Rynar wrote:
Equality, as it has been understood in America for roughly fifty years, is the antithesis of personal responsibility. Personal responsibility means exactly what it says: being responsible for your own actions and decisions. As not all actions and decisions have equal merit, not all outcomes will be equal. Some outcomes will be outright poor, but if we are to have respect for others and personal responsibility, we won't take from one person, and give to another to achieve equality and protect people for the personal responsibility they must assume for their choices. Adding to that, the notion of the common good completely undermines any notion of personal responsibility as it assumes that we are all responsible for everyone's failures and also for everyone's successes, functionally freeing them from the consequences of their own actions, which is the definition of personal responsibility.
No, I disagree. Equality is not the antithesis of personal responsibility. In fact, equality is necessary for personal responsibility. You can't be responsible for your lot in life if someone actively prevents you from reaching your potential. Respect for others goes hand in hand with this. You cannot have equality if people do not respect other people's rights and freedoms. Respect for others also goes with personal responsibility. If you have respect for others, you will not want nor demand that they address your personal problems.
Respect for others supports the common good, as it is necessary for equality and a healthy ecomony/society.
Personal responsibility supports the common good, as it promotes fewer entitlement programs and wards of the state.
Your logic is flawed. First of all, equality and freedom are antonyms.
Secondly, you are applying two different standards to two different groups: those who pay taxes, and those who don't. While insisting that good citizenship involves personal responsibility, while in the same breath saying that it is in the interests of the common good (of the citizens I have to believe) to provide entitlement programs... for those who aren't taking personal responsibility.