There's been a comment waiting the queue that makes assumptions about my positions or opinions that are so askew that I probably won't approve it.*
Instead, I'm going to clarify some items here:
- I think politicians in general are fiscally irresponsible. Republican, Democrat, Green or Libertarian, they all have pet causes and hobbyhorses that they are more than happy to spend your money on. I have never made any secret of this opinion. At the Presidential level, the historical record bears me out, with the two World War Presidents leading the pack and two Republicans and one more Democrat filling out the top five. So you don't need to tell me, "the Dems are just as crazy in their efforts to pile up the national debt to stratospheric heights," because officeholders of both parties stack up that heap. That some of them stick a clothespin on their nose and complain loudly about the process does not mitigate their actions.
- I don't think government ought to be in the business of defining or enforcing any "cultural values," period. The government should encourage secular civic virtues of lawfulness, political participation ranging from voting† to various forms of petitioning to running for and serving in office, and even providing or facilitating access to information (the Government Printing Office, allowing C-SPAN access, various "Sunshine Laws," etc.), but no more than that. External services (Voice of America broadcasts and so on) might promote positive aspects of our national culture as-found, but our culture was not created by our government and is not directed by it. (One of the markers of totalitarianism is the government runs the culture -- or tries to. That's not how we do things in the United States and if you have a problem with that, you have a problem with America.)
- I do think governments should strive to increase the freedom of citizens, and not restrict it without clearly articulated cause. There are plenty of issues on which government should either remain silent or deal with as they deal with the formalization of contracts generally, and these include such supposedly "hot button" matters as marriage and medical matters related to reproduction and gender identity. There are a great number of complex issues for which there is no single universally-right course of action; our governments should recognize this and leave the decision to the individuals directly concerned rather than getting involved. I think the government didn't go far enough in Obergefell; while the various forms of plural marriage are uncommon, they already exist and failing to give them legal recognition simply makes a messy situation even worse. Such matters are complicated and emotionally fraught, difficult to navigate even in the absence of State or Federal opprobrium, and they are not bettered by becoming matters of public debate and heavy-handed, restrictive law. Yes, this does mean other people will sometimes do things of which you -- or I -- will not personally approve. We're not the boss of them, just as they are not the boss of us. Accept it. Freedom applies to everyone, not just to the people are who precisely like you or me. If you have a problem with that, you have a problem with America.
The same commenter wrote, "I agree with you that what Peter Thiel is doing, or not doing, is great. Now if only George Soros would do the same." That's nuts. They're both citizens. They both have exactly the same right to try to influence the government that you or I do. They both have exactly the same right to create, join or participate in organizations that attempt to influence popular and/or government opinion that you or I do. And they have the same right to choose to not do those things that you or I do. And that is what I think is great. I didn't express an opinion about Mr. Thiel's present actions; I pointed them out and shared his stated reasons for so doing, and left the reader to make a value judgement.
I'm sick and tired of asshole noseyparkers trying to run other people's lives and I don't care which political party they vote for. I'm tried of people trying to hammer in the nails of culture with the crescent wrench of government. I don't think they're going to stop, but I'm sure as hell going to remark on it and I'm going to try to slow 'em down. YMMV.
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* You can thunder "censorship" all you like, but blogs are free and you can write whatever you like (and the blog provider allows) on your own blog. This blog is mine. I make the editorial decisions and I'm not going to indulge in long debates over strawman assertions in the comments section.
† An opinion that puts me at odds with today's Republican party, which favors increasing restrictions on voting IMO, that's not a good sign.
Update
6 days ago
2 comments:
You blog, your rules. And we have to constantly remind ourselves than divides us, despite the best of media, both social and mainstream, to pit us against one another. Otherwise we are doomed.
I'm tired of people trying to hammer in the nails of culture with the crescent wrench of government.
I love this phrase, Roberta!
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