Howard Zinn

There

are two issues here: First, why should we accept our culture’s definition of

those two factors? Why should we accept that the "talent" of someone

who writes jingles for an Advertising agency advertising dog food and gets

$100,000 a year is superior to the talent of an auto mechanic who makes $40,000

a year? Who is to say That bill gates works harder than the dishwasher in the

restaurant he Frequents, or that the ceo of a hospital who makes $400,000 a year

works Harder than the nurse, or the orderly in that hospital who makes $30,000 a

Year? The president of boston university makes $300,000 a year. Does he Work

harder than the man who cleans the offices of the university? Talent And hard

work are qualitative factors which cannot be measured Quantitatively. Since

there is no way of measuring them quantitatively we Accept the measure given us

by the very people who benefit from that Measuring! I remember fiorello

laguardia standing up in congress in the Twenties, arguing against a tax bill

that would benefit the secretary of the Treasury, andrew mellon, and asking if

mellon worked harder than the Housewife in east harlem bringing up three kids on

a meager income. And how Do you measure the talent of an artist, a musician, a

poet, an actor, a Novelist, most of whom in this society cannot make enough

money to survive Against the talent of the head of any corporation. I challenge

anyone to Measure quantitatively the qualities of talent and hard work. There is

one Possible answer to my challenge: hours of work vs. Hours of leisure. Yes,

That’s a nice quantitative measure. Well, with that measure,the housewife Should

get more than most or all corporate executives. And the working Person who does

two jobs — and there are millions of them — and has Virtually no leisure time,

should be rewarded far more than the corporate Executive who can take two hour

lunches, weekends at his summer retreat, and Vacations in italy.

There

and there is the second question: why should "talent and hard work",

Even if you could measure them,quantitatively, be the criteria for

"rewards" (meaning money). We live in a culture which teaches us that

as if it were a Truth given from heaven, when actually it serves the interests

of the rich, Especially since they have determined for us (as i point out above)

how to Define "talent and hard work". Why not use an alternate

criterion for Rewards? Why not reward people according to what they contribute

to society? Then the social worker taking care of kids or elderly people or the

nurse or The teacher or the artist would deserve far more money than the

executive of A corporation producing luxury sports vehicles and would certainly

deserve More money than the executive of a corporation making cluster bombs or

Nuclear weapons or chemical pollutants. But better still, why not use as a

Criterion for income what people need to live a decent life, and since most

People’s basic needs are similar there would not be an extreme difference in

Income but everyone would have enough for food, housing, medical care,

Education, entertainment, vacations.

Of

course there is the traditional objection that if we don’t reward people With

huge incomes society will fall apart, that progress depends on those People. A

dubious argument. Where is the proof that people need huge incomes To give them

the incentive to do important things? In fact, we have much Evidence that the

profit incentive leads to enormously destructive things — Whatever makes profit

will be produced, and so nuclear weapons, being more Profitable than day care

centers, will be produced. And people do wonderful things (teachers, doctors,

nurses, artists, Scientists, inventors) without huge profit incentives. Because

there are Rewards other than monetary rewards which move people to produce good

things — the reward of knowing you are contributing to society, the reward of

Gaining the respect of people around you. If there are incentives necessary To

doing certain kinds of work, those incentives should go to people doing The most

undesirable, most unpleasant work, to make sure that work gets Done. I worked

hard as a college professor, but it was pleasurable work Compared to the man who

came around to clean my office. By what criterion (except that created

artificially by our culture) do i need more incentive Than he does? (that goes

for your law professor too!)

Another

point: even if you could show that talent and hard work, defined as Stupidly as

the way our culture defines it, should determine income, how Does this relate to

small children? They have not Had a chance to show their "talent and hard

work", so why should some grow Up in luxury and others in poverty. Why

should rich babies live and poor Ones die (infant mortality strikes the poor

much more than the rich)?

Okay,

let’s get practical. We are, as you point out, a long way from Achieving an

egalitarian society, but we can certainly move in that Direction by a truly

progressive income tax, by a government-assured minimum Level of income, health

care, education, housing for every family. For People (usually well-off people)

who worry that everyone will get an equal Income, you can ease their fears by

saying absolute equality is neither Possible nor desirable, but that the

differences in wealth and living Standards need not be extreme, but there should

be a minimum standard for All, thinking especially of the children, who are

innocent victims of all This high-fallutin philosophizing about property and

wealth.

 

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Howard Zinn was born in 1922 and died 2010. He was a historian and a playwright. He taught at Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia, then at Boston University. He was active in the civil rights movement, and in the movement against the Vietnam war. He has written many books, his best known being A People`s History of the United States. His many books include You Can`t Be Neutral on a Moving Train (a memoir), The Zinn Reader, The Future of History (interviews with David Barsamian) and Marx in Soho (a play), among many others.

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