A new trend is emerging in left-wing circles in the Americas- denouncing rivals as ‘cruel.’ In the US, the New York Magazine (NYMag) recently ran a cover titled ‘The Cruel Kids’ Table,’ which featured a picture of partying conservatives who apparently would have been, according to the implied message, bullies in high school. Never mind that the photo was altered to remove nonwhites and thus make it seem racist, the implication was clear: Not aligning with the left equaled being ‘cruel.’
Interestingly, the same phenomenon has also been taking place for a few years in Argentina. Various writers, political commentators, and politicians have called President Javier Milei ‘cruel’ and even a ‘villain.’ Again, the implication is that Milei embodies cruelty and is thus a danger to the Argentine society, because he has come to destroy it.
Denouncing ‘cruelty’ has become the new way in which left-wing élites showcase their moral superiority. But why? What exactly is cruel about a party? Why would a politician with whom one disagrees be a villain? Astonishingly, left-wing Argentine magazine Anfibia recently announced that its funding was close to running out due to the end of USAID cooperation. ‘We are a shelter against cruelty,’ they said. So, how could Trump dare cut their funding?
The problem with moral superiority on the part of the left is that the track record of cruelty denouncers is usually terrible. This is a direct consequence of the policies that the left supports, which include higher public spending, higher taxes, and higher regulation: All of these reduce growth, drive out investors, and cause inflation. In some cases, these are problems whose root causes the left does not understand, but in others, they seem to be the product of human design. (Many left-wingers call for degrowth, after all.) A worse economy results in a worse quality of life for most people. How is that not cruel?
Besides funding cuts, the left usually focuses on layoffs in the public sector when describing their opponents’ alleged cruelty. However, it is generally left-wing policies that artificially inflate government and grant privileges to those who are part of it, the cost of which falls on taxpayers. That is, from a classical liberal perspective, unjust and cruel. Just because a minority living off of others is less visible than a layoff does not mean that the former is any less real.
To be sure, the right sometimes also embraces policies that make everyone poor, and the latest push for protectionism in the US is a prime example of that. But recent efforts to deregulate, on the contrary, do have a clear classical liberal root, which is why the Trump administration has followed Milei’s in creating a department (DOGE) whose sole purpose is to deregulate the economy and unleash the potential of the private sector. Classical liberals, then, must deny that there is any cruelty in trying to stop the government from interfering with basic economic liberties. On the contrary, they must question the left’s alleged moral superiority.
All in all, classical liberals would do well to counter the new trend among the left by insisting that it is the policies of those who denounce ‘cruelty’ that cause injustice and economic chaos through privileges, taxes, regulations, and unstoppable spending. Trying to fix them cannot possibly be cruel.
Marcos Falcone is the Project Manager of Fundación Libertad and a regular contributor to Forbes Argentina. His writing has also appeared in The Washington Post, National Review, and Reason, among others. He is based in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
READER COMMENTS
Dylan
Mar 14 2025 at 5:27pm
As someone who broadly shares the moral sensibilities of the left, but believes classically liberal economic policies are generally the best way to achieve those aims, I find there’s a big gap in the moral language that widens the gap between the sides when it could narrow it. For example, focusing on individual liberty and keeping the government from interfering in ‘basic economic liberties’ is not going to persuade people who don’t weight those ideas as highly as a classical liberal does.
“Classical liberals, then, must deny that there is any cruelty in trying to stop the government from interfering with basic economic liberties.”
I’d also disagree with this. You can support the end goal that DOGE has and still find that the means are unnecessarily cruel
Dylan
Mar 14 2025 at 5:43pm
A couple of examples from this week. A friend who had been unemployed scored a big project from NASA in early February. She has a signed contract and done a lot of work on it. Today she learned the project is cancelled and she will not get paid for any of the work she has already done and the out of pocket expenses she incurred.
I also had a job offer rescinded this week, that was entirely privately funded, but those funds now need to be reallocated to different departments because of government cuts to work that has already been contracted for.
steve
Mar 14 2025 at 10:00pm
I think if you look at only the ideas from the left you dont like you can rack up a pretty bad number of ideas, but if you you look at the total package I think its a bit different. For example it’s hard not to notice that as we looked at yesterday life expectancy is usually much better in blue states, or GDP is lower in red states. Murders are usually lower in blue states. For along time the 2 states with the best NAEP scores were Massachusetts and New Jersey. So it seems to me that you are dancing around and avoiding addressing the specific claims of cruelty. For example, the USAID workers who were fired while working overseas and not provided safe transportation home. Ot people with good job reviews who had worked in agencies for 20 years who were told they were fired and had 45 minutes to clear out.
What was so urgent that we couldn’t make sure people made it home safely? Some of those people were working in risky areas. What was so urgent they only got 45 minutes? That’s how we treat people who have been caught stealing or committed some crime.
So you are completely wrong. hAving run a corporation for years and having had to fire a few people you really dont need to be cruel about it except maybe on rare occasions. To be clear, it’s not the firing of people that is cruel. It is the way it is being done and also the fact that it appears to have been so random with decisions being made by people with no expertise in the area about which they are making decisions, in many cases 25 y/o coders.
Steve
Thomas L Hutcheson
Mar 15 2025 at 11:01am
Policy should not, of course, be deliberately cruel, but that’s a pretty low bar to cross, It does not give much guidance about
level and structures of expenditures,
level and structure of taxes,
immigration reform to attract more skilled and entrepreneurial people,
cost effective ways to reduce net CO2 emissions, or
regulatory reform to make more _use_ (not window dressing) of cost benefit analysis, especially in decisions about urban land use and building codes.
Matthias
Mar 16 2025 at 12:59am
The whole left Vs right framing is pretty silly.
These are just names of political tribes, and don’t correspond to stable policy preferences over time, or between countries.
Eg in the US tariffs are currently a ‘right wing’ obsession, as is restricting migration.
Both are bad for growth.
A few decades ago, in the US the left was more interested in tariffs than the left.
For an example across space, instead of time: the supposedly more leftist Germany managed to privatise their government snail mail and was close to privatising their government railways. While support for the United States Postal Service to stay a government monopoly is bipartisan consensus in the US.
steve
Mar 16 2025 at 11:14am
I find it interesting how many beliefs depend on who is in office. My MAGA friend who who totally poo-pooed the idea that corporations price gouging had anything to do with inflation is convinced that egg prices are up due to the egg monopoly, because Trump said so AGAICT. The guy is a very successful VC investor.
Steve
Comments are closed.