John Stossel devotes his latest column to a disturbing growth in the number of Americans claiming to be victims who deserve some form of government relief.

Joe Biden’s niece was arrested recently for throwing a punch at a cop. The New York Post says she’s addicted to alcohol and pills, but rather than take responsibility for her actions, she blamed them on the “pressure she faces” because her uncle is vice president.

Give me a break. America was founded by people who were the opposite of victims, by people with grit. Overcoming obstacles is the route to prosperity — and happiness, too.

I had to overcome stuttering to work as a TV reporter. Had today’s disability laws existed when I began work, would I have overcome my stuttering problem? Maybe not. I might have demanded my employer “accommodate” my disability by providing me a job that didn’t demand being on-air.

Now that the laws exist, it’s no coincidence that more Americans say they are disabled.

Tad DeHaven of the Cato Institute writes that this is part of a disability-industrial complex: collusion between specialty law firms, doctors vouching for applicants with dubious claims and federal administrative law judges awarding benefits.

It changes the way people calculate their options.

Despite improved medical care and the workforce’s dramatic shift from physical to mental labor, the number of Americans claiming disability keeps growing. You start to feel like a sucker if you’re not one of them.