Never Forget That These Editorials Are The Opinion Of One Man - —■— -And He May Be Wrong What CAN Be Done? In a “free society” what really CAN be done about ^trikes of key groups? If “free men” are denied the right to quit the work they surely are no longer free. There is sorfle archaeological evidence to support the premise that other high ly developed civilizations foundered on hostile shores not totally unlike this that threatens our complex society today. In the sense of mechanical technology we have no evidence that any society ever reached--t^e-Tofty heights we now occupy, but there is plenty of evidence to support the fact that numerous cul tures have existed that equalled, or per haps surpassed the present insofar as the loose term “civilization” is concern ed. " *,' i* The glories of Greece, the grandeur of Rome, the enigma of Egypt are fairly familiar to the average high schqol student. Less familiar, but perhaps even greater than these story book Medi terannean dynasties are the incompara ble sprawl of the Saracen culture, the » Mogul Empire of India, the China of Marco Polo and the almost forgotten grandeurs that left architectual splen dors in dozens of hidden jungles through out Southeast Asia. And more recently we have known of Napoleon’s France, Victoria’s Britain and Bismarck’s Imperial Germany. Military defeat .ended some of these, but far more died from internal rot than from external attack. And the central virus that rotted a' majority of these previous great empires was the Antoinettean philosophy of “Letting the mob eat cake.” The Rom an Caesars gave their mob the circus. The Saracen world foundered on an exalted sensuality that makes some of our-.current high jinks look about like a Sunday School picnic by comparison. So in the final analysis the ckjggh of great powers is a built-in safety-valve that protects lesser people from dom inance for too long by any nation, that climbs to the top of the power dung heap. Lanier's In Trouble North Carolina Insurance Commission er Edwin Lanier has surely made one big mistake and if his statement of last week is correct he has made several more mistakes that have cost the farm ers of our general area a great deal of money. v ■ v Last week in what he called a pre liminary report, Lanier said' $139,884.20 had been' stolen by insurance agents, in surance adjusters and farmers in “East ern North Carolina.” He said this had been going on since 1963. , Lanier’s first mistake is in throwing such a blanket indictment over every agent and adjustor Lanier knew enough penny about he also had to know who had been involved in this hail insurance banditry. And if it has been going on since 1963 Lanier is guilty of not having protected the public by prosecuting these thieves much earlier ,and now that he is suf ficiently concerned to issue such a blan ket charge he also ought to be gentle man enough to protect the honest farm ers, agents and adjusters by calling names and having indictments issued against those believed to be guilty. Rumors around this section are ten cents a dozen. This is all Lanier’s The honest people who are cloud of suspicion generated ought to demand that he tah he surely hast to ultimately is to get specific and nut jail. __, __a nopefal gleam in the eye of North Carolina Republi cans. He and his supporters know they Jiave a very-long row to hoe in electing a Republican to a statewide office in North Carolina. The tHck has not been turned in this century. But Shallcross is a very determined man, and he has some excellent tools to work with in his effort to dislodge the state’s junior senator. Shallcross is 46, hardworking and bet ter than any Republican in this genera tion he seems to grasp the fact that the plurality that has kept North Carolina in the Democratic Party lives here in. Eastern North Carolina, and he says he intends to exert a large part of his effort in this end of the state that Re publicans have very largely ignored in the recent pest Jordan will be 70 in September, 76 at the end of his term if he is elected. Heartened by John East’s showing against Walter Jones in the first con gressional district* inspired by the bumbl ing in Viet Nam; the gnawing cancer of inflation and excited by the almost pious services Jordan has rendered to Presi dent Johnson in the Bobby Baker white wash job, Shallcross is working early, working hard and he says now in July that he intends to play with every card in the 'deck to unseat Jordan, since con: gress is the key to the myraid abuses of! our economy, our constitution and oar basic freedoms. B. Everett better pack his bag and think up some good answers to a lot of bad questions he’ll be asked between now and November by Shallcross. Tke Eternal Question The eternal question of civilization is: Can we afford it? Since societies of men began there has always been an urge to-keep up with the next-door cave dweller, and this applies at every level' of society. Families, churches, counties, states