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#1
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![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Once more, mea culpa mea culpa. I guess I am just not as good an American as a guy who fialed to show up when it was required of him. I thought you got 20 years at hard labor forthat sort of stuff. If he hadn't shown up for duty you can be sure he'd have paid the penalty. One more point. Kerry went to war. Any idea why he declined to serve his full tour? Bush hid in Texas. Bush's location was known. He could have been sent to Vietnam at any time. How do you feel about Bill Clinton? He went to England without telling his draft board. |
#2
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It's amazing how so many WWII vets risked life and limb to save the French
from Totalitarianism, then scurry back to the U.S. and try to ram it down our throats . . . Art, for one, is a "Big Government Liberal" who doesn't seem to realize that yes, Totalitarianism is a necessary condition to support his Welfare State. And his welfare checks. Perhaps his generation has been trained to expect that the world now owes them a debt of servitude err I mean gratitude . . . Steve Swartz "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Once more, mea culpa mea culpa. I guess I am just not as good an American as a guy who fialed to show up when it was required of him. I thought you got 20 years at hard labor forthat sort of stuff. If he hadn't shown up for duty you can be sure he'd have paid the penalty. One more point. Kerry went to war. Any idea why he declined to serve his full tour? Bush hid in Texas. Bush's location was known. He could have been sent to Vietnam at any time. How do you feel about Bill Clinton? He went to England without telling his draft board. |
#3
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It's amazing how so many WWII vets risked life and limb to save the French
from Totalitarianism, then scurry back to the U.S. and try to ram it down our throats . . . Why don't you elaborate on that statement some. Who is doing that? How many WWII veterans have done that? When I vote for Kerry, is that a vote for totalitarianism? Walt |
#4
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![]() "WalterM140" wrote in message ... When I vote for Kerry, is that a vote for totalitarianism? Totalitarianism is a bit extreme, but a vote for Kerry, or any other liberal, is certainly a vote against freedom. |
#5
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After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, "Steven
P. McNicoll" confessed the following: Totalitarianism is a bit extreme, but a vote for Kerry, or any other liberal, is certainly a vote against freedom. Exactly how is voting for ANY liberal a vote against freedom? I anticipate an illuminating discourse...or not. Robey |
#6
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On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 19:38:45 GMT, Robey Price
wrote: After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, "Steven P. McNicoll" confessed the following: Totalitarianism is a bit extreme, but a vote for Kerry, or any other liberal, is certainly a vote against freedom. Exactly how is voting for ANY liberal a vote against freedom? I anticipate an illuminating discourse...or not. Robey I've got to find myself on the same side of the fence (for this one instance) as Juvat. Certainly characterizing a vote for a liberal as a vote against freedom is ignoring the essentials of the two primary ideologies in America. Characteristically the liberal ideology is based on a belief that government is the best solution to societal problems. Taken further left we get to welfare statism, socialism and eventually at the extreme communism. Examples of liberal approaches are things like Social Security, Medicare, publicly funded education, etc. Often these solutions are very effective. Conversely the basic element of traditional convervatism is a free-market solution, focussed on individual responsibility. Want health care? Get insured. Want a retirement? Put something away. Don't expect government to do it for you. These approaches can work as well. Trends in liberal/conservative ideology is for liberals to support the workers (unions) and conservatives to support entrepreneurs and management. Liberals focus government spending on social programs while conservatives tend toward strong defense ("guns vs butter"). Inevitably government programs cost money, so a liberal administration will lead toward higher taxes, but this is usually balanced by including some element of "redistribution of wealth"--the progressive tax structure of the IRS, for example. This is acceptable to some point as folks weigh the cost/benefit of dollars paid in tax against service provided. The conservative side of American politics, however, is split between traditional (i.e. fiscal) conservatives and social conservatives. Quite clearly the social conservative side of the ideology actually can restrict freedom as much as the liberal in their desire to impose a standard of morality no society as a whole. Good example is liberals support gun control (loss of 2nd Amendment freedom) while social conservatives support censorship, prayer in school, campaign finance reform, and a high degree of homphobia--arguably losses of 1st Amendment freedoms. The reality of the situation is that both sides run to the extremes for the primary season and then back to the moderate middle for general elections. Both sides wind up compromising to build policies that can pass the legislative process. Clinton was arguably a fairly moderate Democrat and Bush 43 has espoused some clearly liberal positions such as steel and plywood tariffs or federally funded prescription drug programs. Illuminated yet? Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
