Sunday, August 24, 2014

Important Ideas


I’ve been struggling through Liberalism: The Life of an Idea  by Edmund Fawcett;  it traces liberalism from its 18th century roots to today.  It reminds me about the county’s roots and my own.  We hear it often that America is a center-right nation but whatever truth there may be in that notion, America was founded by liberals.  Liberals, mind you, that have very little to do with the “liberals” of modern Europe and less to do with today’s American progressives.
 
America is beset by the most illiberal political parties in our history.  The parties are supported by propaganda machines that not only invent their own facts but operate with no ridicule from the nation’s press and less criticism than any time since I started reading the papers. 

You may find this small collection of columns eclectic but they fit my perception of the loss of leadership, common sense and accountability in America generally which has distilled into government with each ascending level worse than the preceding.  Populism reigns with all that human nature brings – government by Facebook.
 
From Gaza to Ukraine, the Effects of World War I Persist
             Jon Meacham
Time Magazine - July 24, 2014
 
From Cupcakes to the Police, Fed Up With Government
George F. Will
Washington Post - August 20
 
How the Carolinas Fixed Their Blurred Lines
By Stephen R. Kelly
NYT - AUG. 23, 2014
 
Personally I’m not one to despair.  The solution to our sad state is readily available.  Soon we will return to our roots and drive the progressives, Bible-thumpers and libertarians back to the fringes where they belong.  We have to stop taking sides with the propagandists;  get the facts straight;  prioritize;  do important things. 
 
Key tools will surely include reducing the power of the two parties.  We need open primaries;  we need to take districting away from legislatures.  But most important, we need to vote – and vote where it counts: in the primaries.  Belatedly I’ve come to realize that voting is not a privilege, as I was taught, it’s a duty.  The uninformed and misinformed have no chance for responsible action.  

Friday, January 17, 2014

The Inequality Problem


Income inequality will likely be a major issue in this coming election;  it’s the only place for Democrats to run given Obamacare and our public inability to deal with real issues.  We’re told this class war crap will last until the 2016 election but I have my doubts. 

Every so often the cockroaches of progressivism find their way out of the woodwork for a while to ply their populist trade;  thus their appearance in the awful 111th Congress and the predictable consequences.  And also thus the inevitable backlash from ordinary Americans and the predictable rise of the delusional Tea Party roaches.  Roaches run from light so it behooves sensible Democrats, conservatives, Republicans, liberals and centrists to get politicians back to governing.  It would be nice if we had a press that would go back to hating all politicians rather than taking sides.  News people should do more fact checking and less advocacy. 

Anyway, here’s a particularly eloquent column on the subject of the serious problem of growing inequality. 

The Inequality Problem
David Brooks, NYT
Jan. 16, 2014

It’s time to drop the ideology and look for leadership.  Vote in the Primaries folks.