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Envy Expressed in Letter

This reminds me of a poll I heard about where people said they'd rather neither economy grew than to have the Japanese economy grow at a slightly faster rate than the U.S. economy. David Eggenschwiler of Los Angeles wrote in to the Los Angeles Times:
GOP congressmen have insisted that allowing people to buy across state lines should take care of the high cost of insurance: People could "shop around."
It wouldn’t necessarily "take care" of the "high cost" of insurance, as there are many factors contributing to that. It would provide more competition, which could lower prices.
These congressmen never point out that it's the insurance industry that would benefit most from this change.
Assuming that’s true - so what? Is that a problem, as long as it increases your options? Or do you hate the employees and investors in the insurance companies so much, you would opt to keep artificial limits on your options just to keep them from getting something they want?
Delaware became the credit card corporate center of the U.S. because it allowed high interest rate charges.
So don't use credit cards if it bothers you so much, and boycott Delaware. I don't even know what my credit card interest rates are, because I pay my credit cards off.

What is it with people who apply to use the services of a company, and then decry the terms and conditions of the services?
Let the buyer -- and voter -- beware. The GOP does not put your interests first any more than corporations do.
Let's grant this. This is why having as small of a federal government as possible is a good idea. It is much easier for one party (or two parties) and corporations to limit your options the more power is centralized in D.C. The fact is, the Democrat Party and the GOP both exist to get their members elected and appointed to office. That's their main purpose. That's not good or bad in an of itself. But we, the people, need to hold any elected official accountable.

See My National Health Care Plan.
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The Party of No?

The burden of proof is on those who want “change” to show that there is a problem in the first place, and that the problem can and should be addressed by some level/branch of government.

Leftists call themselves “progressives”, because they want you to believe that their proposals bring positive progress to society.  What I see in their actions, though, is an attempt to centralize as much power in the federal government as possible. That’s not progress. That has been tried over and over again in history, and the results range from societal stagnation to genocide.

If they were to get everything they want as far as nationalizing and socializing health care and the funding thereof, they would discover some new “right” that is being denied to us, and call on some government program for that, too.

Our plan is not "don't get sick"  and "die quickly if you do".  Our plan is to let people make their own plans through voluntary arrangements - with their co-op, their temple, their union, their doctor, their neighbors, or their insurance company or anyone  else who voluntarily gets involved. That's called liberty. Yes, people will still have problems, but they're going to have problems either way. Individual liberty, whenever possible, is better than expanded government.

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Getting Government Out of the Bedroom?

I'm generally in favor of that.  I'm also in favor of people keeping private consensual behavior... private.  I don't need to see it on parade.

J. Kelly Strader, a professor of law at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles, has a commentary in today's Los Angeles Times discussing the impact – or the alleged lack thereof – of the Lawrence vs. Texas decision on laws and court rulings about sexual behavior. The piece starts out mentioning the effort to repeal the California Marriage Amendment, then quickly moves on to Lawrence, maintaining that that there is a "constant threat to our privacy rights."

My analysis is over at The Opine Editorials.


(Blogging note: I will likely not be blogging again for the rest of the day, or at least not until very late in the day.)




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Limiting Government

"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."
-Ninth Amendment

"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
-Tenth Amendment

Why have we allowed our federal government to behave as though these two Amendments are not in the Constitution?  The Constitution is supposed to tell our federal government the few things it is permitted to do.  Are we electing people who behave this way?  Are they placing judges on the bench who understand this?
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What I Mean By Judicial Activism

I have repeatedly seen the charge that folks like me consider any court ruling that goes against what we like to be judicial activism.

What do we mean by judicial activism?

Judicial activism the opposite of judicial restraint.

Our Constitution limits government.  Our federal government is only supposed to do what it is instructed to do in the Constitution.  If we find that the federal government needs new powers, we should grant them by Amendment.  In other words, the government is restrained.  This includes federal courts.  This can also be applied to most, if not all, states and their constitutions, and thus state courts.

When a case or dispute is presented to a court, the first question that should be asked by the court is, "Does this fall under this court’s jurisdiction?"

For example, let's say a minor teenager living with his biological parents thinks his allowance is not high enough.  If he tries to take his parents to court for more allowance, the court should say, "This is not our jurisdiction.  Your parents have the authority to set your allowance."  Maybe a judge thinks the parents are being stingy.  Maybe she thinks the parents are being too generous.  It doesn’t matter.  It is not the court's jurisdiction.

