Before we really get going here, I want to clarify that I am not anti-government. There is a proper place and purpose for a government, especially when it comes to defense and law enforcement. There are some in government that are outstanding and are blessings to our nation. But there are many who are not. Many who would suck the lifeforce right out of this country, eat its marrow, and chew on its bones. Unfortunately, it is this group that appears to be in control. And it's not just a problem of one particular political party. This is not just about R's and D's. Although I have more fundamental problems with the D's, the R's (Republicans) are not always faultless.
My gut feeling is that someday we'll all look at our recent history and say, "We really did make a choice. I wish we could go back and make it differently." I believe there are two things that are going to impact our immediate future as a nation more than anything else:
1. Economic liberty - If you're in the financial services industry, this really doesn't exist for you and may not exist in a lot of other industries much longer. Pricing is set by regulation. In fact, regulations are so cumbersome that banks simply avoid helping certain customers and must make such choices to survive. So next time you hear Mr. Obama blaming banks for not lending, you can thank regulators and lawmakers for that. Trust is the great lubricator of business. Trust cannot be artificially manufactured with documentation despite what Congress or Fannie Mae might think. Almost all people will still need and desire human contact and verbal explanation even after they've seen it all explained on paper. So why so much time is spent on that is puzzling. Time is money; isn't that what they say? So who pays for the financial services' lost time and for this lack of trust? Americans pay for it all. We pay with legal fees, filing fees, certificates; and we pay with waiting times for document preparation, extra waiting time for redisclosures if something changes, required waiting times for consumer protection, etc. In this world, you can no longer adjust price to compensate for risk. It is the price of a "representative" government that continues to go up. Those prices are never limited. And how could they be when we're all paying for a myriad of mindless projects? For instance, why am I paying for broadband in Cape Cod? A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away the people that owned businesses and the people that worked for them were free. Banks could actually charge for taking on more risk. But enough about banks. This is not just a banking problem. Doctors once saw patients and had time to spend with them. They weren't ruled by the tedium of insurance and Medicare. They were allowed to cover their expenses and make money. People were not forced to buy insurance, nor doctors forced, either directly or indirectly, to accept it. There was once a time when car companies were allowed to make quality automobiles, and if they couldn't then the market punished them by going out and buying something better. There was competition in the marketplace. Competition which drove prices lower and quality ever higher. Now failing companies are propped up by our taxes so that they can fail repeatedly like irresponsible teens whose parents don't have the cahonies to let them spend a night in jail. What is going to happen? I can just hear the story scrawled on a prison camp wall: "They came for the bankers, and the people stayed quiet. Then they came for the doctors, and all were silent. They came for the auto manufacturers, the insurors, the pharmaceutical companies, the fast food restaurants, the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker; still no one spoke up. Finally they came for me, and there was no one left to speak for me."
2. A Culture of Weakness - There are so many examples of this, I'm not sure where to start. You may have read number 1 and thought: "But what about the poor, what about the uninsured, what about the unemployed?" Aren't they everyone's responsibility? No. They are not. They are yours. Yours personally. The guy next door to you in Nebraska that doesn't have health insurance and is sick. Is he the responsibility of a young man in Georgia who was the first of his family to go to college and get a good job? Should his hard earned income now contribute to pay your neighbor's medical bills while you feel better doing nothing because you know your neighbor has government medical coverage? What if I told you the young college grad was black, and his family was poor. Does that matter? What would be much better is if we were free to be personally responsible for each other, not liable to the government to dole out funds as it thinks appropriate in its infinite wisdom or lack thereof. Americans are generous, creative beings. We can take care of ourselves and each other without Acts of Congress rammed down our throats every few weeks. We have churches, and organizations by the thousands, and even some big nasty corporations that help to care for the downtrodden. But you wouldn't know any of that listening to someone like Obama, or Barbara Boxer, or Chris Dodd, or Barney Frank, or Pelosi who we voted in office to represent us as one people. They think you are incapable of rising above hardship. They think you are better off staying unemployed a little longer. They think you want to talk and have tea time with terrorists as they prepare weapons in their garages back home. In the mind of someone like Barrack Obama, the government that governs most, governs best. And the weaker you are, the stronger and more important he feels as he works non-stop to help you to the point of helplessness. Here's the kicker. They seem to want you to fail. They want you to be irresponsible. There are so many of you out there that still don't seem to get it, and it scares the hell out of me. We put these people in office and gave them this power. And the longer you don't get it, the more chance there is for all of us to fail; indeed for the nation to fail. When we all fail together, it won't matter a tinker's damn how high or low you are on the food chain or how much money you make. Our nation is like a sinking ship that is tossing its life preservers overboard to make room for more deck chairs. On a ship like that, everyone is going to drown. And I haven't even gotten to abortion yet. The very fact that our culture has made it acceptable to kill its children because they're still behind a curtain (womb) makes us a lousy bunch of weaklings, scared to death of responsibility, incapable of putting our own needs aside for the sake of anyone else or for the sake of what is right. We don't know right anymore from a kick in the nads. We speak so often of fairness and helping the weak until we are blue in the face. And yet a fetus has no protection because his vote doesn't count yet, and his own mother won't protect him. Who else deserves to die because they are a burden on us? Grandad who doesn't recognize you anymore? Mom with her broken leg? Little brother with down syndrome? If this is our legacy, we deserve to fail as a civilization.I've heard a lot lately about how a Christian should respond to government, about civil disobedience, about rendering unto Caeser what is Caesar's. But there is one thing I have not heard that is crucial: in this country the people are Caesar! Our representatives, our proxies, our avatars, if you will, are failing us. They have attempted to reverse their proper roles and apparently succeeded. In November, during the gladiatorial races, if America has any worth anymore, we shall seal the fate of these failures and their philosophy of economic servitude and a culture of weakness with a simple thumb pointed downward.
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