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Tag: Conservatives (Page 7 of 8)

Fear Monger-in-Chief

John McCain cam out with an ad in New Hampshire against Mitt Romney trying to scare the crap out of voters. I have little sympathy for an empty suit like Romney, but it’s pathetic to watch McCain stoop so low. This man REALLY wants to be President, and he smells blood in New Hampshire, so he’s on the attack. Here’s the attack ad from Mr. Straight Talk:

Of course, Rudy Giuliani must have been really pissed off that someone was trying to scare Americans more than Mr. 9/11. Fear was his territory, so he rushed to reclaim it with an ad that features Bin Laden, Ahmadinejad and a bunch of other scary characters, along with the recently assasinated Benazir Bhutto. The ad is so bad you’ll think it’s a parody:

Krauthammer laments the overdose of public piety

Charles Krauthammer ridicules Huckabee and Romney:

This campaign is knee-deep in religion, and it’s only going to get worse. I’d thought that the limits of professed public piety had already been achieved during the Republican CNN/YouTube debate when some squirrelly looking guy held up a Bible and asked, “Do you believe every word of this book?” — and not one candidate dared reply: None of your damn business.

Instead, Giuliani, Romney and Huckabee bent a knee and tried appeasement with various interpretations of scriptural literalism. The right answer, the only answer, is that the very question is offensive. The Constitution prohibits any religious test for office. And while that proscribes only government action, the law is also meant to be a teacher.

This is another example of the conservative coalition being ripped apart. Krauthammer is a prominent conservative thinker, and yet even he is getting tired of the silly posturing by GOP candidates to tout their religious beliefs.

Dick Armey slams the religious right

Here’s more evidence that the GOP is coming apart at the seems, as Dick Armey blasts social conservatives for embracing big government to adcance their agenda:

There was a day when social conservatives were united with economic conservatives in the belief that small, limited government was not only good for our economy and the prosperity of American families, but essential to protect traditional family values. We all fought for a limited federal government — a government that had the decency to respect the American people by staying out of their lives. Small government meant that all Christians could practice their faith as they saw fit. Big government violates those rights by meddling in our lives, misusing our hard-earned money, and dictating cultural norms to us. We were and are rightly outraged when government imposes wrong-headed values through its monopoly of schools, government-funded “art,” and taxpayer funded “family planning.”

As a united conservative movement, we win when we defend traditional values against big government pretensions to impose its brand of “morality” on the American people. We lose when we attempt to use government power to impose our values on others.

Armey then provides a brilliant summary of the Terry Schiavo fiasco:

Nowhere was it more wrong, with more disastrous policy ends, than in the Terri Schiavo intervention. While her case was heartbreaking, our Founders created a government built on checks and balances, not a nation run by an arbitrary and imperial Congress. Congress cannot simply override our entire state and federal legal system to intervene in one person’s situation. It was truly a chilling act.

I don’t agree with Dick Armey on many things, but I totally agree that we need to keep the government out of our private lives. Democrats and liberals can learn a thing or two from this column as well. Democrats need to consider reducing the reach and influence of government, especially now that many on the right are eager to use government to legislate their interpretations of morality on the rest of us. I’d like to see libertarian Democrats argue for less interference in our private lives.

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