It is not the role of the courts to fix every unfair or wrong thing in society.
  It is not the role of the courts to make every decision, even in government.  Some things fall under the jurisdiction of the legislature, some under the executive (President, Governor, Mayor, etc.), some under the electorate, and some to individuals and their voluntary associations.  Some things should remain at the local level, some things at the state level, and other things at the federal level.

Now, the judicial activist either doesn't consider the question, "Does this fall under this court’s jurisdiction?", or the activist too often answers "Yes, it does."  The judicial activist strikes down laws not because they really violate the constitution, but because a judge or group of judges doesn't like the law (and someone asked them to strike it down).  The judicial activist may have good intentions, but intervenes where he or she shouldn't.  While such a person might right a wrong, they are often doing so at the expense of the overall Constitutional balance of power that keeps our government in check.

I'd rather have a Supreme Court of the United States of America stacked with individuals who are personally liberal and rule with judicial restraint, than one stacked with judicial activists who are conservatives.  It takes a special kind of person to have access to power, but refrain from exercising it whenever he or she feels like it.  We need special people on the SCOTUS, just like we need special people in our other roles of power.

Not everything should be decided by SCOTUS.

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Overcooked Government Hinders Restaurants

Jessica Gelt has a sizable article in the Los Angeles Times about how government makes opening and operating a restaurant in the City of LA especially difficult.
"It's a terrible, broken system, trying to open a restaurant. It devastates people."

This sentiment is echoed by restaurant owners across the city, who say that in its quest to ensure public safety and uphold environmental standards, the local government has constructed a Byzantine system of codes, permits and inspections that has obstructed the growth of new restaurants, tied business owners' hands -- sometimes to the point where the business has to close -- and has driven developers to seek work outside city limits.
The mess of dealing with the City of LA - for businesses and homeowners - is to the benefit of neighboring cities who receive them with open arms.
Their beef is with inspectors who rigidly adhere to a one-size-fits-all application of codes and with the lack of communication between regulatory agencies. The latter can cause an inspector from the health department to sign off on, say, having an open drain behind a bar, and a plumbing inspector to demand a month later that the drain be closed.

When a business owner is faced with contradictory demands from the dozen agencies involved in the permitting process, things can get messy and expensive. (The L.A. departments of City Planning, Building and Safety, Transportation [for parking], the L.A. Bureau of Sanitation and the L.A. County Department of Public Health are the big five.)
Sometimes, the ring finger doesn't know what the middle finger is doing.
That's why, City Councilman Eric Garcetti says, flexibility needs to be encouraged -- within reason and without jeopardizing public safety -- when it comes to code regulation. "L.A. has become one of the great food capitals of the world, but this has happened despite government, not because of it," he says. "Planning in L.A. is a full-contact sport."
Garcetti has actually tried to do something about it.
In L.A., however, the system has grown so unwieldy that it has given birth to an entire class of operators known as expediters.
And those people now have a financial incentive to keep things complicated and confusing.
Navarrette gives the example of a small restaurant in Highland Park called Fidel's Pizza. It has been in business for more than 40 years, during which time the zoning for the lot it occupies was changed from business to residential. Recently, the county health department threatened to shut Fidel's down because it didn't have enough storage space. The elderly couple who own it built storage on the back and were then cited by code enforcement for building an illegal structure.
The article doesn’t even deal with the labor issues or taxes or limits on food offerings imposed by the state and city - or any number of other complications, all because someone is voluntarily offering a service and product to someone who voluntarily buys it.  Keep in mind that restaurants are generally having tough time right now as people spend less.
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Why Fight It? Go With the Obamania Flow!

Dear Obama/Democrat/Government Intervention Supporter:

I have been a responsible, productive member of society.

I have said "no" to substance abuse and addiction.

I have tried to keep myself healthy.

I have kept a good driving record.

I have paid my bills, on-time, not buying things I couldn't afford.

The one and only time I've bought a new car is when I could pay all of the purchase price up-front in cash.

I got a job while I was still in high school.

I actually attended my high school classes and turned in my assignments.  Then I went to college and earned a degree, while working.

