Haiti Blogs

Three blogs I’ve been following for Haiti updates:

The Anchoress, who has been posting reports from a friend in Petit Goave.

The Livesay Weblog, missionaries working in Haiti with several ministries — currently running a makeshift hospital at their location.

The Rollings — their ordinary work is making water filters for Clean Water for Haiti, based out of Pierre Payen.

Follow these.  When you can do almost nothing, at least you can know how to pray.

(Thank you to the several people who first pointed me to these.)

RE: ‘climate change’

I’m a sorry linker, when it comes to WSJ articles .  But anyway, the other day* , after I posted about the beetles, the journal’s “The Numbers Guy” column was on climate models.  Long discussion about how these models are inaccurate, unreliable, not good for making policy, etc. But then there was this graph.  A very eye-catching graph.

–> Which showed, to my slightly-trained eye, that sure enough, over the past century the average global temperature (that’s got to be fun to measure) has been steadily increasing. Plenty of up-n-down blips, but the overall trend was mighty obvious.

Now what to do with that data another question entirely.  I’m not persuaded it’s a man-made phenomenon, though I can certainly see why someone might think so — industrial revolution, all that.  But as I think about Romans-to-Renaissance industrial ebb and flow, and then ponder the climate variations that went alongside, I just don’t see the connection.

It could be that my memory is poor — it’s not like I’ve got 2,000 years of ecomic and weather data neatly filed here at my  hand.  I’m just going off of bits and pieces pasted together from various reading over the years.  So if someone has a nice readable [short, if we could] article fitting that slightly longer-term data into the current climate-change theory, do post.  I really am not at all decided one way or another.

 

*That’s a technical citation, meaning “it is in my mulch box, no longer in the living room”.  Which is how we date newspaper articles here.

May the Best Budgeter Win

A few months ago (yeah, I know), I picked up a copy of The Medieval Military Revolution (Barnes & Noble 1998 – originally written in 1995 — Edited by Andrew Ayton & J.L. Price).  Been sitting on my shelf, inherited from TR, yet unread.  I was looking for something I didn’t find there, but I came across this thought in the editor’s introduction:

Those that live by the sword shall die by the sword, and this can be applied in a sense to governments and even states as well.  States went bankrupt, at least technically, through the cost of war, and the fiscal strain of long-term involvement in warfare was perhaps the single most important threat to political stability even in this most turbulent of periods.

In this case, the editor is writing about the mid-16th to mid-17th century.  But every century has its nations, and the realities of economics and defense don’t disappear over time.

When I was in high school economics, I can remember people trying to argue that somehow the US’s national debt just didn’t matter.  We were too big to fail, or by some bit of magic we could borrow as much as we wanted and nothing would really happen . . . it was bizarre. Didn’t make sense then, and still doesn’t.  I suppose we could always stiff our creditors in the end, but even that has its consequences.

The US is a mighty wealthy nation.  Wealthy people can waste a lot of resources and not feel the consequences the way poorer neighbors would.  But there are limits to our wealth.  We can’t just magically spend on anything we decide we want — even we must pick and choose.

***

And anytime we borrow? We have to pay it back out of future wealth.  The only time borrowing fuels growth is when the money borrowed is invested in something that makes us more productive. The hallmark of a chronic debtor, of course, is the conviction that every debt really was necessary, really did make the debtor ‘better off’.

But reality isn’t so.

In the current economic quagmire, households, businesses, and governments that had previously acted prudently and with fiscal restraint are managing fairly well.  A neighbor was laid off, but fortunately he had savings, was living beneath his means — he has a little cushion to get by while he looks for a new job.  The greatest crises today are coming among those who were massively in debt a year ago or more, and don’t know how to get by without yet more debt.  (Or, of course, stiffing their creditors.)

–>  Not talking here about those families and businesses that did everything ‘right’ during the flush times (which were not, for them, all that flush), but still struggle today.  Not talking about those whose reverses have been far greater than anyone could plan against.  Prudence today won’t withstand every possible storm tomorrow. But it sure improves your odds.

***

So I’m a bit alarmed by the current rush to spend, spend, spend.  Oh and it isn’t a democrat’s problem — I had a pit in my stomach prior to the presidential election, knowing that I could count on either party to be just as irresponsible.  I’m alarmed by things like trying to create new government-sponsored insurance programs *for people who already have health insurance*, when we haven’t sucessfully put together a program for those who don’t.

