Just words, no pretty pictures this time.
Where does one draw the line between Conservative and Liberal and really, does it matter? I
don’t think I know anyone who agrees completely with every particle of either
the GOP platform or the Democratic platform. I doubt even either of the candidates for President, one of
whom will (hopefully – as long as there aren’t too many issues with absentee
ballots, early ballots and voting machine issues) be named as our next
president sometime in the early hours of tomorrow morning, agrees wholeheartedly with the entire platform of their Party.
I write this having voted today (I’ll share my
voting story another time!) and not knowing how the election will turn out. I
have purposely avoided any and all media today, because I am a) sick to death
of hearing about politics; and b) it is just a matter of waiting at this point
and all the pundits analyzing exit polls simply will not make a difference and
I find them annoying. Incredibly annoying. However, I must admit, I keep
thinking about it. So here I am taking a few minutes I don’t really have to
write about some things that have been on my mind for a while.
Labels. We humans do like to apply them. We label each other, lifestyles, school supporters, everything pretty much, especially things like politics. Apparently,
we must be either Liberal or Conservative. Democrat or Republican, Libertarian,
Green, US Taxpayers and/or whatever other miscellaneous party names are out
there. If we don’t fit into any of the
above, we can conveniently call ourselves Independent, which, by the way, is
what I’m registered as, not that it matters.
Am I Liberal or am I Conservative?
Well, I’m not quite sure, to tell the truth, because there is an ever-changing
line that divides the two and I find myself straddling it most of the time. My
leaning to one side or the other tend to vary depending on the issue. I have
never voted a straight ticket ballot in my life and fail to understand how
anyone could.
I am a Liberal, because I believe that Civil Rights should
apply to every US Citizen equally, regardless of race, religion, ethnicity or
sexual orientation. Republican Abraham Lincoln was the President who brought
this issue front and center (After Thomas Jefferson and the rest of the early
Constitutional Congress, who had the gall to approve the words, “all men are
created equal,” later determined to apply to women as well). I find it rather ironic that believing equal
rights, basic human rights in US terms, should apply equally to all Citizens, is
viewed as “Liberal Nonsense” according to a relative I will not name and far
too many others.
I am a Conservative, because I do not believe that asking
someone to prove their citizenship before voting in an election that determines
the direction of the country, state or municipality holding the election is
unreasonable. I would not, for example, expect to be able to vote in Canada, in
England or in France, even if I were living there and paying taxes (which I
did, in England, for several years and I never would have expected to vote, it
would have been ridiculous!). It appears to me to be perfectly reasonable to
expect proof of citizenship before allowing someone to vote.
I am a Liberal, however, because I also believe that
requiring identification means that it should be easy and affordable for
citizens to acquire the required photo identification. No qualified voter
should be prevented from registering and voting in an election because getting
required identification is too difficult or costly.
My kids could get an ID card in 30 minutes and for $5 while
registering for classes at the beginning of each school year. Why can’t we
provide the same option to those needing a photo ID for voting, without making
it difficult and overwhelming to those with limited income and transportation
options? Setting up temporary stations at high schools in areas most affected
for a few days a year to offer that option doesn’t seem as though it should be
that complicated or expensive. Regardless,
there have to be ways to make getting photo ID easier and less expensive if it
is going to be a voting requirement.
I am a Conservative because I do not believe that government
should intrude upon religious freedom. I believe that anyone and everyone
should be allowed to worship how and who they desire, according to the dictates
of their own conscience. I am a Liberal because I believe that laws should not
be formed nor government administered that favor one religion above another,
Christian, Muslim, Judaism, Wicca, whatever. I believe that religion has
absolutely no place in government or law, except in the absolute refusal to
give preference to any particular religion and that laws should apply to all
equally.