I never left or did anything to lose a job until I got a better one, and I once kept an old job by dropping down to part-time there while I worked full-time at the new one.

I didn't knock any woman up.  I married another responsible person and we made babies after getting married.  We take care of our kids instead of leaving them in day orphanages or with grandparents.

We bought (financed) a modest home.  We upgraded to a bigger home, financing it with a considerable down payment and a fixed rate.  We rent out the smaller home, making us landlords.  We pay both of our mortgages – on time, just like our credit cards.

We have not stolen or committed other crimes.

We have not filed frivolous lawsuits.

We have not accepted government loans, grants, or welfare.

We give to charities and our church, which does charitable work.

We have paid all of our taxes on time.

We have saved, invested, insured instead of buying bigger entertainment centers, flashier cars, or expensive vacations.

So we are homeowners, landlords, investors, taxpayers, and active, involved parents – contributors.

But I'm starting to understand that we have been fools.

Why should we pay our bills when we can use the force of government to get something for nothing?  Why pay our mortgages when we can use the force of government to force the banks to "eat it"?  Why work if I can get paid not to?  Why work harder or strive to take care of my health if I can get the same medical insurance and the same education regardless?  Why save money when it is just going to be devalued?  Why earn more and invest more if I'll lose more in taxes?  Why pay for insurance and be careful and conscientious when the government should take care of all of my problems?  Why follow the law when I can get millions of dollars suing if law enforcement makes a mistake in arresting and prosecuting me?  Why steer clear of substance abuse when it will give me all of the excuses I need?

Why be contributors, who are vilified, when we can be dependent takers, who are glorified?

So, you win.  You're right.  The rich, the business owners, the property owners and landlords, the bosses, the insurance companies - they are all the problem.  Perhaps I should stop focusing on working and climbing a ladder, and instead spend my time community and union organizing so as to manipulate things for my personal benefit at the expense of everyone else.  Perhaps I should stop contributing, and focus on taking.  I wonder what life would be like if more people did that?  I hope others don't figure this out.  After all, the fewer contributors there are, the harder it will be for us to live off of their hard work.  We need someone to continue to play the fool.

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The Bush Legacy

It is impossible to write a definitive judgment on the legacy of President George W. Bush at this time, although there have been many evaluations and retrospectives in the last several months.

Left-leaning folks, especially those who have had Bush Derangement Syndrome from the moment the first chad dangled, will try to blame him as much as possible while denying him as much credit as they can, and some Republicans will defend Bush's every move, even if they would have pitched a fit if it had been done by a Democrat.

We should be vigilant against those who would try to write him into history as the worst President ever.  They will try to do so for political expediency, since he is the most recent Republican to serve in that office, and the only President besides Obama that most newer voters will remember with any understanding.

We should also be careful not to let Bush's decisions or tolerations that were decidedly expansive of government be portrayed as proof that limiting government doesn't work.


Those who champion limited government knew that Bush was not a solid conservative way back in the 2000 race.  But enough Republicans felt he had the best chance of regaining the Presidency that we as a party opted for a flawed candidate who could win as opposed to a more ideologically pure candidate who would lose.

Evaluating a President is difficult to do when there are many things we don't know. 
There is information that will remain classified for decades to come.  We don’t know how many threats have been neutralized, or what private negotiations, promises, or requests have been made between a President and foreign forces.  We don't know the rulings that some of Bush's judicial appointments will make.

Comparing one President to another is difficult when they had different world situations, different Congresses, different court ruling and Constitutional amendments, and different natural disasters with which to contend.

At this time, we can only give a tentative assessment of the Bush Presidency.

And what should be the criteria?  That depends on the duties of the President.  If I broke my leg during Bush's time in office, it is highly unlikely that it was his fault.  Just because something happened while he was President does not mean he should get blame or credit for it.  Something has to be the result of his actions or his inaction (when and where he should have acted) for him to deserve the credit or blame.  Economic growth or recession is always assigned to a President, but a President can do very little, aside from reducing taxes and government interference, to boost the economy.  A President can do much to harm an economy.  Aside from government positions, a President does not create jobs.

What are the duties of the President?

-Serve as Commander-in-Chief.  This includes protecting our national security, directing the military, controlling our nukes, and securing our borders.

-Sign or Veto Legislation.  Could the legislation have been written much better?  Was there a veto-proof voting block in Congress?