–> Frankly I’m really dissappointed in the democrats, because they aren’t actually coming through on helping people who actually need help.  Tons and tons of spending on vague programs to ‘stimulate’.  Er, how about we just get everyone who needs food fed?  Houses for *actual homeless people*?

A more personal example: I’ve a friend who has an undiagnosed breathing problem. She *stops breathing*.  She can’t afford a doctor’s visit to diagnose the problem.  Mmn . . . how ’bout we stimulate the economy by making it possible to get in for a doctor’s appointment if you’re a person who can’t work because you can’t, uh, breathe reliably??  That cash would trickle into the pockets of a receptionist, a maintenance guy, a lab worker, an MD — *and* we’d have a person who might be able to breathe all the time? And thus be able to go get a job? Hmmn?

***

End of the rant.  Have a good week.  Soon as I find my lost book, I’ll have a review up on the other blog.  Meanwhile am trying, as always, to clean the house, educate the children, exercise the ol’ mind, body & spirit, and all that other vocation-y stuff.  Hope y’all are doing well.  Oh, and hey, to keep you busy during my slackerlyness, here’s another cornucopia of social-issues rants: http://www.frontporchrepublic.com/ . Thanks to Bethune Catholic for the link.

link – investment vs speculation

Goodness, I have no idea whether I’m a distributist or not (someone maybe could tell me), and I certainly don’t know whether The Distributist Review is generally a good blog or not.  But here’s a useful post:  The Wealth Delusion.  Go read it.  All about what I’m all about: economics needs to reflect reality, not fantasy.


tax law madness reaches new heights

Retroactive taxes are evil.  End of story.

You earn income through legal means.  You set aside the expected amount for taxes.  Chances are you spend the rest.   Even if you save or invest your income, likely you put it into something that is not very liquid — an educational savings account with penalties for withdrawal, for example.  Or real estate.  There is no reason to believe that any person, no matter how wealthy, parks his income in a bank account waiting to see if the government is going to ask for it back.  It is your money, legally acquired; it is reasonable to think it really is yours to do with as you please.

And then here comes Congress, deciding that because your income is unpopular, they should be free to tax it at 90%. Retroactively.  What if you can’t pony up the cash come tax time? Well, then you can pay penalties,  maybe have your home seized, maybe go to prison.

Am I outraged by the AIG bonuses?  Of course I am.   They are yet another symptom of lousy management by both AIG and our Congress who decided to invest in the company.  If we like, let us pass a law limiting compensation to government-funded entities.

But a retroactive tax is nothing short of confiscation of private property.  It is evil, and it is bad governance.

***

Edited to add this link to a description of the bill that passed the House.

Warren Buffet & Mark-to-Market

So I’m loathe to argue with Warren Buffet on financial matters.  His wealth being the result of a keen understanding of reality, which is what this blog is about.  But if I correctly understand what he is campaigning for concerning the mark-to-market rule, I think he is nearly right.

So the whole issue with the mark-to-market rule and banks begins with how banks are regulated:  Banks are required to have a certain amount of assets for each dollar worth of loans they make.  So for example if the bank has $1 million in assets (cash, stock, real estate, what have you), they can make only so many dollars in loans.  If they want to make more loans, they have to increase their assets.  If they reduce the amount of assets they have, they also have to reduce the amount of their loans.

Mark-to-market is a new accounting rule that says this:  That $1 million in assets? It is what those assets are worth now, not what you paid for them.

Warren Buffet is arguing that although mark-to-market is a fine rule for the financial statements, it should not be used to kick in regulatory requirements.  In other words, if your $1 million in assets drops in value to $750K, by all means report the loss in value on your annual report.  But don’t let the bank be required to generate $250K in new assets all on a moment’s notice, because chances are the dip in market value is going to come back up before you know it, and everything will be fine.

I think he’s mostly right here.  You can’t run any operation living and dying on the blippiness of changing market values.  But, if [if – note the if] Buffet is arguing that the bank can go on as if nothing happened while waiting for a rebound, I think that’s not quite right.

***

Here’s a similar example that is more concrete, to help you see what I’m saying:

Suppose you bought a house for $200K, and you paid for it cash. [Try not to laugh.  We’re pretending.]  You own it outright, no mortgage, it’s all yours.

So then you go to the bank, and based on the value of this house, you get a $200K home equity loan.  A loan that is secured by your house.  If you don’t pay back your loan, the bank gets your house.

