Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Longing For The Good Old Days Of The Great Depression
Longing For The Good Old Days Of The Great Depression
Dec 25, 2025 12:11 AM

. Sure, times were tough, but at least people were more sensitive and caring. And our government was much better at taking care of people. Not like now when people are losing government hand-outs left and right. No, the days of the Great Depression were good.

There was a time in our history when the poor and unemployed experienced a passionate government. During the Great Depression the federal government not only provided safety nets in the form of relief, food aid, public housing, mortgage assistance, unemployment insurance, and farm aid, but more significantly, it undertook a series of job-creation programs that gave back to millions of unemployed workers and their families precisely what the Depression had taken from them—the opportunity to support themselves with dignity.

Now, it’s a harsh, cruel world. Collins calls our era one of “cruel indifference.”

What? Where? Huh?

Here is the world of “cruel indifference” I live in. Several churches in the rural area where I live provide a free dinner every Tuesday to ers. No strings attached. Come in, sit down, be served. If you have other needs, let us know and we’ll see what we can do to help you out.

In the munity, there are half a dozen places one can get support for an unplanned pregnancy: formula, diapers, medical care, etc. Just down the street from where I work are several shelters, soup kitchens, addiction and other services for the homeless, almost all of them privately-funded. There is a resource center for women to help them finish their educations, learn appropriate interviewing and job skills, help them build a work wardrobe, and professional mentoring in order to gain sustainable employment. If you have a mentally ill or cognitively-impaired child, there is a program at a local (private!) social service agency that will not only help you navigate the mental health service network, but also pair you with a parent who has more experience or is a few years down the road from where you’re at now.

Where is the “cruel indifference?” What is Collins so unhappy about?

What she is unhappy about is that she wants the government to take care of all this. Relieve the private citizen of the care of his fellow man, and let Congress take over. The New Deal, for Collins, is the icon of a passionate government:

The underlying logic of the New Deal was that society had an obligation to offer aid to persons denied the opportunity to be self-supporting. Hopkins [Harry Hopkins, head of Roosevelt’s Federal Emergency Relief Administration], in particular, favored jobs programs over relief or “welfare,” although relief was to be available to those who couldn’t work. For New Dealers,the goalwas to close the economy’s job gap, not to correct the supposed moral failings of jobless individuals or to put pressure on them to seek and accept work when there wasn’t any.

It was just this type of thinking, Collins explains, that gave rise to the Social Gospel: “an ideology of individualism that government could alleviate problems beyond the scope of the private sector.” No pressure to work, no condemnation, no worries: the government is here to take care of everything.

We need two things, Collins says. First, more money to fund more government programs. Second, the government needs to hire more people. More money, more public programs, more government. Private programs, Collins points out, just aren’t up to such big tasks:

However well motivated, providing soup kitchens and homeless shelters can never meet all of the need; but more importantly, it doesn’t do anything to confront the psychological and moral devastation faced by those without the prospect of meaningful, self-supporting work.

Actually, soup kitchens and homeless shelters (and other private programs) are exactly where people can get help with the psychological and moral devastation of joblessness. Try showing up at the office of your local state representative and see how much moral and psychological support you get.

Yes, the government helped people in a time of great distress, but who in their right mind is nostalgic about the Great Depression? Are people really clamoring to stand in bread lines? Is the government the best entity to create jobs? Should we point those in need to the government, rather than taking the time to help them ourselves? The answer to all these is a resounding “no.”

Collins is right: society does have an obligation to offer aid. What she doesn’t seem to realize is that we are society; society is not government. Whether a person lives in a republic, a democracy, under a monarchy or even in a dictatorship, the individual obligation to do everything they can to help another remains in place. If I cannot do the task by myself, I find like-minded folks to help. Our churches, our neighborhoods, our charities, our own two hands: that is society.

