Thanks to a decades-long safety net, we have forgotten the trials of living without it. This is why, the historian Tony Judt argued, it’s easy for some to speak fondly of a world without government: we can’t fully imagine or recall what it’s like. We can’t really appreciate the horrors Upton Sinclair witnessed in the Chicago slaughterhouses before regulation, or the burden of living without Social Security and Medicare to look forward to. Thus, we can entertain nostalgia for a time when everyone pulled his own weight, bore his own risk, and was the master of his destiny. That time was a myth.
-- Firmin Debrabander at The New York Times
Maybe it is also a myth to believe that society is good or can be, or that people are, or that we are.
-- Firmin Debrabander at The New York Times
Maybe it is also a myth to believe that society is good or can be, or that people are, or that we are.