I am a Liberal, because I do not believe that anyone’s
personal religious views should affect the way others are allowed to live their
lives or exercise their civil rights. Specifically, I find it heinous that a
large number of people really believe that they have the right, because of
their religious views, to determine who should and should not marry. I am
astounded that these people somehow see their bigotry and intolerance of anyone
who identifies as different from themselves as anything
other than bigotry. I am completely unable to understand how they believe this
different from the prejudices and resulting injustices which have affected
African Americans, Women, Muslims, Asians, Catholics, Mormons and every other
minority group that has ever been affected by prejudice and intolerance.
I also find it quite ironic that some of the worst offenders
are members of groups, religious and otherwise, who once suffered from extreme
prejudice and intolerance themselves. While these people see the persecution
of their own group as just that, persecution; they somehow see their persecution of other groups
different from themselves as justified. It really boggles my mind. I also
believe that women and minorities deserve to be paid equally for the same job
as a white man and cannot begin to understand how anyone could think anything
different is acceptable, somehow this makes me a Liberal.
I am a Conservative because I believe that life is sacred. I
am not in favor of abortion; in fact I think it is wrong. I am a Liberal because I am pro-choice. No,
they are not mutually exclusive. I know dozens of people who are pro-choice and
not a single one who is pro-abortion. I
believe that the life of the woman who is faced with an unexpected and unwanted
pregnancy for whatever reason is every bit as important as that of the fetus
residing in her body.
I do not believe that
I, or anyone else, has the right to make such an intimate, incredibly difficult
choice for any woman finding herself in an untenable situation and I find
it unbelievably arrogant that anyone should believe that they do have the right
to make that decision for someone else. That being said, late term abortion is
just another term for murder in my view. If an embryo is far enough along to survive
outside the womb, it is a baby.
My purpose here is not to debate abortion, however, I have
known a few women, several quite well, who have had an abortion at some time and this has colored my views. A
couple of girls I knew when we were teenagers found themselves in a terrible
situation, one of them was a victim of rape. Having a baby would have literally ruined their lives. Some parents
are more understanding than others; not every teenage girl or single woman has
a supportive and loving family to turn to for support.
I know a few women who had an abortion in their twenties or thirties, for
different reasons. I know a woman who had a much wanted pregnancy and then
found out the child was so severely deformed she and her husband were told there was no possibility the child would survive
birth and would quite possibly die during the pregnancy. This was a decision she agonized over, along with her husband and in
the end, they decided that it would be best for them, their two already
existing children and for the child who would never live. I have known this woman
now for over ten years and she still believes they made the right choice.
Every single woman I have known who chose to have an abortion
agonized over making the decision. None of them took it lightly but all
believed it was the best decision under the circumstances they were in,
circumstances no one who hadn’t been in them could possibly understand. So no,
I do not believe that taking away the right to choose is justifiable. Abortion
is a tragedy, but it is a choice that should be made between a woman, her
family if applicable, her doctor and her God.
I am a Conservative because I believe in the right to bear
arms as specified in the Bill of Rights. I don’t believe that all guns should
be outlawed and I don’t believe that obtaining ownership and a license should
be so difficult it is almost impossible. I believe in the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights.
I am a Liberal
because I believe there should be limits placed on gun ownership. I believe
that anyone wanting to buy a gun should be subject to a criminal background
check and a Psych Evaluation. I do not believe that anyone should be able to
buy a gun at a gun show and disappear. After all, the people we trust to carry guns
professionally, Law Enforcement and the Military are subject to both criminal
background checks and psychological evaluations.
So why on earth would we let any nut job off the street walk
in and buy a gun and enough ammunition to say, oh, attack a Congresswoman
speaking at a Mall, or shoot down classmates, or shoot random strangers driving
on a freeway? Additionally, I have a vivid imagination and cannot come up with
any reason a private citizen here in the United States needs to own a machine
gun. Neither can I conceive of a reason an ordinary citizen would need to carry
a gun into a church, a school, a library or any other public place where one
has no reasonable expectation of being in a dangerous situation.