-Make Appointments/Nominations.  This is especially important with judicial nominations, including to the Supreme Court of the United States.

-Execute/Enforce Federal Law
.  Did the President aggressively crack down on crime and corruption?

-Issue Executive Orders, Pardons, Commutations.

In addition to these duties, a President can offer moral leadership and use the bully pulpit to encourage some things and discourage others; and be the international face of the union.

As Republicans, conservatives, and advocates of limited government, we would tend to also judge a President on how well he or she contributes to limiting government, advances our principles in the public mind and around the world, and strengthens the Republican party by getting Republican elected and raising funds.  This is a tricky one, however.  One could argue that Democrat Bill Clinton helped to get a conservative majority elected in Congress in 1994, but most of us would not cite Bill Clinton as one of our favorite Presidents.

It is NOT the duty of a President to:
-Ensure you get the education you want at the cost to you that you want.
-Ensure you have a job you enjoy with the compensation you want.
-Ensure you have the kind of house you want at the cost to you that you want.
-Ensure you have the health insurance coverage you want at a cost to you that you want.
-Ensure that everyone else likes you and supports your goals and needs, or that you like you.
-Control the climate of the world.
-Get polar bears to mate.

We are still dealing with mistakes Carter made.  Heck, we're still dealing with mistakes LBJ and FDR made.  Reagan helped to bring down the Iron Curtain.  He also signed an illegal alien amnesty bill that was supposed to solve the problem, but helped to encourage millions more poor, unskilled, and dangerous illegal aliens to flood into our country over the subsequent decades.  Bill Clinton signed the DOMA and welfare reform, but let Islamofascist terrorists be treated merely as criminals instead of what they were – a national security threat.  Bush didn't make that same mistake, but he has expanded the size of government with domestic programs and spending.

I do believe that Bush was committed to protecting this nation.  However, I can't reconcile that with our porous borders.  Maybe there is something we don't know yet.

Bush left office with a low approval rating.  Congress has a much lower approval rating, but I'm not writing about them.  Much of Bush's low approval rating comes from Leftists who would never ever approve of his work.  Some of it is from conservatives and libertarians who wanted to see Bush limit government instead of expanding it, or people who are very upset about the illegal alien situation – these are people who are not likely to be favorable towards a Democrat President, either.  There's probably a small percentage of that overall disapproval percentage that blame Bush for furthering a conspiracy involving Skull & Bones, New World Order, Illuminati, North American Union, Metric System Adoption, and socks that disappear in the wash.

However, there is probably a portion of that disapproval percentage comprised of people originally ambivalent or even slightly favorable towards Bush who simply grew fatigued of his Presidency.  After all, attention spans do seem to be shrinking.  Even the most popular television shows usually see a steady decline in ratings after peaking early in their run.

If someone is forming their opinions on Bush mostly on information from the drive-by media, Hollywood, special interest groups, and state university professors - especially the likes of Michael Moore, Bill Maher, the New York Times, The Obama-infatuated Time magazine, advocates for pre-natal or post-natal infanticide, Christophobes, Big Socialist Labor, and gender confusion advocates – then they probably haven't seriously given consideration to Bush being a sincere public servant with some worthwhile accomplishments.

We won't be able to arrive at a well-informed, low-bias perspective on the Bush Presidency for a long time.  Right now, we don’t know how much worse things could have been, or what lasting good fruit, if any, his Presidency will produce.  There are some things we can discuss – Iraq, Bush's stance of ESCR, his tax cut policies, No Child Left Behind, and any number of other things for which the Left has bashed him.  If we're going to promote limited government and national defense, we'll have to stand up for those principles in these cases.  But by no means can we pass final judgment - favorable or unfavorable - on his Presidency right now.

Don't let the Left write all of the history books.  But concentrate most of your energy on holding our new federal government accountable.  We have a lot of work to do.

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Trapped In a Ditch, But Still Digging Deeper

Slowdowns and downturns in the economy are a natural part of the market cycle, and if they were exacerbated by government interference and forcible redistribution of wealth, then it is foolish to respond to them with... more government interference and forcible redistribution of wealth.

Forcible redistribution of wealth, among other things, includes such things as taxes/government hand-outs, printing more money at a rate that artificially devalues the dollar, taking private property, growing the size of government, most forms of "affordable housing", and loans to people who can't repay them.

