Pick a candidate and throw a plug. If you don't think any Dems will win in 2004 lets hear why?
Upnorthkyosa
Upnorthkyosa
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I think the country is drifting from the bipartisan system and the Dems are the first to feel the birthing pains.
Originally posted by PAUL
If you said this in 99' or 00', I would have agreed. But since then, it is very clear that people have become more party biased. There are polls and stats to prove it, and it was covered by CNBC and another TV news source I saw, and Time Magazine (december or November issue this year). Higher percentages of people by a landslide in the last election voted straight Dem or Rep. tickets, and higher % in polls are claiming a party, rather then claiming to be "independant."
The stats are there, and I only know this stuff because I have news stations on all day long in my office, so you'll have to excuse me!:asian:
Originally posted by Sharp Phil
I would rather the two parties were farther apart. I want a real choice when I vote. I want to vote for candidates that will defend, uncategorically, my right to keep and bear arms, for example. I want to vote for candidates who understand that the money each of us earns is ours, not the government's.
The middle of the political road is no place I want to be.
Originally posted by Sharp Phil
I would rather the two parties were farther apart. I want a real choice when I vote. I want to vote for candidates that will defend, uncategorically, my right to keep and bear arms, for example. I want to vote for candidates who understand that the money each of us earns is ours, not the government's.
The middle of the political road is no place I want to be.
Originally posted by Sharp Phil
I would rather the two parties were farther apart. I want a real choice when I vote. I want to vote for candidates that will defend, uncategorically, my right to keep and bear arms, for example.
Yet, without the government, you would have no money. No rules to protect your person, or your possessions. Are you asking for anarchy?I want to vote for candidates who understand that the money each of us earns is ours, not the government's.
Most people live in the mushy-middle. They don't want to be taxed to death, but they want their grandmother to get cheap (or free) prescription medication.The middle of the political road is no place I want to be.
Because, of course, you want to belong to a 'well-regulated militia', right?
Yet, without the government, you would have no money. No rules to protect your person, or your possessions. Are you asking for anarchy?
Most people live in the mushy-middle.
They don't want to be taxed to death, but they want their grandmother to get cheap (or free) prescription medication.
I believe we are stronger as a community, than as individuals.
There are such things as communities. If we make them.
A government therefore has certainly strictly defined roles.
Originally posted by Sharp Phil
1. There is no such thing as "free" health care. There is only government mandated transfers of wealth. I do not believe you are "owed" healthcare. I do not believe you are owed anything except what you earn through your own effort.
2. Individuals can indeed better their individual circumstances by cooperating and trading with others. There is no such thing, however, as a "community" -- there are only individuals who choose to work together or choose not to work together. A "community" in which communitarian values are enforced over individual rights is no community in which I wish to live.