A government is good at many things: building and maintaining infrastructures, policing our towns and cities, defending the nation against threats to life and liberty. A government is not good at holding someone’s hand when they’ve lost their house or job. A government isn’t good at helping a mom plan meals on a limited budget for the month. A government isn’t good at mentoring young men to help them stay in school. Society – you and me – is good at that. Collins is nostalgic for the era of the Great Depression and the New Deal? That’s depressing.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Work as flourishing in prison: The power of a ‘triple bottom line’ business
For much of his life, Pete Ochs was a successful investment banker in Wichita, Kansas. Yet having started his own business and created significant wealth through a series of investments, he struggled to see the value and purpose of it all. When the market took a turn for the worse, he realized that something needed to change. “After 9/11, our business dropped 50%, and I looked at God and said, ‘don’t you understand what I’ve done for you?’” he explains....
How budget constraints affect consumer choices
Note: This is post #70 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. There are numerous variables that determine the price of goods and services—including your willingness to pay the price. Because we have choices in what we buy, the price is relative to other goods. For example, one pizza may cost the equivalent to two cups of coffee so we have to make tradeoffs between goods. We also have budget constraints, which are a crucial variable in helping you...
Black Panther has something important to offer
In this week’s Acton Commentary I examine the dynamics of marginalization and solidarity in the blockbuster phenomenon Black Panther. As so mentators have suggested, there’s a lot to this film, and one of the important things it has to offer is a valuable perspective on the underlying unity amidst diversity in humanity. Another aspect of the film worth highlighting is that it presents Wakanda, and Africa more generally, as having something positive to offer the world; advanced technology and rare...
Keeping warm during the ‘Beast from the East’? Thank energy investors
As the UK beds down for the night, it is blanketed with government alerts that traveling out into the snow-covered landscape might prove deadly – as it already has for 10 people ranging in age from seven to 75. The snowfall may total more than 19 inches, as Storm Emma collides with the “Beast from the East.” Subzero temperatures also strained energy supplies on Thursday, triggering the largest spike in consumer demand in eight years. While far from perfect, the...
How the Reformation led to a reallocation of religious resources
Soon after Martin Luther nailed his ninety-five theses to the church door at Wittenberg (if he even did), Protestants began to be blamed for unleashing many of the destructive influences of Western Civilization. As a Baptist, I thinkthe criticisms are overstated (and thatthe good of the Reformation far outweighs the bad) but they aren’t wholly without merit. There is more than a grain of truth that anunintended effect of the Protestant Reformation was to increase the rapid expansion of secularization....
Oscar-winner ‘Coco’ is a free-market family gem
Last night, Coco joined the elite group of animated films to win a “grand slam”: the Golden Globe, BAFTA, theAnnie Award,andan Oscar. Neither of the victories at last night’s 90th annual Academy Awards came as a surprise – fans have dubbed the Best Animated Feature Film category “the Pixar award” – but the blockbuster’s plot touches on how the free market rewards or rebuffs unethical practices, how technological progress brings justice, and the eternal significance of vocation and memory. The...
Alex Chafuen awarded for an exemplary career in defense of freedom
Today The Instituto Juan de Mariana has awarded the “Premio Juan de Mariana” to Acton’s Director of International Outreach Alex Chafuen. This award recognizes an exemplary career in the defense of freedom and liberty. The Juan de Mariana Prize is presented at the Freedom Dinner as a part of Freedom Week. Chafuen was recognized especially for his work at the Atlas Network. During 26 years with Chafuen in a leading role, Atlas brought together more than 450 institutions from almost...
Radio Free Acton: Yuval Levin on finding solidarity in the Age of Trump; Upstream on ‘Black Panther’
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Marc Vander Maas, audio/visual manager at Acton, speaks with Yuval Levin, Vice President of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, on finding solidarity in the “Age of Trump,” what it means, how it came about, and then touch on the history of political polarization in America. On the Upstream segment, Caroline Roberts has a discussion with Julian Chambliss, professor of history at Rollins College, on Marvel’s new hit movie, “Black Panther.” Check out...
Milton Friedman debates President Trump on trade
Many of us thought it was empty rhetoric or that an advisor who had read an economics textbook would talk him out of it. But yesterday President Trump announced he’ll keep his campaign promise to start a trade war by slapping tariffs of 25 percent on foreign-made steel and 10 percent on aluminum. On Twitter, the president followed up with the bafflingly, ment that, When a country (USA) is losing many billions of dollars on trade with virtually every country...
Justice Alito exposes the hypocrisy of liberal double-standards
You probably haven’t even heard about it, but yesterday there was an exchange in the Supreme Court that future generations will regard as one of the most significant revelations of our political era. The case of Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky concerns a Minnesota statute that broadly bans all political apparel at the polling place. When Andrew Cilek went to vote in 2010, he wore a shirt bearing the image of the “Don’t Tread on Me” flag and a button...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved