because it’s been working so
well.
These
ideas are totally absurd. Yet this what passes as science today. And
because it’s science, society simply believes it to be true.
No
doubt, people in the future will look back, and they’ll wonder… but they
won’t understand one bit.
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