Why I move right – but could never vote Republican

In accordance with the old truism, I’ve moved right – I’ve become more conservative – as I’ve gotten older. This is partly the natural cleaving to the old ways, it’s partly getting an MA in Economics from the University of Tennessee, and it’s a lot about moving to the UK and seeing the consequences of a true welfare state. You talk about dependency culture – whooo-weee, daaaang – there are generations of people here who don’t have the foggiest about work.

So in Mitt Romney’s withdrawal speech (full transcript from the NYT) there were some things I agreed with:

Dependency is death to initiative, risk-taking and opportunity. Dependency is culture killing. It’s a drug. We’ve got to fight it like the poison it is.

Yep. I agree. It is a poison. A poison that rots the soul.

But he goes on in that mean spirited Republican way which just sickens me. Sickens me with its mantle of “personal responsibility” – which is just a slick cover for tight-fistedness, for I-got-mine-so-screw-you, and most shamefully for sticking their noses in the trough of public goods that they like (highways, infrastructure, business tax credits and subsidies, policing and defense) and turning off the tap for other social goods that they have access to privately ( i.e. health care) despite the fact that this approach is actually economically inefficient and delivers poorer outcomes overall.

Now, some people think we won that battle when we reformed welfare. But the liberals haven’t given up.

At every turn, they tried to substitute government largess for individual responsibility. They fight to strip work requirements from welfare, to put more people on Medicaid, and remove more and more people from having to pay any income tax whatsoever.

And the crowd cheered and the band played on.

Is this the latest sick, selfish Republican mantra? Make sure that poor folk don’t have access to health care? Make sure the low paid pay through the nose but get rid of taxes on unearned income (e.g. capital gains, estate taxes)?

One thing I’ve learned about a dependency culture in the UK is that you want to make the transition into working as easy and rewarding as possible. One truth about universal health care that the Selfish-right don’t want you to know is that it actually encourages economic activity and entrepreneurs. In the US, some people get caught in the trap of losing health benefits when they start to earn too much money. In the US, people are stuck with dead end jobs or denied the opportunity to go out on their own because they must cling to their employer provided health care.

In the UK, the non-working have every incentive not to work (at least in the short run) as they lose benefits pound for pound as they start earning (which doesn’t take into account that leisure does have value) and they come into a rather punitive and regressive tax system. My tax burden is far lower now than it was when I was barely scraping by (though of course I am paying far more overall – it annoys, but it doesn’t hurt now.)

The point is, of course, that everyone has to start somewhere. And unless you’re the privileged child of wealth, the place you start is at a very low wage job. You work your way up. And you should be rewarded for trading a life of penurious leisure for penurious labor by keeping as much of your wage as possible when you’re at that rough, rotten bottom rung of the economic ladder.

It’s not as if the low-paid don’t pay taxes. They pay a lot of tax (proportionately). They pay taxes on goods and services. They are almost certainly paying other payroll taxes (FICA in the US, National Insurance in the UK). And they can’t escape the taxman with sheltered income and offshore accounts.

I believe in the hand up, not the handout. But forcing the poor to hand-over disproportionately, making their precarious situation all the more tottering is just wrong.

Romney drops out

Mitt Romney drops out. The best I can say about him is that had he won, I reckon he wouldn’t have been the total disaster that that crazy McCain would be.

Wither Freddie?


So is the Fred campaign at an end? I bear him no personal ill will – but I do find it ironic that he seemed to do so much better before he was an official candidate. And I do agree with Knoxviews contributor Elrod that Fred’s campaign provided a distracting magnet for TNGOP cash and attention. I just hope he stays in until the 5th of February so he can continue to do so.

I am a little sad that the value of my little personal heirloom has probably already bottomed out. Any offers? No timewasters, please.

But the best thing about the Fred campaign has got to be this picture. If I’m not mistaken, I know this woman. I don’t know if this is her grandson, but I guess it must be. She’s had some bad luck lately, but this is a fantastic photo. (It’s published under a Creative Commons license under the Flickr ID Freddthompson).
There are some other great pictures of Lawrenceburg around and about because Fred’s homecoming. (The bloggers who bring us the great pics and blogs at Sugarfused and Nashville Files were there with their cameras.)