Whether we are sending out welfare checks to the unemployed or "bailout" money to gigantic banks, we are giving hand-outs.

Most people are hoping someone richer than them will get stuck with the bills, and some of the bankers are hoping to spread their bills to everyone instead of just their owners or customers or themselves.  Most likely it will be all our children who pay for this manipulation, whether we are rich or poor.
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Bob Barr Ditches DOMA

Former Republican Congressman Bob Barr, who failed to gain much of a vote as the Libertarian Party's 2008 candidate for POTUS despite McCain being the Republican nominee, has a commentary in today's Los Angeles Times calling for the repeal of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (which he wrote, and President Clinton signed into law).
The left now decries DOMA as the barrier to federal recognition and benefits for married gay couples.
There's nothing about DOMA that prevents the federal government from recognizing same-sex couples, and or applying that to taxation or immigration or other areas.  Congress can pass a law that does just that.
I've wrestled with this issue for the last several years and come to the conclusion that DOMA is not working out as planned.
So it should be repealed?  I think we should repeal hundreds of other laws that aren't working out as planned, first.  Let's have priorities.  I don't see anything good being gained from repealing DOMA.
In effect, DOMA's language reflects one-way federalism: It protects only those states that don't want to accept a same-sex marriage granted by another state.
What is the problem there?  That was one of goals, wasn't it?
Moreover, the heterosexual definition of marriage for purposes of federal laws -- including, immigration, Social Security survivor rights and veteran's benefits -- has become a de facto club used to limit, if not thwart, the ability of a state to choose to recognize same-sex unions.
How can that be when California subsequently enacted a domestic partnership law that treats domestic partners as spouses?
Even more so now than in 1996, I believe we need to reduce federal power over the lives of the citizenry and over the prerogatives of the states.
So do I.  But when you have one state whose judiciary is not following limited-government principles and forcing neutered marriage licensing on the people, why should other states have to accept their error?  I’m pretty sure if I get a hunting license for one place, I can't use that hunting license everywhere - even with the full faith and credit clause.
It truly is time to get the federal government out of the marriage business.
It isn't in the marriage business.  States are.  The federal government recognizes marriages that are licensed by the states.

The paper is taking comments about this one on their website.  Click through to add yours to the circus.  This one, by "plaasjaapie" at 9:35 AM caught my eye:
"...I believe we need to reduce federal power over the lives of the citizenry and over the prerogatives of the states." I seriously doubt that, Bob. Are you willing to repeal that huge piece of federal legislation that placed serious federal penalties on defaulters on child support payments ordered by state courts that you passed back in 1992? Let me take leave to doubt that very seriously.
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How to Argue About Marriage Amendments

If you supported Prop 8 or any other marriage amendments, and someone who disagrees wants to discuss the issue with you (as opposed to picketing, threatening, or stoning you), I recommend doing the following to save time.

Ask this question:

Is there anything I could possibly say that would cause you to agree that I’m not a bigot and that I have a defensible position?

If they answer no, then there's no point having a dialogue with them.  They've already dismissed you.

If however, they say "yes" or "maybe" or "I don’t know", then there is some hope.

If you get past that point, I suggest discussing these points, because these are ultimately what decides any reasonable position on the issue.

1. Although some of our rights are enumerated, our constitutions tell our governments what they can do, not the people all that we can do.  We have our rights whether or not they are enumerated.

2. We have a government of, by, and for the people.  Our constitutions provide for a democratic, representative republic.  In California, like some other states, we even have direct democracy through the ballot initiative process.  As such, in general, the will of the people is what determines law, though laws can be struck down by courts if they violate rights.

3. True rights do not obligate others without their consent.  Our rights are natural, such as our right to free speech and freedom of association.  These are very important points to get across.  If they do not agree with this one, then it will be much more difficult to get them to see your side of the argument.  See this blog entry for more about this.

4. Men and women are different.  Most, if not all, people figure this out as infants, even though they don't know all of the particulars.  Some people will try to argue with this.  However, I don’t see how they can deny this fact and simultaneously insist that homosexuals can't change.  If women and men were not different, the terms like heterosexual, homosexual, straight, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and trangendered would have no meaning.  Even bisexuals will tell you men and women are different.  If someone refuses to admit this point, point out to them that their own sexual orientation is based on this reality.

