Friday, December 14, 2007

Entitlement Attitudes


Before our sports award shin-dig Wednesday night, my Defensive Coordinator and I got into a discussion of perceived attitudes of todays generation. At first, I completely disagreed with him but after our discussion carried on for hours (Josh, you bastard!) I found myself agreeing with him. But unlike Josh, I can demonstrate this attitude in a few minutes.


When Gwen discovered she was pregnant, she quickly took a job that offered medical insurance and said nothing about her condition. A couple of months later, she was laid off, leaving her with no insurance.

Although she had kept her pregnancy secret, Gwen went to a lawyer. They decided to sue her employer claiming she was terminated because the company found out she was pregnant. When Gwen told her friend Ann about this, Ann was appalled, "That’s dishonest!" she said.

Gwen responded angrily, "Don’t be so judgmental. I had no choice. I’m doing what I have to do. You’d do the same thing in my situation."

Ann said, "No, I wouldn’t. That’s not the way I was brought up."

It’s easy to sympathize with Gwen. While her decision to lie is understandable, it’s not justifiable. It’s fraud, plain and simple. Unless we are willing to endorse the right of everyone to lie to get what they think they deserve, we must insist Gwen find another solution.

Both personal responsibility and the integrity of social programs are undermined by a rampant entitlement mentality that goes something like this: "Whatever I want, I need. Whatever I need, I deserve. I have a right to do whatever is necessary to get what I deserve."

Similarly, I worry about the all-too-quick resort of claiming needfulness to justify dishonorable behavior. Nietzsche once warned against granting moral immunity based on dubious exigencies. "Necessity is not a fact. It’s an interpretation."

In a world where "me-first" rationalizations place personal wants and needs above moral principles, we will all become victims sooner or later.

5 comments:

Schmoop said...

Ah yes the entitlement society we have become. I can say that my 13 year old has managed to escape this train of thought so far.

And that darn Nietzsche, I love him, he was always seemed so humorous and light-hearted. Cheers!!

You can Call me AL said...

Matt-Man Thanks for stopping by,
My Boys go to a school that has a high percentage of "at risk" students. Sometimes they will accept idea's that this Daddy don't like! I have to explain to them why they should perceive it differently then their classmates.

Dogmatist said...

I don't know. The more you mention him, the smarter this Josh character sounds. I mean, in your blog he is right up there with Nietzsche.

Oh, and I agree with your premise absolutely.

none said...

I sgree wholeheartedly.

There are plenty of people on welfare with flat screen TVs cable, satellite plus many other "necessities" many of us working folks cannot afford.

Synchronicity said...

great post! i just wrote something on integrity too. we are on the same wavelength.