One Saturday in January

Hey South Carolina and Nevada – what a great day to hold an election. Seems like maybe more people could get out and vote on a Saturday, maybe that’s what the US should do. And then I wouldn’t feel bad about staying up all night to watch the returns. But of course, so many states are going for the early voting that maybe it doesn’t matter anymore.

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My dad and brother will be visiting soon and will be here on election day. Both of them have opted for early voting. Apparently VolBro has already voted and we don’t agree on a primary candidate.

VolBro says that Hillary Clinton is the Republican’s best chance at the White House because she’s so divisive. You know, I used to think that, too. But the Clintons have overcome that before.

Besides, seems to me like the last election we had was the Democrats to throw away – given that the Republicans were running that “uniter” George Bush. If ever a candidate was divisive, that must be the guy. Seems to me divisiveness maybe isn’t the handicap people think it is.

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I sure hope Fred does well. It’d be great to see prices going up on this thing..

Keep on rockin in the free world

Yesterday I got my paper notice about the Global Primary. (If this link doesn’t work, don’t worry – more info below). Since Buddy is eating paper these days, I wanted to get it on the bulletin board and out of his way. But of course, I forgot and left it dangerously close to the changing area.

Me: Hand me that voting thingy.
Vol-in-Law: Voting thingy?
Me: Yeah, that paper there.
ViL: Oh, your voting thingy. (Extra derisive tone where you see italics).
Me: Yeah, you know the vote the directs activities in the free world.

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Living abroad? Want to vote in the primary? Check out the Democrats Abroad site.
Need to register to vote? Check out – www.votefromabroad.org

Hurray for Hillary

I’ve already stated that my preferred candidate in the Democratic primaries is Hillary Clinton. But I’m not bashing anyone else in the race, because we’ve got a bigger, more important race coming in the Autumn.

However, with yesterday’s election results I was quite happy to say Ha ha

Not to the other Democratic candidates, certainly not to any of their supporters. But to the media who gleefully predicted Hillary Clinton’s demise in this “fight of her political life.”

New Hampshire is just a small Northeastern state, not a deathmatch. But even so, I’m glad she won.

And now I will blog about the 2008 Presidential race

For so long I’ve avoided blogging about the 2008 run for the White House and sworn I wouldn’t until it was seemly. Maybe it was because I was a bit sickened by the campaigning kicking off before the 2006 Midterms even concluded. It’s like retailers putting up Christmas decorations before Halloween. It ain’t right.

I did have a post or two about Fred, but I tagged them Not the 2008 election, so I feel I kept my promise in a moral sense.

But now it’s 2008, so I’m ready.

To the Republican party:

Y’all are making me laugh. Your candidates are crazy or lazy.

To the Democrats:

Can we please avoid having a nomination until the rest of the nation freakin’ votes? We did this last time and look who we got. A loser. A guy who was so lacking in charisma and winning-ness that he couldn’t resoundly beat that no-hoper George Bush.

To the “liberals”:

Stop calling Hillary Clinton “shrill” or “close-to-tears” when she’s not. Y’all need to take a look in the mirror and think about where this attitude is coming from. From what I’ve seen Hillary Clinton has acquitted herself admirably. Yes, I am voting for her.

But here are two people who probably/certainly aren’t voting for her who’ve spotted the woman bashing, too. (Kathy Flake and the Tennessee Guerilla Women here and here and elsewhere). Heck, even my husband who subscribes to Pat Buchanan’s American Conservative magazine noticed and has been stunned by the level of woman bashing.

To the British media:

Stop pontificating on this election as if a) you have a vote or b) you deserve a vote. You are merely outside observers. You do not get to anoint your chosen candidate – Barrack Obama. Although, maybe I shouldn’t say anything since I believe that The Guardian with their stupid letter writing campaign along with the some vote tampering managed to lose Ohio.

And since I’m supporting the shrill and close-to-tears Hillary Clinton (yes, this according to the British media), go ahead, please shoot yourselves in the foot on this one, too.

never before its time

I do not wear white shoes before Memorial Day.

I do not hang a Christmas wreath or erect a Christmas tree until Thanksgiving is over.

Some food needs slow cooking, don’t try to speed up a roast.

I’m not ready to blog about the 2008 Presidential Campaign.