5. Relationships between adults are voluntary associations unless at least one participant is a criminal.  People choose to be friends with someone, or date them, or live with them, or commit to them.

6.  The government treats different kinds of voluntary associations differently.  Nonprofits are treated differently than for-profits.  Small businesses are treated differently from large businesses.  Publicly traded corporations are treated differently than private business partnerships.  The relationship between an adoptive parent and an adopted minor child is treated differently than the one between a teacher and a minor student.


Okay, here is where the rubber meets the road.  If you have reached this point, you should be able to get through these points through a logical discussion.  Unfortunately, as far as I've seen so far, the other side isn't arguing based on facts and logic.  They are basing their arguments on desires and emotions.  But it is worth a try.

7. Because men and women are different, the union of a man and a woman is a different kind of voluntary association than the union of two women or two men.  They may try to argue against this, but again, it goes back to point 4.  The conclusion is inescapable if men and women are different.

8. State-issued licenses are issued on behalf of the people as a whole (refer to point 2).

9. There is no right to a state-issued license.  They are issued voluntarily, not to fulfill rights (refer to points 3 and 8).  

10. It isn't a violation of rights for the state to treat a union of a man and a woman differently from other kinds of relationships (point out their agreement to points 4, 6, and 7 if necessary).

11. It isn’t a violation of rights for the state to issue a license only to partnerships consisting of one man and one woman and not issue that same license to partnerships without a man or partnerships without a woman or to an individual or trios or groups.  (The other side will try to dispute this, but if they have agreed to the previous points, they can't do so on the basis of logic.)

They may try to argue about equal access or equal protection, but if they agree to the previous points, then the logical conclusion is that there is equal access and protection for any of the same kind of voluntary association.  Since other kinds of voluntary associations are different, there is no obligation for the state to treat them the same.  Both men and women have access to state marriage licensing, and there is no sexual orientation requirement in obtaining that license.

12. As long as rights are not being violated, it is up to the people (via direct vote or their elected representatives) to set and change marriage licensing requirements.

13. Since no rights are being violated with the bride-groom requirement in state marriage licensing, courts should not order a change.

14. Since a court did order a change against the will of the people, and since we are supposed to retain rights and have checks and balances in our government, the people had a legitimate incentive to pass a constitutional amendment to restore the will of the people.

These all deal with why we are not obligated by our constitutions to neuter state marriage licensing.  I may write more later about why we shouldn’t choose to neuter state marriage licensing.


Previously: The Case For Prop 8
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On Promoting a Limited Government GOP

We have a two party system.  Yes, although there are times where Democrats and Republicans are too similar, there are many times when the differences are clear.  Third parties were irrelevant in the 2008 Presidential Election, despite the wariness of libertarians and many conservatives about the GOP nominee. It will be better to reform the GOP than build a whole new organization, so I favor working towards a GOP that consistently promotes limited government through conservatism, free market capitalism, and federalism.

One of the difficulties we have is that we’re electing people into positions of power, and then hoping they will vote themselves less power.  It is very tempting for someone to attempt to the use the force of government to "do something”"to make a perceived ill better, or to spend money taken from others.  Still, I believe it is possible to elect people who will restrain themselves and each other, bringing true reform, focusing on protecting our actual rights.

It should not be the role of our government to attempt to cure every social and moral ill through a law or a government program.  It is possible to elect people who understand that and will fight for limited government, but we have to work hard and work well to do it.  We can't just have candidates who are committed to limiting government – we have to get them elected and hold them accountable in order for them to be able to do any good.

Here are some of my other entries relevant to this issue:

Why Do People Vote Democrat?

Why McCain Lost

One Way to Win in 2010 and 2012

More Ways to Win in 2010 and 2012

Winning the Voters

Why Social and Fiscal Conservatives Belong Together in the GOP

Different Republican Camps Need Each Other

Conservative Christians Must Have Sensible Priorities

Conservatives Can’t Influence If They Sit on Their Hands

Six Lessons Republican Politicians and Pundits Need to Learn

Is the Battle Lost?

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More Ways to Win in 2010 and 2012

I’ve already blogged about turning new voters who voted for Obama towards Republicans in 2010 and 2012, and some ways we can reach some of the people who vote Democrat.  However, there’s more to keep in mind.

