Charles N.W. Keckler @ American Thinker:
A month before the presidential election, we know it will be close, and it will be a choice — no mere referendum on the executive management skills of the current president. The electorate is choosing the balance between public and private sectors, between more and less government. But it is also choosing between the different ends to which government is directed, the different visions about what government is for, and in particular, the relationship politics has with suffering and sacrifice.
Paul Ryan offered the clearest expression of this choice, in forthrightly declaring his opposition to “the best this administration offers — a dull, adventureless journey from one entitlement to the next, a government-planned life, a country where everything is free but us.” With nods to Rand, Hayek, and Tocqueville, Ryan presents an exaggerated but effective reductio ad absurdum of the policy and endpoint of the progressive welfare state. The statement was also bold in its way, because all of us on our worst days, and too many of us every day, actually crave the security of a “system” that eases our cares and allays our fears, and we are moved at times to offer this peace to others worse off than ourselves. To highlight this shared anxiety — the source of the eternal appeal of the Democratic Party — is to take a risk. It becomes easy for one’s opponents to say, as they will do in myriad ways, We care about you and for you; we will relieve your suffering, and all your ups and downs will be smoothed and gentled; and, if the state hanging on your sleeve means you cannot jump very high or run very fast, well, at least you will never falter, fall, and be crushed beneath the crowd. Here at last is a real choice for the electorate, but inevitably, many will select the less painful option.
This selection implies a dull and “adventureless” life, perhaps. But what good, after all, are adventures? As Bilbo Baggins said, they are nasty, disturbing, uncomfortable things that make one late for dinner. For Bilbo to change his mind and leave the drowsy comfort of the Shire required the intervention of a wizard, in short supply these days. Tolkein’s ultimate answer, however, is that the chance for a fuller and nobler existence is worth the discomfort of the adventurous life, and something in that vein must also be the foundation of the Republican answer. Therapeutic competition with Democrats is obvious folly, so Ryan was right to offer something different; the open question is whether he and Governor Romney can persuade the voters to take up the offer.
The Democratic Party presents itself as the enemy of pain — no bad thing, certainly, from an electoral perspective. On its leftist fringes is a political theodicy attributing the existence of suffering to the malign forces of some hidden power: the one-percenters, the fat-cat bankers, the rich, the greedy, the privileged, the vampire capitalists. You suffer and lack because They take too much; you hurt because They allow it through their cruelty and indifference. More broadly, though, the Democratic Party as a whole seems committed to the proposition that one’s suffering is contingent and corrigible, that if only the nation got the policy right pain would disappear. At the least, it is deemed our collective duty as good utilitarians to redress pain wherever it is found.
Excellent new way to look at the major difference between the Left and the Right.
I doubt the Peggy’s of the world (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P36x8rTb3jI)
and the Obama Phone ladies of the world (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpAOwJvTOio)
those who are PAID to ”protest” against Romney (http://www.examiner.com/article/obama-democrats-paid-by-union-seiu-to-protest-against-romney-free-obama-phones and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5DTqvX74O4)
and so many others will be open the reasoning of exchanging a bit of risk and or pain for the possibility of great success and raised esteem.
An ultra-conservative right-wing hyperbole about the goals of liberalism.
Lib1: Please document: ultra-conservative.
Please document: right-wing.
Please document: hyperbole.
How does anything in this essay differ from the proposals of Obama and Biden to take care of us?
Your response is emotional. Your response is not factual. There is nothing to debate, nothing to question, nothing to disagree with.
Calling someone names is easy.
Documenting your claims is hard, requires thought, and is open to rebuttal.
Oh, well. In your heart you know you are left.
The stuck pig squeels loudest as lib1 proves.
I’m an adult. I know how to take care of myself. I don’t need a nanny state to keep me safe from myself and feed me their pablum until I puke.