
Campaign Down 2000
Big Government
VS
Intrusive Government
(The Whole Story)
By Michael T. McPhearson
After watching three debates between Gore and
Bush, and part of one debate between Chaney and Lieberman, I clearly see the
different visions the two parties have for the United States. It was obvious
from the first debate and has been so for many years.
George Bush does a fantastic job communicating
half the Republican story when he says that he trust us (citizens) to make
decisions and that the Democrats think that government knows best. There is
some truth to his claim. The Republicans want to put more of our hard earned
dollars back into our hands through large tax cuts for everyone. With this
money we can buy what we want, save what we want and invest if we want. The
richest citizens will greatly benefit from the Republican plan because their
tax cut in real dollars will be significantly higher than the vast majority
of us. The thinking is that the richest citizens drive the economy. They
will use this new cash flow to make more money, thus creating jobs, more tax
revenue and a continuation of this unprecedented economic expansion.
Democrats on the other hand propose smaller tax cuts. They want to use tax
incentives to help citizens pay for college, save money, and buy homes.
Democrats believe that by shifting more of the tax burden to the richest
citizens, middle-class citizens will have more money to spend. The
government can help the middle-class by paying down the national debt
quicker with the tax money kept from the smaller tax cut. This will keep
interest rates down and give the government spending flexibility if there is
an economic slow down.
I
like the idea of having more money in my pocket to do as I see fit, but
Gore’s plans are more responsible. Tax cuts and government spending
stimulates the economy. Bush’s plan could actually heat up the economy and
cause inflation.
On the education front, Republicans want to give
citizens vouchers to help them pay for private schools. They ask why should
only rich people have the opportunity to send their kids to private schools?
Republicans want to put more federal money into local school systems without
mandating how the money should be spent. They believe local officials know
more than Washington D.C. bureaucrats about how the money should be spent.
There has been talk of dismantling the Federal Department of Education and
breaking teachers’ unions who protect incompetent teachers. Democrats do not
like vouchers because it takes money from an already under-funded public
school system and will leave students behind with fewer resources than
before the plan. They also want to send more federal dollars to local school
system but they want to ensure the money is spent effectively.
I think
local school boards should decide how any federal money is spent because
they should know their districts best. Vouchers are not good for the public
school system. They will take money from school systems already in dire
need. But what should parents do while their children languish in a broken
system? Maybe the competition will shake the teachers’ unions and education
bureaucrats up a little. Somebody needs a wake up call. But dismantling the
Department of education is ridiculous. We need to have some type of national
regulatory/advocacy agency to help ensure continuity and high standards
across the board. It has been clearly demonstrated and still seems to be
true that state government cannot be trusted to equally educate its entire
people.
Social
security most vividly illustrates the two visions of government in terms of
the issues I have discussed thus far. Republicans want to privatize social
security by allowing taxpayers to take their social security deduction and
invest it as they see fit. Democrats believe that social security should act
as a safety net because successful investments depend on economic expansion
and a rising stock market. More importantly, even if the stock market
continues to boom, not everyone’s investments will prosper. Most people rely
on money managers, so called professionals, to handle their investments.
Should citizens be penalized because they picked an inept investor? Finally
those whose investments do not prosper will become a burden to the state.
One way or another, we will pay to take care of them.

The
other big issue on the two dominant parties’ agendas is medical insurance.
There are differences, but I cannot discern anything that I consider to be
major. Some people may get coverage in one plan earlier than in the other,
or the threshold to qualify for government assistance may be a little higher
in one plan than the other. Both candidates are proposing plans that take
the treatment regime decisions away from number crunchers and return those
responsibilities to the doctor, the patient and family. But neither party is
addressing the more significant issue of 45 to 46 million citizens not
having coverage at all, many of whom are the “working poor”. Any one of the
plans may lower this number, but neither has laid out a plan to ensure all
citizens have access to quality healthcare.
Bush
eagerly contrast the few ideas Republicans put forth to give citizens
choices with Democrats vision of an active government. He says, “I trust
people to know what to do,” as if the Democratic Party’s plans are
distrustful of citizens. Gore’s vision is one of government lending a
helping hand in places he believes only government can. Remember we are the
government. So when our tax dollars help, it’s like helping a neighbor, or
at least trying to help.
But there is another side to the story that Bush, for
self-serving reasons, and Gore, for reasons I cannot fathom, forget to tell.
Gore may have a vision of continued government activism in our public lives,
but Bush has a vision of a more intrusive government in our private lives.
On these issues the differences are clear.
Republicans
want to expand the role of religion in public life through government
endorsement of Christianity. Some Republican legislators wish to hang the
Ten Commandments in public schools and others want school led prayer in
public school classrooms and football games. Yes, the majority of the
country is Christian, but history shows that Christians had to flee Europe
to this nation’s shores running from other Christians because of government
oppression. I live in New Jersey, a state where Jews, Christians (Catholics
and Protestants), Moslems, Hindus, Buddhists, Zoroastrians, Sikhs, Atheists
and others all go to school together. The rest of the nation will soon look
more like New Jersey than less. I believe the moral ethics of all the major
religions should be a guiding force in our personal lives. But I also know
that religion in the hands of government is a tool of division and
oppression. The answer to religious harmony is not government endorsement.
What is more private than a person’s sex life and body?
Republicans want to control both. Constant pressure is brought to bear at
state and federal government to curb a woman’s right to determine if she
should carry a fetus to term. Many Republicans would like to see Roe vs.
Wade overturned completely. Instead of addressing the issues which may
lead a women to decide to end her pregnancy in abortion, such as poverty,
incest, economic opportunity and individual social responsibility,
Republicans simply want to make it illegal and return to the days of
Cider House Rules or coat-hangers.
Neither the
Republican Party nor the Democrats want to recognize all adults right to
declare their commitment to each other in the eyes of their God(dess) and or
government by formally legislating equality of same sex marriages. The
Republicans will block most any attempt to gain equal rights for and
recognition of gay and lesbian relationships.
Free
speech is the cornerstone of democracy. Republicans lead the charge to pass
a Constitutional Amendment to criminalize desecration of the United States
Flag. The House passed the Amendment and the Senate fell just 4 votes short
of the two-thirds majority need. Forty-eight of the fifty-seven Senators who
sponsored the failed joint resolution were Republicans. Yes the flag is an
important symbol of our nation, but no symbol is more important than freedom
of speech. I believe the reason speech is put front and center in the
Constitution’s Bill of Rights is to guard against congress passing such
laws. This is precisely why Republicans seek to circumvent the Constitution
with an Amendment to make it constitutional. The Bill of Rights was written
to prohibit specific government actions. Flag desecration laws do not limit
citizen's and or government action against other citizens. They limit
citizen’s speech choices against government. Is this the vision of a
non-intrusive, citizen trusting government?
Da…. I don’t think so.
To make matters worse, it is possible that the next president
may appoint three supreme courts judges. Judges interpret laws using the
Constitution as their guide. Plessey vs. Ferguson, and the Dredd
Scott decisions vividly depict how biases and authoritarian visions of
government can lead judges to make the most absurd rulings.
The Republican Party has a long way to go before it can gain
my confidence. I agree with some of their fiscal policies and approach to
personal responsibility, but their social agenda is dangerous and
anti-freedom. I kind of like George Bush, but he cannot control the far
right conservative agenda of his party. Those forces are strong and well.
So, regardless of the outcome of the election there is a lot
of work to be done. Government encroachment on personal freedom is a
constant threat. If we continue to stand by and watch, voting and free
speech will not be enough to change the actions of government. If we remain
passive while others' rights are taken away, we will need guns to keep our
own.