MONDAY's EDITORIAL
The issue ~Labor Day
Our
opinion ~ Human mind is real source of wealth and
progress
Labor Day for celebrating human
mind
It is fitting that the most productive
nation on earth should have a holiday to honor its work.
The high standard of living that Americans enjoy is
hard-earned and well-deserved. But the term "Labor Day"
is a misnomer. What we should celebrate is not so much
sweat and toil, but the power of man's mind to reason,
invent and create.
Several centuries ago, providing
the basic necessities for one's survival was a matter of
daily drudgery for most people. But Americans today
enjoy conveniences undreamed of by medieval kings. Every
day brings some new useful household gadget, or a new
software system to increase our productivity, or a
breakthrough in biotechnology.
So, it is worth
asking: Why do Americans have no unique holiday to
celebrate the creators, inventors, and entrepreneurs who
have made all of this wealth possible - those of the
mind?
The answer lies in the dominant
intellectual view of the nature of work. Too many
intellectuals, influenced by generations of Marxist
political philosophy, still believe that wealth is
created by sheer physical toil. But the high standard of
living we enjoy today is not due to our musculature and
physical stamina. Many animals have been much stronger.
We owe our relative affluence not to muscle power, but
to brain power.
Brain power is given a
left-handed acknowledgment in today's "information age"
in which education and knowledge are termed keys to
economic success. The implication, however, is that
prior to the invention of the silicon chip, humans were
able to flourish as brainless automatons.
The
importance of knowledge to progress is not some recent
trend. Man's mind is his tool of survival and the source
of every advance in material well-being throughout
history, from the harnessing of fire, to the invention
of the plow, to the discovery of electricity, to the
invention of the latest anti-cancer drug.
Under
capitalism, even a man who has nothing to trade but
physical labor gains a huge advantage by leveraging the
fruits of minds more creative than his.
The labor
of a construction worker, for example, is made more
productive and valuable by the inventors of the
jackhammer and the steam shovel, and by the farsighted
entrepreneurs who market and sell such tools to his
employer.
The work of an office clerk, as another
example, is made more efficient by the people who
invented copiers and fax machines. By applying human
ingenuity to serve people's needs, the result is that
physical labor is made less laborious and more
productive.
An apt symbol of the theory that
sweat and muscle are the creators of economic value can
be seen in those Soviet-era propaganda posters depicting
man as a mindless muscular robot with an expressionless,
cookie-cutter face. In practice, that theory led to
chronic famines in a society unable to produce even the
most basic necessities.
A culture thrives to the
extent that it is governed by reason and science, and
stagnates to the extent that it is governed by brute
force. The best and brightest minds are always the first
to either flee a dictatorship in a "brain drain" or to
cease their creative efforts. A totalitarian regime can
force some men to perform muscular labor; it cannot
force a genius to create, nor force a businessman to
make rational decisions. A slave owner can force a man
to pick peanuts; only under freedom would a George
Washington Carver discover ways to increase crop
yields.
What Americans should celebrate is the
spark of genius in the scientist who first identifies a
law of physics, in the inventor who uses that knowledge
to create a new engine or telephonic device, and in the
businessmen who daily translate their ideas into
tangible wealth.
On Labor Day, let us honor the
true root of production and wealth: the human
mind.
- Adapted from the writing of Fredric
Hamber, senior writer for the Ayn Rand Institute in
Marina del Rey, Calif
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