We need to Speak up, Speak Well, and Speak Far and Wide.

Speak Up – Some who voted Left this time simply haven't heard good arguments from our side.  We tend to try to deal with life instead of complaining – going about quietly fixing problems without waiting for the government to do it.  But we now need to speak up and let other people - especially independents and people who don't always bother to vote - know what is going on.  We need to tell them when a new regulation or law or policy change or tax rate negatively impacts us, especially if it will also impact them, even if only by extension.  Some of us have been intimidated by being shouted down by professors or dope-smoking protestors or emotional family members.  We need to face intolerance and ignorance head-on and speak up.  If someone gets angry as us - oh well.  They'll calm down.

Show our fellow citizens when the media and the Left are attacking them and their values.  Show them how things that move us further away from limited government bring negative consequences.

Speak Well – There are effective ways to be persuasive.  Stay focused.  Keep on topic.  Lead things towards their logical conclusion before the subject gets changed.  Part of speaking well is informing your audience.  Perhaps we should be passing out pocket copies of the Constitution with footnotes?  Running television spots talking about Constitutional principles and limited government?

We can't ignore image or neglect the fact that much of our audience will be fickle with short attention spans.  We have to deal with how things are, not as we want them to be.

Speak Far and Wide – We need to use technology effectively to make our case and show it to be stronger than the Left's case.  Engage our fellow citizens in conversations that can make a difference.  The Left is using technology, especially social networking sites.  We need to use every ethical and effective means to reach, keep, inform, and motivate an audience.  Get them hooked on some of your favorite blogs.

We can turn things back towards limited government.
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Winning the Voters

It is very appealing to a lot of people that "someone else" is going to pay for things, and they are going to get "refunds" or services from the government, which really means other people.  When you rob Peter to pay Paul, you can almost surely count on Paul’s vote, and there are more Pauls than Peters.

I wrote earlier about some of the reasons why some people vote Democrat.  In this entry, I wanted to quickly go over ways we can address some of those reasons and get these people to vote for limited government Republicans.  If you haven’t done so yet, you can also read my entry on how to turn the newer voters who went with Obama our way.

We can turn some of the people by appealing to them as voters, taxpayers, parents, investors, potential employers, homeowners and potential property owners, churchgoers, military families, law enforcement families, crime victims, and lawsuit victims – showing them that have a stronger overall interest in limited government than they do in getting hand-outs.

We can appeal to voters by publicizing our efforts to fight vote fraud, but more importantly, emphasizing that the legislators they voted for should be making law, not activist courts.  In states where there is direct democracy, this can be even more effective.  Voters do not like it when courts overturn their votes without solid justification.  Witness Prop 8 passing in California, even in blue Los Angeles County.  Voters, obviously, think voting is important.

We can appeal to taxpayers by keeping taxes low and by using their money wisely.  It is nice to be able to “bring home the bacon”, but all we’re really doing is paying people in federal government to handle our money for us, and do so inefficiently.  Everybody thinks they pay federal income taxes.

We can appeal to parents by fighting to maintain their authority over their own children with things like school choice and parental consent laws.  Most of the population experiences parenthood at some point, and most of those people don't like it when someone interferes in the parent-child relationship.

We can appeal to investors by letting them decide how to run what they own, not taxing them more, and going after fraud aggressively.  We should point out that anyone with an IRA, 401(k), or some other like account is an investor.  That’s a lot of people.

We can appeal to potential employers by fighting for their rights to reach compensation and benefit agreements with their employees, and to keep the government from interfering more in the workplace.
  A lot of people hope to be employers if they aren’t already.

We can appeal to homeowners and potential property owners by interfering less in their choices.  Most people will either own property or seek to buy property sometime in their lives.

We can appeal to religious communities by respecting them and not forcing them to keep their religion in a closet.  Most voters are either part of some “faith community” or are sympathetic to such groups.

We can appeal to military families by respecting and thanking our military personnel and giving them clear, effective missions and caring for their wounds – physical and mental.  Most people in our country have either served in the military or have some family member who has or does.

We can appeal to law enforcement families by keeping law enforcement personnel from being scapegoated and having their hands tied.
  Most upstanding citizens appreciate law enforcement and are sympathetic to their struggles.

