I wrote this over a year ago and forgot about it. I think it still applies today...
I am a conservative with
pernicious libertarian tendencies who believes we should examine our
politicians and probe their logic, not worship them. We should be
skeptical, very skeptical, of everything that proceeds from their
loquacious gobs. I also don't want any of them feeling too comfortable
up there in the District of Criminals.
Thomas Jefferson said it best:
When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
--Thomas Jefferson
I
think George Bush was no conservative, but I believe he is a sincere
and honest man, as politicians go. He is not Hitler, he was not in on
any 9/11 conspiracy, and VP Cheney didn't shoot holes in the New Orleans
levees with his Halliburton cannon. If you back me into a corner, I
will reluctantly admit that Bill Clinton was a pretty good president,
private peccadilloes aside.
I have a grudging respect for Hillary
Clinton, although I disagree with her politics. She's a hard worker
and she does her homework.
Conservatives and Liberals will
never agree on many subjects, but here are three things I hope we can
all agree upon: 1) Make the politicians prove it; 2) Listen to one
another; 3) Dial it back.
Make Them Prove ItI will
start by pleading guilty to not paying attention as George Bush and the
GOP went wilding with our money. My days of not standing up and
questioning those I voted for are now over.
We are living in the
age of rampant, naive credulity, and it needs to stop. Our default
position should be to disbelieve anything a politician says until she
can prove it. While we're at it, let's make them defend their big ideas
in light of the US Constitution.
Taking this hyper-skeptical
approach will keep them from tragically wasting our blood and our
treasure. There is a selfish partisan interest here as well. By
holding our own politicians and candidates' feet to the fire, and
spitting them out when they're found to be full of crap, we preserve the
reputation of our respective parties.
No more letting them lie
to us with a wink and a nod just to get elected. The incinerator at
the bottom of the memory hole has been extinguished. With the internet,
America's digital memory is now infinite. Lying and political
shape-shifting doesn't work in an age when I can sit in my underwear and
research everything a politician has said since he was in grade school.
I share no ideology with Dennis Kucinich or Bernie
Sanders, but they are probably two of the most honest politicians in DC,
and I can at least admire them for that.
Listen to One AnotherLeft
and right are poles apart, by definition. No one should have to listen
to hysterical ideologues screaming insults, but we should lend an ear to
reasoned voices on the other side. You don't have to compromise your
principles to do it, and you may learn something.
Wanna know
one area where the right has jumped on the lefty bandwagon? Opposition
to crony capitalism. Conservative mistrust most likely springs from a
different motive, but we've seen the light! We agree with you that
government should not be in bed with corporations and bankers. No
special favors!
Another area where the right has seen the
light? The primacy of the US Constitution. A few years ago, only
libertarians and liberal social activists referred to that venerable
document. Granted, the left narrowly focused in on the bill of rights,
usually the 1st, 4th and 5th Amendments, but they could nonetheless
claim to be bigger constitutionalists than their ideological adversaries
on the right.
No more. Our disillusion with traditional Country
Club Republicanism stacked upon our distaste for postmodern liberalism
has left us nowhere else to go. So let's rally 'round the constitution
and argue over what those words mean. It is so much more productive
than the tired bread and circuses of Republican team versus the
Democratic team and "my politician is better than your politician."
Dial It BackI
have excoriated President Obama. I got so mad once that I put red
Mickey Mouse ears on him. He's the president, so I should have more
respect, as I thought the left should have shown President Bush.
I
remember thinking at the time that George Bush did not make the case
for invading Iraq. But everybody this side of Russ Feingold was too
scared to call him on it, so off we went.
I cut him too much
slack because I liked him (I still do). I blindly trusted him on
everything from the Patriot Act to No Child Left Behind. Some of that
stuff needed to be done, but no one on the right seriously questioned
him. We did not have a critical debate.
You know what
would have made it easier for me to part ways with Bush on some of these
issues? If foaming-at-the-mouth leftists had not been jumping all over
him like a mob of diseased orangutans, vomiting insults and hysterical
rage at him. Had much of that legitimate criticism been well-stated and
not couched in ad hominem, I would have found it much easier to jump on
board. I was in the military at the time, and it seriously seemed like
it was President Bush and us against the world.
We're All AmericansWe
will never agree on abortion, gay marriage, or health care, but we
should all agree that no politician gets a free pass. We the People can
also all agree on a few founding principles like a wall of separation
between business and state, and a kick in the bum for crony capitalists
and the corrupt political hogs who wallow with them. Maybe we can even
be friendly to those on the other side who are not spewing hatred our
way.
Am I dreaming? Probably, but I feel compelled to say this in the name of ideological ecumenism.
I'm Kurt Silverfiddle, and I approve of this message.