and national government are spurred on by this same keeping-up-with-the-Joneses philosophy. '' T AIIAtlt Pniinlir in tinnr snJJAwinrr mm acute attack of this social disease. Hos pitals, airports, water pollution, schools, streets, colleges, and recreation are all in heed of huge chunks of what the tax payer has less and less of these days. “Progress,” and the construction trad es, and the users of each of these facili ties make very strong cases for each. In the minds of many nearly all of these mentioned here come in the “must” cate gory. - - . We agree. We do need a better hos pital and all of these other things, but can we afford them? Federal programs now take close to half of the average person's income ... and we have all but /lost any contipl over the rubberstamp congress which each year levies more and more heavily on our income. Over local projects we do still have total control, and so, many of us feel that if we can’t control the federal bite we can at least lessen or keep under reasonable control the slice of our in come' that is'taken for city, and county projects. > But this can be a “robbing Peter to pay Paul” attitude, which might cause the most needM projects to be aband oned. ' In the months just ahead Lenoif Coun tians aye going to be asked to decide the future of the county for a long, long, time. So far no workable financial program has been offered by our of ficials in answer to that question: Can we afford it? There, are many remarkable statistics pouring from the bureaus along .the Potomac, and it is amazing how little attention the public pays to the glaring discrepancies that exist in the so-called “fair” expenditure of tax monies. - Among the most belabored branches of government is the welfare agency. It has the thankless job of taking care of people nobody else wants to take care of. The people who labor in this vine yard try to do a good job, but the odds are against them and the illogic of na tional policy is unbelievable. Consider: In the nation as a whole 123 persons out of 1,000 over 65 draw a wel fare check in the category of old age assistance. But in Louisiana the rate is 490 persons — or just a tiny fraction less than half of all past 6S getting a welfare check. Put this beside the Dis trict of Columbia where the rate is only 34, Virginia where the rate is 44 or Maryland where the rate is 39. Can any statistician, sociologist, politician or ma gician explain such a wide variation? I doubt it.Vi In rich Texas the rate is 280 per thous and. In destitute West Virginia the rate is 84. In oil rich Oklahoma the rate is 321. North Carolina’s rate is 129. . . al most four times that of Washington, D. C. and one fourth that of Louisiana. And if you think this situation only, in volves the aged poor take a further look. The national rate for aid to the blind is 81 per thousand for people over 18. In Maryland the rate is only 20 and in Mississippi the rate is 230. Why are there three times as many blind reci pients in Mississippi as in the nation at large and 11 time as many as in Mary land? North Carolina’s rate in this cate gory is 178, while Sister State Virginia’s rate is just, 44 per thousand. Aid to the permanently and totally disabled averaged 4.7 persons per thous and between the ages of 18 and 64 in the nation. But Mississippi’s’ rate is 14.7 and in Texas the rate is only 1. The national rate for dependent chil dren is 42 per thousand for all children under 18. But in West Virginia that rate is 140 and in Texas the rate is only Thorn ic nn lnm’nMl __i*_0__ nation ava> these variations, but there is even less for the way the-money is thrown around. Take a look further at the variations. The national average monthly payment for old age assistance is $77.94. Yet the average check in Oklahoma is $95.20 and the average check in Mississippi is $39.38. North Carolina’s average is $61.67. The totally disabled nationally average $78.62 per month. Again Oklahomans get $110.48 while Mississipians get $43. 47. North Carolinians average in this category $70.34. The average check per family for de pendent children in the nation is $182.41. In Washington, D. C. the average $J.55.40. In Mississippi $39.34 North Carolina* $99.89. The aiverage per child in th^ is $33.10 per month. In Oklahoma $34.70, in Mississippi $9.87, in North Carolina $24.15. Does poverty and need vary so greatly just across state lines? The dependent child in Washington City gets $32.66 and over the river in Vir ginia'the average is $25.49. Then you can take these sa&e cate gories of federal aid and break them down within states as between coun ties and you wind up with equally un explainable variations. The wily thing that is uniform— state by state an! county by county — is the tax rate and the people getting the most from these and other federal programs pay no more federal tax than those who get much, much less. Equity does not exist in the system. The rule is that of whim, not logic, not need,