We can appeal to crime victims by aggressively pursuing criminals and restorative justice, and blocking Democrat attempts to extend voting to more felons.  Most voters have been victims of burglary or some serious crimes, or know someone who has been - robbery, identity theft, grand theft, arson, assault, rape, kidnapping, murder.

We can appeal to lawsuit victims by reforming legislation so that Litigational Harassment is discouraged instead of handsomely rewarded.

Overall, we can appeal to a lot of the Pauls out there because many of them hope to someday be Peter, and more people can if government is limited.

We can’t outpromise the Democrats when it comes to hand-outs.  We must appeal to the self-worth of the voters.


Previously: Is the Battle Lost?
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Why Do People Vote Democrat?

If we know why, we might be able to more of them to vote Republican.  Of course, this presumes that the Republican they would be voting for would be somewhat conservative, libertarian, or federalist - have some form of limited government philosophy.  Yes, I know that there are some conservative Democrats out there, but even a liberal Republican can help in that the majority party in a legislature gets an advantage, such as in committee appointments, and if most of the Republicans are of the limited government sort, then the liberal Republican can’t do too much harm.

Let me get out of the way right now that I don’t deny there are people who largely vote Republican for some of the same reasons listed.  That’s fine - their votes can help even if they weren’t for the right reason.  Also, I'm not saying that these are the only reasons someone would vote Democrat.

Some people vote Democrat because...
  • They’re registered Democrats and always have been and are never going to change.  It probably isn’t worth the effort to get such people to switch.  They may be part of the Democrat power structure and simply aren’t going to give it up.
  • They want to push the government Leftward.  These people are probably not going to vote Republican, but it may be worth it to encourage them to vote for a third party candidate instead of the Democrat.
  • There was a Democrat President or other figure they liked.  These people can be switched.  There are people who have fond memories of JFK.  However, we can show them that Republicans today have more in common with his political stances than the Democrat leadership of today.  People give Bill Clinton too much credit for the economy of the 1990s, and it can be demonstrated that a Republican Congress helped, and that the private sector did the heavy lifting despite – not because of – Bill Clinton.  One of the dangers of Obama is that he’s young and presumably will be around for years to encourage those who voted for him based on his perceived personality to keep voting Democrat.  I’ve already blogged about how to turn some of his voters.
  • They think the Republicans are corrupt or nasty.  Some of us are.  But it isn't too hard to demonstrate that Democrats are at least as, if not more corrupt or nasty, and it is easy to demonstrate that Republicans force corrupt Republicans out of power much more readily.  It will help if the GOP continues to hold members publicly accountable, and help even more if Republicans stay out of trouble to begin with.
  • Some Republican - politician or personal acquaintance - turned them off.  Unfortunately, some Democrat voters think of people in groups, and it is guilt by association for them.  Just think of how many Democrat voters Nixon created with Watergate alone.  It can be hard to turn these people.  It is easier to be proactive – being good ambassadors as Republicans so that we don’t turn them off to begin with.
  • They are single-issue voters, such as with abortion.  These people can only be turned if we draw them away from a fixation on a single issue.  With abortion, though I think it is murder, I highly doubt that even with the right SCOTUS, we're going to see abortion effectively banned.  A few states may place some restrictions on it, but "health of the mother", technology and travel are going to make preventing abortions difficult.  Although I do not believe there is a right to an abortion, we're going to significantly reduce the number of abortions only be reaching the hearts of each generation and instilling a respect for life in them.  This does not mean we should give up standing up for life in elections.
  • They think they need some government program/assistance to survive and thrive.  Anyone receiving any form of "public assistance" is susceptible to falling into this trap – welfare, grants, loans, and so on.  Anyone who has used the government to wrest something from a current or former employer or landlord.  That’s a lot of people.  Members of labor unions are constantly told by their leaders that Democrats will bring them higher pay, better benefits, and better working conditions.  For these people, it is important to appeal to their sense of self-worth and their personal talents and desire for self-determination.  It may mean steering them towards private assistance, and it might take the people who administer such assistance insisting that their beneficiaries refuse public assistance.  Just imagine if we stepped up to wean people from public assistance and got them to vote for limited government as a result.
We need to know why people who vote voted Democrat so that we can get some of them to our side.  If they are already voting, they're halfway there.  I'll get to more of that in subsequent blog entries.

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