Sunday, January 2, 2011

Equality

Nicholas Kristof's  column in the January 2, 2011 New York Times is based on book, “The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger.” The book is by two British epidemiologists who have studied the effects of inequality.  The column says that the stress of being at the bottom of the social hierarchy causes biological changes that result in physical ailments such as heart disease and social ailments including violent crime.

You can, and I hope you will, read the entire column here: Equality, a True Soul Food

The column got me thinking about my childhood.  Very few people in the little town where I grew up locked the doors to their houses.  Burglaries were almost unknown.  Was it just because it was a small town? Or was there another reason the town was safer than? 

The top tax rate from 1951 through 1963 was at least 91%.  In 1952 and 1953 it was a bit higher, 92%.   The estate taxes were high too, 77% at the highest bracket.  While there were still some very rich people, the effect of the tax rates was to reduce the difference between the highest incomes and the lowest incomes and to reduce the possibility of an aristocracy of wealth in the United States.

So did the greater equality of income make the town I grew up in safer?  Possibly.

Thought I'd Start a Blog

My wife, Linda, has no interest in political or religious discussions.   And Facebook really isn't a proper forum for all the things that are on my mind.  So I've decided to record my musings in a blog.  I doubt what I have to say will interest many people.  But I'll at least have  a way to express what I'm thinking.



More to come.