> Why must every service and thing in the US must be a private profit making thing?
This is a side-effect of the Protestant Work Ethic. Weber coined the term in 1905 as a way to explain why the Northern European countries (who were predominantly Protestants) were wealthy while the Southern European countries (who were predominantly Catholic) were poor. Prior to the election of JFK as US President, anti-Catholic sentiments were widespread throughout the US (which explains why Irish & Italians were not considered "white" until the early 20th Century). Even today, many Evangelicals do not consider Catholics to be Christians.
> Calvin taught that all men must work, even the rich, because to work was the will of God. It was the duty of men to serve as God's instruments here on earth, to reshape the world in the fashion of the Kingdom of God, and to become a part of the continuing process of His creation (Braude, 1975). Men were not to lust after wealth, possessions, or easy living, but were to reinvest the profits of their labor into financing further ventures. Earnings were thus to be reinvested over and over again, ad infinitum, or to the end of time (Lipset, 1990). Using profits to help others rise from a lessor level of subsistence violated God's will since persons could only demonstrate that they were among the Elect through their own labor (Lipset, 1990).
> Selection of an occupation and pursuing it to achieve the greatest profit possible was considered by Calvinists to be a religious duty. Not only condoning, but encouraging the pursuit of unlimited profit was a radical departure from the Christian beliefs of the middle ages. In addition, unlike Luther, Calvin considered it appropriate to seek an occupation which would provide the greatest earnings possible. If that meant abandoning the family trade or profession, the change was not only allowed, but it was considered to be one's religious duty (Tilgher, 1930).
These 2 paragraphs also explain why many in the US have such an utter hatred for any sort of social safety net for poor people - those people are damned in the Biblical sense and therefore it is a sin to give them any sort of money, food or healthcare.
During the Cold War, one criticism of socialists/communists was that they were taking orders from Moscow. Likewise, Catholics were presumed to be taking orders from Rome.
> Supporters of the Know Nothing movement believed that an alleged "Romanist" conspiracy to subvert civil and religious liberty in the United States was being hatched by Catholics. Therefore, they sought to politically organize native-born Protestants in defense of their traditional religious and political values.
During the later 1800s, many "charity hospitals" would abduct children of Catholic women and then sell them as orphans that other people could adopt. The Klu Klux Klan would also attack Catholics - not just burning crosses and lynching black people.
> Not only were Irish immigrants viewed as interlopers by many white Americans (an irony, considering the historical treatment of Native Americans), but these immigrants were Catholics in a primarily Protestant land. It was a religious difference that widened the divide, as did the fact that many Irish immigrants didn't speak English. As strange as may it may sound today, Irish immigrants were not considered "white" and were sometimes referred to "negroes turned inside out."
The Wikipedia page has lots of links and references about PWE.
> In 1998, the International Sociological Association listed this work as the fourth most important sociological book of the 20th century, after Weber's Economy and Society, C. Wright Mills' The Sociological Imagination, and Robert K. Merton's Social Theory and Social Structure.[3] It is the eighth most cited book in the social sciences published before 1950.
This is a side-effect of the Protestant Work Ethic. Weber coined the term in 1905 as a way to explain why the Northern European countries (who were predominantly Protestants) were wealthy while the Southern European countries (who were predominantly Catholic) were poor. Prior to the election of JFK as US President, anti-Catholic sentiments were widespread throughout the US (which explains why Irish & Italians were not considered "white" until the early 20th Century). Even today, many Evangelicals do not consider Catholics to be Christians.
> Calvin taught that all men must work, even the rich, because to work was the will of God. It was the duty of men to serve as God's instruments here on earth, to reshape the world in the fashion of the Kingdom of God, and to become a part of the continuing process of His creation (Braude, 1975). Men were not to lust after wealth, possessions, or easy living, but were to reinvest the profits of their labor into financing further ventures. Earnings were thus to be reinvested over and over again, ad infinitum, or to the end of time (Lipset, 1990). Using profits to help others rise from a lessor level of subsistence violated God's will since persons could only demonstrate that they were among the Elect through their own labor (Lipset, 1990).
> Selection of an occupation and pursuing it to achieve the greatest profit possible was considered by Calvinists to be a religious duty. Not only condoning, but encouraging the pursuit of unlimited profit was a radical departure from the Christian beliefs of the middle ages. In addition, unlike Luther, Calvin considered it appropriate to seek an occupation which would provide the greatest earnings possible. If that meant abandoning the family trade or profession, the change was not only allowed, but it was considered to be one's religious duty (Tilgher, 1930).
These 2 paragraphs also explain why many in the US have such an utter hatred for any sort of social safety net for poor people - those people are damned in the Biblical sense and therefore it is a sin to give them any sort of money, food or healthcare.
[0] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protestant_work_ethic
[1] - History of it: http://workethic.coe.uga.edu/hpro.html
[2] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Catholicism_in_the_United...