Re: Why Conservatives Should Vote for Kerry

From: Travis Kelm (tkelm118_at_bellsouth.net)
Date: 10/26/04


Date: Mon, 25 Oct 2004 23:17:09 -0500

Himm,

I think it's called the Libertarian Party.

I don't see any "Republican" voting for Crooked, um I mean , Commy John
Kerry.

FranklinJefferson wrote:
> A Contrarian View: Why conservatives should not support Bush.
>
> One reason that conservatives have had for supporting the candidacy of
> George W. Bush is not that they favor Mr. Bush (many of us have grave
> reservations about his policies) but that they worry about a Democrat
> victory presaging a sharp turn of the country to the left. But this
> is an unfounded fear: it's simply not going to occur. The Reagan
> revolution happened, and, regardless of who is elected in November,
> it's not about to be undone.
> Actually, a Democrat winning the presidency in November would have
> remarkably little effect on policy. Republicans hold both houses of
> Congress, and that's not about to change-- in fact, the best estimates
> are that the Republican majority in both the house and the senate will
> increase. Liberal or not, a Democrat president isn't going to effect
> any changes that won't first take a thorough Republican scrubbing.
> There are, in fact, many advantages in having the president and the
> Congress elected from opposite parties, and it's argued that America
> is strongest when they are. The congress can serve as an effective
> anchor on presidential excess, and a skeptical president can cut the
> worst of congressional pork-barrel spending. I am not one to argue
> that the government shouldn't be trusted... but when one party
> controls the government's purse strings, without anybody watching out,
> congress always seems to see the public treasury as a great big candy
> store. That's when you see pork-barrel spending running out of
> control. (It's worth noting that the budget surplus the later part of
> the Clinton administration came from a Democrat president held firmly
> in check by a Republican congress.)
> But the main reason that conservatives shouldn't support Mr. Bush is
> very simple: George W. Bush is not a conservative. When you ignore
> his talk, and looking at what he has actually done, you see that over
> and over again, George W. Bush has betrayed every ideal that the
> conservative movement has.
> The heart and soul of the conservative thinking is fiscal
> conservatism: the government should be responsible for how it spends
> money. The conservative economic view has always been very simple:
> balance the budget, and quit deficit spending. That idea somehow went
> out the window when George W. Bush was elected (in fact, suddenly we
> are even hearing how deficit spending is somehow good for the nation.)
> What happened to the "lock box," where George Bush said he would put
> the budget surplus to save it for social security? The instant he got
> elected, he seems to have forgotten his promise.
> The fact is, George W. Bush has run up a record budget deficit-- the
> largest deficit in history. And, before you say that terrorism and
> the response to the 9/11 atrocity is the source of the unexpected
> budget deficit-- look at the data. Only a small portion of the Bush
> deficit can be tagged to the 9/11 terrorists. Bragging about
> "cutting" taxes while actually increasing government spending at the
> same time isn't really a tax cut; it's just increasing the tax next
> year. America is about our children, and leaving our children and
> grandchildren in debt is not what we mean by "family values."
> The heart of America is our business. Americans aren't afraid to
> work... but where are the jobs? A conservative president should be a
> pro-business president, but in fact rather than helping business,
> American businesses are going out of business; and the ones that are
> staying in business are shipping jobs oversees. No matter what Mr.
> Bush's advisors may think, ramping up the deficit is not helping the
> economy.
> Mr. Bush says that education is his priority. This is excellent, but
> is the federal government really the right place to reform our
> schools? Education needs to be done at the local level-- right at the
> level of homes and families-- and not by big-government mandate. The
> "no child left behind" laws, stripped of rhetoric, consist of nothing
> except new government-mandated standardized tests-- another unfunded
> mandate from Washington that our states and cities have to pay for.
> Teaching children how to do well on standardized tests-- is what we
> want to teach our children? When did conservatism start believing
> that the government in Washington is the right place to run our
> schools?
> The conservative world view is that the era of Big Government is
> over. Ronald Reagan knew that, and for that matter, so did President
> George H. W. Bush. But the younger Bush just hasn't gotten the
