Ronald Reagan supposedly gave some advice to George Bush in 1988 when Bush was gearing up to run for the presidency. I can’t find the exact quote, but it was something like this: “Unless you’re the incumbent, always run on change. People always want change.”
Politicians can promise change every single election and never have to modify their basic message. Why? Because nothing substantially changes. Especially in the U.S. system, positive change is very difficult, because the system is designed to slow change down.
Even when there is change, you’ll always find it tending — over the long term — to be in the direction of government taking more and more power. For those who would like to roll back the power of government — libertarians and some conservatives — that’s a problem. (It’s actually a problem for left liberals at times, too, at least the ones who want more individual rights in some social areas.)
The weight of the evidence suggests that voting doesn’t produce change very often — and it never seems to produce change that actually reduces the size of government. Yet for some reason, some libertarians and all conservatives seem bound and determined that if they will just find a way to win this election — for whatever pathetic statist the Republicans have nominated — things are going to be different this time.
The Alien Observer:
Death of classmate from past feels like a reminder to change my life
On National Dog Day, remember how love can change any of us
Just $12 fed mom and her girls, but bigger challenges lie ahead
NOTEBOOK: Are Romney, Obama running for president or king?
Why do people who say they love each other cause mutual harm?

How does modern culture escape ‘little boxes made of ticky tacky’?
The plan sounded fair at the time, but why did I pay for everything?