kenberg, on 2012-November-06, 07:56, said:
May I make one more observation. People of my age understand about the consequences of spending money we don't have.
i'd like to take a moment or two to talk about this, and i'm trying to do so without being particularly partisan, though i'm sure some will think that's not true... it seems to me that the more people we have who don't subscribe to your view, the farther we get away from america and the closer we come to a more european society... we've even seen some posters here who would prefer that, and who have said so... not as many people believe as you and i do as used to, and i see the population of those "disbelievers" growing... it's my view that the more who become gov't dependent, the less likely we are to remain what we were founded to be... spending money we don't have, individually and socially, and confiscating other people's money has become the norm
when i see the sheer number of people who not only rely on gov't subsistence, and i'm not speaking here of social security and/or medicare (though even these things need addressing), but who view such aid as a right, an entitlement, i see an almost unstoppable slide... when i see the central gov't amass more power unto itself, which of necessity lessens the power of the people, i see a tipping point on the horizon, one which will fundamentally change america
i'm not saying the republicans have the answers... in many ways they are as much the problem as their liberal counterparts... imo, gingrich was right when he said that social engineering from the right is just as much social engineering as that from the left... taking just one example, the defense of marriage act is just as wrong as any other federal law that limits the power of the states to decide for themselves, as determined by the people who reside in those states... if MA wants to legalize gay marriage, it should be legal in MA - imo neither LA nor MS nor the fed gov't should have the power to interfere in that... however, the same goes for abortion... we can't have it both ways, and both liberals and conservatives think they can
by the same token, the fact that MA passes universal healthcare for the citizens of that state is a perfectly acceptable action... but to do so on a nat'l scale is, to me, an unwarranted interference by the fed gov't - a breech of liberty, not to sound too melodramatic
i know there are those here, you can see it in most every thread, who probably believe that a stronger central gov't is the way to go... that's fine, it's simply a philosophical disagreement, and people of good faith can have those... but we shouldn't fool ourselves into thinking that such a thing won't reduce personal freedoms, won't make america a very different country, because eventually it will...
both parties are guilty... i just truly believe that the republican party is the lesser of two evils
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)