This week, Fox News anchor Bill O’Reilly attempted to criticize the American work ethic. Specifically, he claimed more Americans than ever are on “some kind of means-tested government support” and that the “safety net” is eroding the country.
According to O’Reilly, “the president is creating a huge federal apparatus that is draining individual incentive and creating an underclass of Americans who aren’t willing to compete for prosperity.”
He says society tolerates “slackers” and “rewards irresponsible behavior.” He never says anything specific about any ethnic group, but the words he’s using give him away.
O’Reilly quoted some statistics, but didn’t cite a source. We dug through government data and couldn’t find anything (even from Bill’s fans at the Heritage Foundation) to support his claims (we addressed those inconsistencies on The Ed Show Thursday night).
So we’re left to fact-check O’Reilly’s broader claims about “slackers” and women who “churn out kids” and “live on food stamps.”
Can anyone really prove Americans aren’t slackers, especially when Republicans keep repeating this vicious meme?
- “[President Obama’s] making us an entitlement society. Where people think they’re entitled to what other people have.” – Mitt Romney, Presumptive GOP Presidential Nominee, CNN Southern Republican Presidential Debate (January 19, 2012)
- “[President Obama] is systematically destroying the work ethic. How? By the narcotic of government dependency.” — Rick Santorum, Former GOP Presidential Candidate (January 4, 2012)
- “We’ve gotten to be a society where we don’t encourage the work ethic. Dependency’s just fine.” — Newt Gingrich, Former GOP Presidential Candidate (February 20, 2012)
- “We’re creating this sense of form of dependence, which to me is a form of modern, 21st century slavery.” — Rep. Allen West, (R) Florida (June 2012)
Narcotic. Entitlement. Slavery. Keep those modern day sentiments in mind as you read the next set of quotations.
They’re taken from school textbooks dating back to 1860. W.E.B. DuBois compiled these and a lot more in Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880:








