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Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Paul  Edwards :: Townhall.com Columnist
WALL-E's Indictment of Liberalism
by Paul Edwards
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The lead character in the Pixar film “WALL-E” is both an acronym (Waste Allocation Load Lifter—Earth class) and a lonely robot with a personality. While Pixar has mastered the art of animation, it is the implicit message this film conveys which makes it much more than a mere cartoon.

Some conservatives have written the film off as anti-capitalist propaganda. If the intent of capitalism is to cater to the basest instincts of the human heart, requiring us to indulge our every whim and desire, leading to a dependence on government, then I guess I, too, am an anti-capitalist. However, capitalism can only arrive at that end when all of the restraints of personal responsibility are removed. In this sense, WALL-E is a brilliant exposure of liberalism’s flaws.

WALL-E is the story of what results when a liberal vision of the future is achieved: government marries business in the interest of providing not only “the pursuit of happiness” but happiness itself, thus creating gluttonous citizens dependent on the government to sustain their lives. The result is a humanity consisting of self-absorbed, isolated individuals with no affection for others, who thus defy what it means to truly be human.

The movie begins 700 years after the last human has been forced by undisciplined consumerism—and the waste in its wake—to leave the planet. An army of robots (WALL-Es) then sets out to clean up man’s mess. One might immediately surmise that the creators of the movie received their inspiration from Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth.”

Not so fast. While in the storyline humans certainly have laid waste the planet, and the government’s answer to the crisis is the removal of humans (which is also Al Gore’s solution), 700 years after the last human has left the planet it becomes quite clear that the earth needs humans just as much as humans need the earth. After all, in the Bible we learn that humans were created as caretakers for the planet: “And the Lord God took the man, and put him into the Garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it” (Genesis 2:15).

WALL-E exposes a fundamental flaw in the liberal worldview. In their well-intended desire to lift people out of despair, liberals often fail to factor in the depravity of the human heart. Offer a man the opportunity to get something for little or nothing and the ultimate end will be a man who believes himself entitled to everything for little or nothing. The Buy ’n Large metaphor in WALL-E is not an attack on capitalism. It’s an attack on the government’s co-opting of the entrepreneurial initiative of its citizens, micromanaging it through mandated outcomes and compulsory taxes to the point that there is no longer an incentive for individuals themselves to produce.

As the government usurps the role of producer, it creates citizens who are fat and lazy consumers, entitled and dependent, with no sense of their own responsibility to make any contribution at all to their well-being. In WALL-E’s world we’re all consumers, and an economy with only consumers and no producers cannot be sustained, no matter how many “tax rebates” the government provides to encourage even more consuming.

Rather than deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed, contemporary government derives its powers through the seeming benevolent control of the governed to which we readily consent because it feels so good. Liberating ourselves from our addiction to government benevolence requires the hard work of personal responsibility, a lesson that for the most part isn’t being taught in our public educational institutions or in the decisions handed down by our judicial system. Continued...

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About The Author

Paul Edwards is the host of The Paul Edward Program and a pastor. His program is heard daily on WLQV in Detroit and on godandculture.com

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Another excellent article from Edwards!
This guy is a jewel of conservative wisdom!

WALL-E was *definitely* a cautionary tale against the nanny-state.

Along the same lines... has anyone seen Idiocracy? It's by Mike Judge, who created Beavis & Butthead and King of the Hill.

It explores a similar theme. It's interesting that liberals and conservatives can watch the same media and draw different lessons. In fact, both lessons are equally and importantly valid.

Consumer capitalist culture is dangerous precisely because too few among us have the inner fortitude to stave off its decaying effects.

The solution? IMHO we need to *synthesize* the wisdom of the left and the right. Create a more compassionate environment and train our children to take responsibility for their inner environment.

As one of my favorite humans reminded us, "Be the change you wish to see in the world."

DISNEY/PIXAR MAKES GREAT MOVIES.
I agree this was a great message for the old and young alike.

All their movies are great. FINDING NEMO was an excellent celebration of the male and fatherhood. As a single mother it makes my job easier to have such quality movies for my son.

There were so many great parts to this movie but one of my favorites is when the fat, obese people fell off their "chairs". The Captain was one of my favorite characters. He was too cool.

But WALL-E is our new hero.

Great article, great point. I hope eveyone goes to see this movie. It is a great lesson in life.
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