America, it seems, is suffering from an epidemic of laziness. Some of us work hard, sure, but our country is being dragged down by its idle masses, millions of indolent Americans who would rather lie about all day than contribute to the nation’s progress.
Or at least, that’s how some of our leaders tell it. While the idea that laziness is a crisis that must be addressed in policy is mostly a conservative obsession, even some Democrats — including President Joe Biden — can be heard reinforcing this premise. This is all the more bizarre because in truth, Americans are among the hardest-working people in the world.
H.L. Mencken once wrote that Puritanism was “The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy,” and many Republicans are equally haunted by the fear that some person somewhere may not be keeping their nose pressed hard enough to the grindstone. Or more specifically, that some poor person may not be working hard enough; they have no problem with wealthy heirs living off their trust funds.
The mythical layabout sitting at home saying, “I just love not having to work, since I’ve got this sweet health coverage” is a fiction.
Which is why they are in the midst of yet another push to add work requirements to programs like Medicaid, and increase the strictness of already existing requirements in programs like food stamps. “I don’t think many people think it’s right to be paying billions of dollars to allow people to sit at home,” says Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La. “Let’s help people get lifted out of poverty into jobs,” says Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy. In their view, what’s stopping Americans from being “lifted up out of poverty” is apparently nothing more than their own sloth. Make them suffer a bit, and they’ll finally get off the couch and get a job.
Sadly, even some Democrats fall into this kind of rhetoric. Biden recently tweeted that “Every American willing to work hard should be able to get a good job and afford good health care no matter where they live. That’s the American dream.” Why would Biden say that only people “willing to work hard” should have access to health care? Is there some problem with insufficiently industrious people going to the doctor?
It may be something the president said without giving it too much thought, but it offers a clue as to why, unlike every other industrialized country, we don’t have universal health care in America. When even a Democrat like Biden reinforces the idea that health coverage is something you have to earn with hard work, why should we just give it to everyone?
For the record, research has shown that adding work requirements to Medicaid has no effect on employment among recipients, because it doesn’t force people to get jobs. Lazy people exist, of course, but the mythical layabout sitting at home saying, “I just love not having to work, since I’ve got this sweet health coverage” is a fiction. And in practice, work requirements means paperwork requirements. Recipients are forced to navigate a bureaucratic obstacle course; when they make a mistake, many lose their benefits even when they are working.
But to Republicans, those facts don’t matter. Their unshakable premise is that laziness is such a widespread and urgent problem that the government must sort those “willing to work hard” from those who aren’t, and punish the latter group for their moral failure.