Now imagine that the housing market tumbles [I see you aren’t laughing now], and your house is only worth about $100K.  We can’t be entirely sure of its market value, since you aren’t trying to sell it, but that’s a reasonable estimate of what you could get if you had to sell the thing right now.

–> Which means you now have a $200K loan, secured by a house worth only $100K.

What should the bank do?  Should they require you to quick pony up another $100K in assets or else declare you bankrupt?  Or should they continue to act as if your home is still worth $200K, and let you borrow freely based on that value?  After all, sooner or later the market will probably turn around and your  home’s value will go back up again.

They should do neither.  Declaring you bankrupt is nonsense.  Chances are you are just going to pay off your home equity loan as previously planned, your house was only really there as insurance in case something happened.  –> This is the argument against regulatory mark-to-market.  Forcing the banks to behave like they are bankrupt when really they are not is causing all kinds of financial havoc.  Not good for the economy, the bank, or anyone, anymore than suddenly calling in that $200k home equity loan would make sense in our example.

BUT, you can’t ignore reality.  Your house just dropped in value big time.  Who knows why.  Maybe it’s a cyclical downturn or the result of some temporary panic, and everything will be back to normal before you know it.  Or maybe you paid way way too much for the thing, and if your banker had taken one look at it you’d never have gotten that loan.  Or something else — an earthquake just opened a huge sinkhole in your driveway, gangsters are building a compound next door, who knows.

–>  All kinds of things can affect the value of a house, or any other asset; some of them are real changes, others are just the vagaries of the market.  Some will be easily rectified, others will cause a permanent loss in value.

What should the bank do? Let you pay down your line of credit.  At a normal manageable rate.  And once your outstanding debt matches the current value of your house, all is good again.  Doesn’t really matter, from a regulatory perspective, whether it is because your home’s value rebounds or because you reduce your overall loan.  The important thing is that your financial situation reflects reality.

***

This is where our banks need to be with mark-to-market.  Use mark-to-market as a tool to guide what the bank ought to do next.  When assets drop too low, no need to declare bankruptcy, but it is time to put the brakes on future lending until the situation balances out again.

Warren Buffet is absolutely right, it is unreasonable and imprudent to ask banks to magically conjure up new assets out of thin air whenever the market takes one of its habitual dives.  He knows very well that usually things turn around, usually it will work out in the end if you just sit tight.

But at the same a time, you can’t use ‘it’s just a little downturn’ as an excuse to allow a bank to be in way over its head, continuing to make loans based on what used to be true, but is no longer.

–>  If you put together a reasonable mechanism for adjusting to changes in asset values, if the situation really is a temporary market downturn, quickly enough it’ll sort itself out, and you can go back to lending-as-usual.  But if it turns out that your assets really do have permanent loss in value, you have begun to make the necessary changes to get your financial situation back in balance.

**********************************

This, by the way, is a gratuitous econ post.   A little lenten penance for you.  We’re still on schedule for my hopeless review of Church and State in the Middle Ages come Friday.  Or the day that will be called Friday for blogging purposes, regardless of what the so-called ‘calendar-value’ of that day appears to be.

Wealth, Money, Stimulus

High time we got back to economics.  Naturally I’ve been generating plenty of opinions on the economic situation even as I sit on my hands these last couple of months.  Today, the deluge.

***

Review: What is wealth? Recall that economics is the study of how to use limited resources to meet unlimited wants and needs.  Wealth, then, is what helps meet those needs.  Food comes to mind.  Houses. Clothes.  Toys.  Medical care.  An afternoon spent rolling in the maple leaves.  These are kinds of wealth.

We work to increase our wealth. We increase our wealth by taking something we value less, adding human labor, and turning it into something we value more.  A packet of seeds and a patch of dirt, turn it into food.  A pile of lumber, turn it into a bookshelf.  Knit a sweater, write a story, build a car, put a trail through the woods or a road through the prairie, whatever it is we want.

–>  And sometimes we just work, or refrain from working, in order to preserve or enjoy the wealth given to us.   Clean water, mountains, beaches, creeks, swamps — these things meet a need we have.  We don’t make them, we just do our best to maintain them and avoid destroying them.  They are a most definitely a kind of wealth, as real estate prices make clear.

