luke warm, on 2010-November-03, 10:51, said:
i think history shows that the stronger the central gov't becomes the less freedom the people have... maybe i'm wrong here, but i believe you can come up with many examples that i'm not, if you try...
Well, in the mid-sixties my student deferment was revoked and I was reclassified 1-A. In such circumstances one might well free constrained. Ugly as that all was, I don't think I would advocate a total ban on a military draft, now and forevermore. Restraint in going to war would be nice though.
Generally, my complaints about the government are pretty pale compared to my perception of benefits. I went to the University of Minnesota in the late fifties for about $250 a year in tuition. That's for example. I really find it much easier to think of these good examples of government programs than to think of how I have been stifled.
Before we throw the metaphorical baby out with the bath water I really think people should give some thought to their own lives, how they have been helped and how they have been hurt by government programs.
Going back to the local, if one of the candidates for county commissioner had run on a platform of more sidewalks and bike paths, he would have had my vote, be he democrat or republican. He could belong to The Tea Party or the Communist Party. He could even raise my taxes to pay for it.
Business folks may well have some legit complaints about paperwork. I lack the experience to say much here. But then: Recently there was a public meeting about a planned business park. One poor sap lives across the street from the location and was really hoping the planned gas station/convenience store could be reined in a little. I think he got some restriction imposed along the lines of requiring that the sign could only be twenty feet tall and the lighting had to be turned off by 3AM. If a conservative is a liberal who has been mugged, a regulator may be a free-market enthusiast who now lives across the street from a new business park.