#7
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Ed:
And how, precisely, do "liberal solutions" get implemented? At gunpoint. A vote for "liberalism" (the modern definition; "big government solutions") is clearly a vote for totalitarianism. A vote for modern "conservatism" is different only in degree, not principle. Vote for your economic freedoms to be taken away first, then your freedom of action . . . or vice versa. Steve Swartz "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 19:38:45 GMT, Robey Price wrote: After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, "Steven P. McNicoll" confessed the following: Totalitarianism is a bit extreme, but a vote for Kerry, or any other liberal, is certainly a vote against freedom. Exactly how is voting for ANY liberal a vote against freedom? I anticipate an illuminating discourse...or not. Robey I've got to find myself on the same side of the fence (for this one instance) as Juvat. Certainly characterizing a vote for a liberal as a vote against freedom is ignoring the essentials of the two primary ideologies in America. Characteristically the liberal ideology is based on a belief that government is the best solution to societal problems. Taken further left we get to welfare statism, socialism and eventually at the extreme communism. Examples of liberal approaches are things like Social Security, Medicare, publicly funded education, etc. Often these solutions are very effective. Conversely the basic element of traditional convervatism is a free-market solution, focussed on individual responsibility. Want health care? Get insured. Want a retirement? Put something away. Don't expect government to do it for you. These approaches can work as well. Trends in liberal/conservative ideology is for liberals to support the workers (unions) and conservatives to support entrepreneurs and management. Liberals focus government spending on social programs while conservatives tend toward strong defense ("guns vs butter"). Inevitably government programs cost money, so a liberal administration will lead toward higher taxes, but this is usually balanced by including some element of "redistribution of wealth"--the progressive tax structure of the IRS, for example. This is acceptable to some point as folks weigh the cost/benefit of dollars paid in tax against service provided. The conservative side of American politics, however, is split between traditional (i.e. fiscal) conservatives and social conservatives. Quite clearly the social conservative side of the ideology actually can restrict freedom as much as the liberal in their desire to impose a standard of morality no society as a whole. Good example is liberals support gun control (loss of 2nd Amendment freedom) while social conservatives support censorship, prayer in school, campaign finance reform, and a high degree of homphobia--arguably losses of 1st Amendment freedoms. The reality of the situation is that both sides run to the extremes for the primary season and then back to the moderate middle for general elections. Both sides wind up compromising to build policies that can pass the legislative process. Clinton was arguably a fairly moderate Democrat and Bush 43 has espoused some clearly liberal positions such as steel and plywood tariffs or federally funded prescription drug programs. Illuminated yet? Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
#8
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After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, Ed Rasimus
confessed the following: I've got to find myself on the same side of the fence (for this one instance) as Juvat. Can I get an "amen" brothas and sistas? Illuminated yet? Nice to see my political science degree wasn't a waste. But you gave away the answer to Steven. I won't be holding my breath for his "illuminating" epistle...dogma perhaps. Robey |
#9
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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... I've got to find myself on the same side of the fence (for this one instance) as Juvat. Certainly characterizing a vote for a liberal as a vote against freedom is ignoring the essentials of the two primary ideologies in America. Characteristically the liberal ideology is based on a belief that government is the best solution to societal problems. Taken further left we get to welfare statism, socialism and eventually at the extreme communism. Examples of liberal approaches are things like Social Security, Medicare, publicly funded education, etc. Often these solutions are very effective. Odd, then, that you chose those three examples. |
#10
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In article ,
Robey Price wrote: Exactly how is voting for ANY liberal a vote against freedom? "Liberals" think we should leave nasty dictators in place forever and let them kill and abuse millions, while "conservatives" think we should kick out folks like Hussein and free those folks. Tell us again about that "freedom" thing. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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