Wealth-generation versus busyness. Not all work generates wealth.  Think of digging a ditch and then filling it back in.  Or filling out a long complicated tax form.  Aside from the zen exercise, I argue that no wealth has been generated by your busyness.  Opportunity cost is part of this equation.  It isn’t that the ditch-digging wasn’t helpful for building muscles or teaching patience, or that the tax form didn’t grow your mental powers.  But the same amount and type of work would have generated so much more wealth if you had devoted that time and energy to doing something that was actually wanted.

–> Wealth depends on *wanting* what you produce.  Okra comes to mind.  A treasure house of okra does very little to meet my unlimited wants and needs.  Perhaps not so for you.  But for me, please, make it tomatoes.

***

Where does an economic crisis come from?

We’re having one.  And understanding where the crisis comes from is the first step in trying to resolve it.  Oh, I don’t know either.  But today we’ll talk about the general principles, and maybe that will give us some clues.

Two broad sources of economic crisis:

A tremendous loss of wealth. Either the destruction of what you currently have, or a failure to be able to produce what you normally require.  Hence the traditional sources of economic crises:  disease, famine, crop failure, war, corruption, earthquake, flood, tsunami, fire, etc. etc.  What you have is destroyed.  You are poorer.  Or what you need — say, food — you cannot produce.

Have we experienced this lately?  I think so.  Quite a few wars going on just now, and the US is involved in a couple of them.  Expensive and destructive.  Not too mention the tying up of labor and resources that could be spent actually producing wealth.   More expensive than not going to war?  We could argue all night.  But consider the possibility at least that our current wars are costing us wealth.  Worth the cost?  Perhaps.  But let us not be surprised if the spending of our wealth makes us poorer — even if we are happy to be poorer.

(It is okay to spend one kind of wealth – say, lives, tanks, fuel, food — to get another, say, peace.  But just don’t be surprised when you are short on the one if you’ve gone and spent it.)

You may also recall the last several years were busy for natural disasters.  Can’t lose the bulk of the Gulf coast to hurricanes and not be poorer for it.  Easy to look at the busyness of re-building and think how swimmingly the economy is going — and forget that all the busyness is the work of replacing what was lost and destroyed.  All that work is to replace lost wealth, not to generate new wealth.

Plenty more examples.  –>  We should consider that at least part of the reason we feel so poor lately, is that we are so poor.  If so, part of the solution is stop the causes of on-going loss, and then to generate new wealth.  To the extent that loss is unavoidable, we have to accept our poverty.  Which brings me to the other source of economic ‘crisis’:

Fantasy exceeding Reality. All this talk of ‘bubbles’ and ‘speculation’, is mostly this. But think first about your personal life.  Ever have a time when your imagination takes you one way, and later you discover reality was the other direction?  A crisis results . . .

It is, say, the end of the day and the house is a wreck and suddenly there is a whirlwind-of-cleaning-crisis because you have a big mess and neither time nor energy to fix it.  Much yelling at children and bickering with the spouse.  (Ahem.  This is, of course, a purely theoretical example.) The fantasy of ‘we’ll clean it up later’ collides with the reality of ‘I should have started cleaning sooner’.

Financially we do the same.  You take out loan on the expectation that future income will come in to help you pay the bill.  Or you spend today’s income on new clothes and a family vacation, and forget that you needed to set aside that cash for the emergency fund or the kids’ college.  When reality intervenes, you are stuck with a loan or expenses you can’t pay, and you have a ‘crisis’.

This can happen on a national scale, too.  We borrow today for a spending program, sure that tomorrow’s income will allow us to pay it back.  Well, if we as a nation don’t generate the wealth to pay back our loans, we end up in a crisis.

–> It is easy to deceive ourselves about these ‘crises’.  I’m sure I would have had the house clean if only the baby hadn’t picked just this moment to take up cooking.  Well, perhaps, but how many children must you have before you learn what it is toddlers do, and plan accordingly?  Likewise, financially, surely you knew that the kids were going to grow up and want to go to college?  Surely you considered the possibility that you wouldn’t get the raise, that your car might break down, that the hot water heater might go out . . . we can’t plan for every disaster, but a certain amount of turmoil?  It’s going to happen, you’ve got to allow for it.

Nationally, just as likely.  Big spending programs built on best-case-scenarios are going to leave us crunched for cash when the best-case doesn’t happen.

