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TOP 5 REASONS TO OPPOSE OBAMA

I thought it useful to organize a few key points against the Obama presidency before he imposes an internet-based Fairness Doctrine:

1) Healthcare--economic entitlement programs are much harder to remove than increased tax rates. If Obama employs some of the government-imposed mandates he favors (let alone a possible universal system), a major portion of our economy will be socialized, probably for good. Look at the "band-aid" Social Security program that our country now wears like its favorite sweater. This could apply to the housing market as well.

2) Free Speech--Obama is notorious in certain circles for pursuing those who question his record through legal avenues (see Stanley Kurtz in Illinois). Two gems currently proposed by Democrats: the Fairness Doctrine and Card Check. The first would require equal time for conservative/liberal viewpoints on all radio stations, which would in effect shut down much of conservative talk radio (their primary medium). The second would submit workers to soft coercion to support labor unions and bypasses the privacy of a secret ballot. Oh, and there's the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which will make all organizations except churches hire people regardless of sexual orientation (think Christian counseling, schools, etc.). Conservative opposition could possibly be crushed.

3) Redistributing Wealth--The idea that Obama will cut taxes for 95% of people is a lie. Many of those people don't pay taxes, for one, and this money will not be given from the government, but from the rich. He will simultaneously allow the tax rates to go up on the "rich" (including many who own a small business and hire 4-5 workers) while "lowering taxes" for the poor. That money will go directly from the former to the latter. Little do the "poor" realize that many of them could get laid off by that extra $40,000 of taxes on their employer. It'll make our economy much worse.

4) Supreme Court--There could be as many of 4 retirements from the Supreme Court. While they likely won't come from the strict-constructionist wing, those appointments, without any resistance in the form of a filibuster, could enshrine extreme activists on the court for the next three decades.

5) Foreign Policy--Most every major politician in the twentieth century learned to follow Teddy Roosevelt's "big stick" policy with regard to foreign affairs. We should avoid military conflicts where possible, but every President had to be strong when it counted (i.e. JFK and the Bay of Pigs). Much of Europe won't stand up to Russian aggression right now. If Obama appears soft (which he does--see Biden's comment the other day about the looming time of trial), the Russian shadow may again descend over much of Europe. Will Iran fear military consequences for developing a bomb or Sudan for its continued genocide? Will American capitalism and democracy be subordinated to a corrupt UN?


Barack Obama esteems unity while eschewing dissent. How many people have been tarred with the "racist" label for question Obama's policies or connections? He could reign in his prominent surrogates in the media, but doesn't. The reverberating echoes of "unity," become eerily novelesque as those who oppose his brand of "unity" are stigmatized (and perhaps eventually crushed).

I'm not a big McCain fan at all, but I will vote for whoever (up/down ticket) stands in the way of the Obama machine.
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A Dark Day for Conservatives

By the time Sarah Palin has the opportunity to make her own run for the Presidency, it may be too late.  There are many reasons why classical liberalism, now termed conservatism, is unlikely survive in any significant form in the next ten years:
 
1) Persistent attacks: This is typical of the mainstream media and academic establishment, but the attacks are largely catching on.  Many people believe Barack Obama when he describes the current economic downturn as the final nail in the coffin for "trickle-down economics."  The rookie Senator tells voters "to fire the whole trickle-down, on-your-own, look-the-other way crowd in Washington who has led us down this disastrous path."  Obama is not merely trying to trim the outlying branches of conservatism, but hacking at the roots.  In many of his speeches, he gives an atrocious caricature of supply-side economics and then demolishes his conservative strawman.  These attacks are possible because of a...
 
2) Muted and lukewarm defense: While President Bush's tenure may be vindicate with regard to Iraq, his inability to defend a single conservative ideal will go down (in our circles, at least) as an abysmal failure.  Many of his accomplishments, such as No Child Left Behind and his monstrous Medicare bill and farming subsidies, are not consistent with free market principles at all.  When he did push personal savings accounts for Social Security, he was horribly inept at defending the concept.  John McCain's populist rhetoric doesn't help the cause either.  Instead of defending the free market as the best hope for a revived economy and attacking government-backed monopolies, McCain is borrowing from Obama's adolescent handbook and attacking the "greedy" on Wall Street and proposing new government solutions (regulations).
 
3) Crisis decisions: In times of apparent crisis, the government proposes extensive solutions--usually involving new agencies (i.e. Department of Homeland Security after 9/11).  While these solutions may alleviate the crisis on the hour, their long-term effects are often ignored.  The Bush Administration is currently working with Congress to finance the largest bailout since the Great Depression.  Wall Street responded well, but what of the future?  These housing and banking bubbles were created the implicit government backing of risky loans and shoddy business practices.  The free market manages risk by offering incentives for innovation while punishing failure.  By negating the negative coercion of the market, the government abused the free market. Now we have an opportunity to remove the invisible iron fist of government from the market, but instead are going to expand the power of the government over the market.  Economist F.A. Hayak once noted that historically, monopolies are created through government interference on behalf of certain businesses, and such monopolies are often removed by a government with vastly-increased powers.
 
4) Silent-but-deadly policies: In my current work chronicling recent gases of government abuse, two issues have caught my eye over others: eminent domain and anti-discrimination laws.  The concept of private property has been largely diminished by the ability of government and big business to confiscate whatever land they desire.  Eminent domain abuses are rampant as the government takes peoples' land for whimsical projects.  Anti-discrimination policies, in particular those defending ever-increasing homosexual rights, punish dissent against the prevailing government orthodoxy.  Businesses around the country are being punished because the won't specifically endorse a lifestyle that is contrary to their beliefs.  This isn't a Christian v. Gay issue, but a liberty v. government-coerced "equality" issue.
 
5) Inability to communicate: Conservatives are often trapped in the modernist mindset of defining and defending policies by objective standards.  While this work must be done, it must be packaged in the language of "meaning."  Today's postmodern society doesn't want a "good" policy, but a policy that is "good for me."  Free market economics benefit a country's liberty and prosperity, but people need to know that is also benefits them.  In other words, sound policies must be expressed in populist rhetoric.  For example, when Maria wants dinner, she can go to the grocery store and pick from an array of options with different prices.  She will get the dinner she wants because she picked the food according to her budget constraints.  Why not allow that freedom with our health care or education?  Because they are both highly regulated, the necessitate much more money while leaving options limited.  Why pay for caviar when you would be happy with mac and cheese?  Why settle for spamwich when you can have ham?  Deregulated healthcare and education allow each person to care for their own bodies and raise their children with their money.
 
 
These examples are not exhaustive, but highlight the bleak predicament in which conservatives find themselves.  Sarah Palin may be a newer version of Ronald Reagan, but her ability to combine substance with style won't matter if health care has been socialized, the market tightly regulated by an alphabet soup of government agencies, and the Supreme Court stacked with judges who have no respect for history or this nation's founding documents.  In this day, we need our best and brightest on the frontlines. Michael Steele and Rep. Michele Bachmann have been particularly impressive recently...
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