I am a Liberal because I do believe that Government has a
responsibility to ensure its’ Citizens are cared for and have food and shelter,
as a last resort in case of poverty and in cases of disaster. We have all seen
the need for a Federal Government to provide help and leadership in emergencies all too
vividly in the past couple of weeks. While I do believe that some things should
be decided and administered at the State level, is there really anyone who
thinks that New Jersey and New York should have been forced to take care of the
effects of Hurricane Sandy on their own?
I am a Conservative because I believe that things like educational structure, local taxes, public education and administration of welfare funds should
be left up to the States to decide. I believe States should come up with their
own budgets and local municipalities should do the same. I believe that too
much interference in private business is detrimental. I believe that taxes
should be kept as low as possible, while still maintaining essential services.
I am a Liberal because I believe the Federal Government is
necessary for oversight. Does anyone remember what happened just a few short
years ago with our banking system and then the Economy due to lack of
regulation (or enforcement)? How about going back a little further to the Stock
Market Crash of 1929? Not many people still around who lived through it, but
surely “The Great Depression,” rings a bell. The regulations enacted after the
Great Depression were enacted to prevent it from happening again. These are the
same regulations the Bush Administration, heeding the pleas of those looking to
make money, proceeded to weaken and take apart, which made this latest banking
crisis possible.
Does anyone really believe that manufacturers can be trusted
to look out for the public good without oversight and being held to standards
on a Federal level? Think about the public safety issues we have now as it is;
tainted spinach, tainted peanut butter and numerous other contamination
outbreaks over the past few years alone. Would you want to eat food canned and produced
under a system with State controls over food safety? If so, perhaps you should go back and re-read The
Jungle, by Upton Sinclair.
Currently we have an
outbreak of meningitis killing people due to infected steroid injections. The contaminant
has been traced back to a specialty pharmacy which has been cited before for
quality control problems. In spite of warnings by many experts in the field,
this is an area that has managed to escape oversight due to loopholes in the
law. Thus far 30 people are dead, over 400 infected and it’s hard to argue that
this is an area that should not be subject to federal inspections and practice
guidelines in the future.
Think about how quickly the CDC has worked to track down and
find the root causes of these problems. Does anyone really believe that is
something that a state government, or several states governments if
distribution has crossed state lines, could do anywhere near as effectively? So
yes, I do believe we need a Federal Government and that there is a need for
some regulation and oversight.
The issues above are just a few of those that divide and
define Liberals and Conservatives, the list could go on and on. What’s
important is that we’re all human beings, and that we all remember that. I’ll
let you in on a little secret which probably isn’t much of a secret. I
personally hope that President Obama wins re-election for several reasons.
First, because I believe that Romney’s vague economic promises are just that,
vague promises. I find Paul Ryan’s extreme and cold right wing version of conservative
Catholicism and lack of empathy for others frightening. I do not believe that either of them has
any understanding of what it’s like to live below the poverty level or for those who are struggling desperately to survive. I fear what a
Romney/Ryan Administration would do to Civil Rights. I find their entire
campaign’s disregard for facts and the truth troubling, to say the least.
What I think doesn’t matter anymore, if it ever did, to
anyone but me. Honestly though, I must say I really don’t think that the country
will fall apart if Romney wins. I think
that we, as US Citizens, are fortunate to have two basically good, not perfect,
but good, people who want to be the President of the United States (which
frankly, I think is nuts, talk about a thankless job!) and I am grateful.
My hope and prayer is that our horribly dysfunctional
Legislative Bodies can overcome their imbecilic partisanship and work together
and with whomever the President ends up being, to find a way to work together
and do what is best for the Country. The
United States of America will go on. I believe that we will pick ourselves up
from whatever knocks us down, we will persevere, we will innovate and we will
figure out a way to make things work. Because that is what we do, it’s what
we’ve always done and what we always will do, regardless of who is named as the
next President of the United States.
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