And one other source of economic woe: Poor distribution of resources. Nobody go running for Das Kapital.  But, but, but: how wealth is spread around society does have its impact.  The well-being of the economy — that is, how well our resources are being used to meet human needs — is measured not only on by the average-well-being, but by the well-being of each individual.  What with society being made up all these individual human beings.

I mention this just to give you one more clue to consider.  Compared to other countries, I think the US does pretty well — not as well as I’d like, but better than we could.  Still, when looking for ways to improve the economy, look at your tax code, your inheritance laws, your education system, your health care practices, your wage laws, your lending laws: How do these impact the flow of wealth?  Do they help the poor end of society make at least a modest living?  Do they encourage enterprise?  Do they encourage us to make good use of resources, or are there bizarre incentives towards wastefulness?

–> One of the results of our specialized economy, is that in a crisis, a portion of the people end up with nothing. As they said during the great depression, if you had a job, you were fine.  Specialization of labor is a good thing — we end up wealthier as a society, and for the most part, as individuals as well.  But if we are going to enjoy the benefits of specialization, we also need to make provision for the unemployed.

***

What about the complicated financial situation?

Remember that money is backed by the wealth of the nation.  Even in a gold-based economy, that hunk of metal is not being passed around because of its own inherent worth (gold is useful, but not that useful), but as a token to represent the wealth of its owner.

Yes,  yes, you can really mess up a financial system through poor management of your coin-minting process. Yes, look at your financial system and figure out what needs to be done better. And I’ll say right here that the FDIC did just what it was meant to do, and prevented a massive run on the banks.  Good job.

–> But make sure you aren’t looking at the mess in the financial markets, and blaming the market, rather than the economic situation it represents.  I’m reminded of last fall when everyone was lamenting that you couldn’t get approved for a car loan as easily as a year earlier.   All the sudden you could only get approved for a car you could actually afford.  Nothing wrong with that particular financial market, except that it hadn’t come to its senses sooner.

I do think our current financial-system-practices encourage the whole fantasy life problem.  Don’t know what to do about it, though.  The same financial instruments that cause such temptation and disaster when abused really are good and useful in their place.

I expect there is a need for reform here and there.  Certainly transparency is a great help in protecting investors.  Mostly though I’m afraid that the push is to rescue companies whose only ‘crisis’ is poor business practices.   To a certain extent, you have to live with the pain of your thoughtless actions, and take responsibility for your own misguided choices.

**

So about that stimulus package . . .

You be the judge.

Does it provide for the basic needs of the unemployed?

Does it address wealth-drains, such as corruption and bureaucratic complexity?

Where it invests, is it to produce infrastructure or goods that are truly needed?    Is it careful to limit spending so that we aren’t blindly putting out okra and moving piles of dirt left and right in the quest for busyness, but with no check for whether our work will produce actual wealth?

Does it encourage private investment and enterprise?

–>  Does it limit government spending only to areas where there is real reason to believe the private sector can’t or won’t  step in to address true wants and needs? Does it avoid excess spending, so that capital markets have funding available to lend to businesses?

Is it based on realistic expectations for our ability to pay back the government’s loans later?  Or are we signing ourselves up for an economic ‘crisis’ down the road, when we are forced to face the sad truth that we are not as wealthy as we had expected?

***

Enough for this month.  Next week: Review/report on Requiem Press’ Church and State in the Middle Ages.  Ha, dismal sciences everywhere.

About that international dateline . . .

I’m looking at my schedule for the weekend, and estimating that ‘Friday’ will show up on this blog sometime Monday afternoon.

Meanwhile, my thought for the weekend:

How ’bout a square-feet-per-occupant guideline on that housing bailout?  Not persuaded that the bailing-out is the best way to proceed.   (Said by a person who is very keen on affordable housing and owner-occupied housing.)  But I’m certainly sympathetic to those who were faced with the choice of ‘if you want to own a home, you have to buy at this ridiculous price’.   We were fortunate not to have needed to relocate during the big bubble.

So my thought is this: If I am going to be subsidizing your housing, I would like it to be reasonable housing.  Kind of rankles to imagine someone went out and mortgaged a McMansion, and I have to pay taxes to make sure the poor folks don’t have to downsize to a house like . . . mine.  Just envy speaking, don’t mind me.

Plus I’m curious to see what the government would come up with as a ‘normal’ home.