> message.
> Iraq. It goes without saying that America needs to be strong, and
> that we should use every means of defending ourselves against those
> who detest our freedom and despise our way of life. Destroying the
> Taliban, the stronghold of the Al Qaida terrorists, was necessary and
> unavoidable; it was required for the defense of America. But invading
> Iraq? Long ago, John Quincy Adams wrote, "Wherever the standard of
> freedom shall be unfurled, there will [America's] heart, her
> benedictions, and her prayers be. But she goes not abroad in search
> of monsters to destroy." It doesn't matter how loathsome a dictator
> Saddam Hussein was; America should go to war only with great
> reluctance, and as a matter of last resort. America isn't in the
> business of nation building. Once, even George W. Bush understood
> that. During a debate with then-Vice President Al Gore in 2000, Mr.
> Bush said: "I don't think our troops ought to be used for what's
> called nation-building . . .. Maybe I'm missing something here. I
> mean, we're going to have a kind of nation-building corps from
> America? Absolutely not." Apparently to Mr. Bush, it depends on what
> the meaning of "absolutely not" is.
> And fear of terrorism is no reason to erode our liberty.
> Conservative leader Pat Buchanan said, "It is remarkable how
> complacent Americans seem to be, as our freedoms are gradually
> restricted, and more and more power and wealth flow to Big Government
> to protect us from terrorists." Do we really need the 342-page
> Patriot Act, to protect us from terrorism by giving the government
> more rights? Has we finally become a place where American citizens
> can be picked up and held without lawyer and without charges,
> indefinitely? It is worth quoting Benjamin Franklin: "They who would
> give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither
> liberty or security. " When did we decide that we prefer our security
> to our liberty?
> A final reason why conservatives should not support Mr. Bush is that,
> quite frankly, he is not merely destroying the credibility of the
> Republican party, he is damaging the credibility of conservatives,
> period. Is Bush really the person who we want the world to view as
> the public image of conservatism? For the last twenty years, Ronald
> Reagan has been the image of conservatism in American. Do we want
> George W. Bush to be the intellect who will shape conservatism for the
> next twenty years? Conservatism can survive a term of Mr. Kerry as
> president-- it may even make us stronger and more focussed. But can
> conservatism survive another term of Mr. Bush?
> No one will deny that Mr. Kerry is a liberal. But even if he wins
> the presidency, he will find a solid Republican Congress, and an
> America united. He is no threat to America.
> Bush, a wolf in sheep's clothing, is eroding our economy, our
> liberty, and the very standing of our nation in the world. His words
> say that he is a conservative. His actions, on the other hand, say
> exactly the opposite.
>
>
> Recommended reading:
> Where the Right Went Wrong: How Neoconservatives Subverted the Reagan
> Revolution and Hijacked the Bush Presidency, by Pat Buchanan
>
> War without end: http://www.theamericancause.org/patthecheney.htm
> The Case against Empire:
> http://www.theamericancause.org/caseagainst.htm
> The war party http://www.theamericancause.org/patthewarpartys.htm



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Gas prices rises 10 cents a gallon over 2 weeks
    ... The campaign promises were to end the war in Iraq and impeach Bush. ... Why did prices rise under six years of a Republican President, ... rules would have shut down every home business in America. ...
    (misc.survivalism)
  • The ECONOMIST: Sep 11
    ... President if he keeps this up and China would have a clear path to ... As it turned out Bush is indeed a small man in a very big office, ... The damage he has done to America will be the ... At the same time September 11th strengthened the Republicans while ...
    (soc.culture.china)
  • Bush: Americans Dont Lack Will to Win
    ... Bush: Americans Don't Lack Will to Win ... President Bush changed course Saturday and said America's enemies ... The appeasers and fearful in America and around the ... everything in their power to undermine any war effort. ...
    (alt.politics)
  • Bush vs. America
    ... Vice President Richard Cheney. ... Why did the Bush administration want to do that? ... After five years of trying to govern by propaganda, George Bush ... What America? ...
    (misc.news.internet.discuss)
  • Re: [OT] Why Bush?
    ... > bin Laden's determinedness to attack America... ... America would be pissed off because of high security. ... which Bush and Blair have universally ignored) created a greater ... and are angered because the president didn't offer ...
    (alt.lang.asm)

Quantcast