When I attended a meeting earlier this week about a new sales tax for my suburb, there was a continuing theme that was disturbing. What I heard from supporters of the tax was bad, but what I heard from opponents was just as bad, because many of them were hypocrites.
In order to sell the tax, politicians are throwing out bait in the form of various projects that they promise to do with the money. The disturbing thing I heard from many tax opponents is that they’re adamantly against the tax, but they want the projects done anyway.
We’re a nation of people who have had costs disconnected from benefits — to the point that most people don’t seem to make the connection anymore. People want good things to just magically happen. It doesn’t occur to them that it’s their responsibility to find a way to provide what they want. They’ve been trained to believe that The Government will take care of everything.
You can see how out of touch people have become by looking at things said during the health care debate last year. Many of those who opposed the Democrats’ efforts to take over even more huge chunks of the medical system didn’t seem to understand that much of what they have now is already “socialized medicine” — and nobody better threaten to take it away from them.
No, I can’t support your campaign; changing candidates won’t fix things
Film’s tortured protagonist feels uncomfortably familiar to me
Timeless design principles beat suburban McMansions for beauty
U.S. debt per capita worse than basket cases such as Greece
Each loss makes me feel grateful for the irreplaceable ones I love
Why are U.S. troops going into Uganda to take sides in a civil war?
Goodbye, Molly (2008-2021)
If you were once a nerdy outsider, you need to go see ‘Ender’s Game’