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National Service: A Solution in Search of a Problem
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17993 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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5 / 1990 |
2,916 Words |
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Thomas J. DiLorenzo Thomas J. DiLorenzo is the Probasco Professor of Free
Enterprise, the University of Tennesse at Chattanooga. This
article is adapted from his forthcoming book, Paved With Good
Intentions: Economic Nationalism and American Industrial
Policy (Cato Institute, 1990) and is reprinted from Freeman,
March 1990. |
In some intellectual and public policy circles, economic nationalism has struck a fever pitch in the form of proposals for so-called national service. There are now several plans floating around Congress and the White House for a national youth corps. One plan would provide a $100 weekly salary and a $10,000 yearly tuition credit voucher for people between 18 and 26 who join a "Citizens Corps" for two years or serve in the armed forces at a reduced rate of pay.
The reasons given for why the nation supposedly needs a "youth corps" are that it is important to instill in youth an admiration for individualism. Of course, national service proponents rarely are so forthright in their use of language. But a brief survey of some of the "national service" literature reveals that this is exactly what they intend.
One congressional sponsor of a national service bill says the bill is "based on the premise that our young people must move beyond the narcissism of the Reagan years." Such egocentricity, says the congressman, was socially irresponsible because it "led many to ask what their country could do for them." Thus, it is supposedly undesirable for citizens to think of government as an institution whose main purpose is to serve the public. Rather, it is the other way around: Citizens should be compelled to serve government. Citizens are thought to have special "duties," as defined by government, which they must fulfill through "national service."
Donald J. Everly, executive director of an organization called the Coalition for National Service, believes that "young people have a responsibility to their heritage to contribute a period of service
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