Rationing Health Care

I forget which of the several great blogs I owe thanks to for pointing me to Secondhand Smoke.  Good coverage of ethical issues, and over the past week there have been a few posts specifically on health care and end-of-life decisions.  Look here for a brief report about how the British healthcare system rations expensive medicines.  And here is an article about a family that wishes to dehydrate-to-death a family member who has become severely disabled by a stroke — of significant concern is the cost of nursing care for the patient.

I wanted to point out two issues that these articles raise:

First of all, making cost-versus-benefit decisions about medical care is normal and rational. Resources are limited, and both length and quality of life can be subject to opportunity costs. As a wife and mother, frankly I’m all about making this life’s inevitable suffering and end as frugal as possible.   There are times when my family’s money is better spent on some other purpose than my medical care.

Forgive me if I shock you, but shouldn’t my money be spent on my happiness?  If I find greater marginal utility in spending $10,000 on college tuition for my children, rather than on a year’s supply of a prescription drug of doubtful longterm benefit, do I not have the right to spend my money as I see fit?  If it is acceptable for me to give up my life of housewife luxury in order to toil away in a fluorescent-lit cubicle farm, in order to provide some perceived good for my children, am I not also allowed to give up that same number of days of housewife luxury, for the same benefit to my children, if instead of a cube farm I find myself suffering at home, or in purgatory, doing some kind of work arguably no less valuable than whatever clerical job I might have gotten in the first case?

So what’s wrong with a nationalized health care system making rationing decisions?  The same thing that would be wrong with a command economy telling me I am required to take that clerical job.  These are my decisions to make.   The catholic name for this principle is ‘subsidarity’.  From CCC 1883:

Socialization also presents dangers. Excessive intervention by the state can threaten personal freedom and initiative. The teaching of the Church has elaborated the principle of subsidiarity, according to which “a community of a higher order should not interfere in the internal life of a community of a lower order, depriving the latter of its functions, but rather should support it in case of need and help to co- ordinate its activity with the activities of the rest of society, always with a view to the common good.”

Any health care system that violates the principle of subsidarity — taking health care decisions out of the hands of the patient and making them subject to the preferences of the state — is not morally sound.

The second point that came to me, especially reading about the beleaguered stroke patient, is that we as a culture seem to have lost all concept of responsibility for caring for family members.  Let me be the first to say that I find nursing to be icky work.   There’s good reason I went into accounting and not health care.  I can barely stand to change my own kids’ diapers, why would I want to change anyone else’s?

But contemporary America has decided to completely forget about the work of caring for the helpless.  All those housewives who ‘don’t do anything’?  They’re, um, taking care of other people.

–> Ever notice that if you don’t take care of your own children, you have to pay other people to do it?  It’s because childcare is actual work.  Same story with making dinner, vacumning, cleaning toilets, all that stuff.  When people decry the ‘high cost of childcare’ I want to shake their shoulders.  Don’t you know that the nice lady who keeps your kids for you has to feed herself and her family, too?  There isn’t a ‘cheap’ method of caring for children.

And the same is true of nursing care.  Fine and good if you as a family have decided that expensive hospitalization and advanced medical procedures are not how you wish to spend your money for the care of ill family member.  But you can’t anymore decide that therefore *nobody* should feed the poor guy, just because you don’t want to pay someone to do it for you — anymore than you could decide that since daycare is so expensive, just leave the baby home alone and unfed while you go to work all day.

And now we’re back to subsidarity.  You can’t have it both ways.  Does the state have a responsibility to pay for the care of your children?  Then you have given up your right to decide how that child will be treated.  Does the state have a responsibility to care for your elderly, disabled, father?  Than you again have turned over your rights.  Because these are, fundamentally, your rights.  Your rights, and your responsibilities.

We are slipping more and more from the notion that the state has a legitimate role in assisting the most weak and vulnerable among us — the orphan, the childless elderly, the abandoned and helpless — to thinking that the state has the obligation to care for all of us.  It isn’t so.  What the state does for those most in need, it does on our behalf — the church, or some other private group or individual, could as easily do the same.  In a secular nation, it is not unreasonable that our government be a logical choice for representing us in these works of mercy.

But they are, all the same, our work.  Our responsibility.  We have a collective responsibility to the poor in our communities.  We have an individual responsibility for our own family members.  And claiming and fulfilling that responsibility is the only way we can hope to hold onto our freedom.  Which I suppose makes a homeschooling housewife a rather patriotic sort of worker.