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John, Hillary, Barack - - Meet Our Friend Adam
Townhall.com ^ | JUne 3, 2007 | Austin Hill

Posted on 06/03/2007 4:22:57 AM PDT by Kaslin

Hillary Rodham Clinton has been doing that thing she does so well - - maligning rich people.

During a major campaign address delivered in Manchester New Hampshire, Mrs. Clinton explained her intent to eliminate the so-called “tax cuts for the wealthy,” and introduced new ways for government to spend American’s money.

“Let’s be clear” Mrs. Clinton remarked as she argued for raising taxes, “it’s not as if America hasn’t been successful in the past six years…”

But then without even contemplating the possibility that maybe - - just maybe - - cutting the taxes of all Americans has played a role in America’s recent “success,” Mrs. Clinton went on to decry the idea of America being an “ownership society”(a fitting label given the all-time high level of private home ownership among people of all ethnic groups) calling it instead an “on your own society,” and expressing her preference for a “we’re in this together” society.

And what does this mean? For Clinton, a “were in this together” society is a society of “shared responsibility” - - AND “shared prosperity.”

Clinton made it clear that her vision for America’s future is a collectivist vision - - one that focuses primarily on goals for the group (the broader society), while things like personal responsibility, the wellbeing of individual persons, and individual achievement become secondary, if not tertiary concerns.

Senator Barack Obama has also been doing his best to pile-on, drawing a direct connection between the two enterprises of punishing the wealthy, and giving away healthcare services. His proposal is simple enough - - raise taxes on “the wealthiest Americans,” and use that revenue to provide “free” healthcare to others.

Similarly, John Edwards has continued with his themes of poverty and low-wage work, promising to raise taxes on Americans earning $200,000 a year or more.

Now, the hypocrisy of Edwards and Clinton is staggering.

For example, much of Clinton’s spiteful rhetoric about some people having “too much wealth” seems at odds with her lifestyle of expensive, fuel-guzzling private jets - - dispatching one here, sending another to pick her up there, swapping private planes mid-trip because the interior design of one isn’t aesthetically pleasing to her - - most all of which are provided to her by wealthy personal friends or purchased with campaign donations.

Edwards, on the other hand, has become know for lecturing on college campuses about the immorality of poverty and tuition hikes, while charging schools and students up to $55,000 per speech - - this from a man who enjoys a lifestyle of four hundred-dollar haircuts and a thirty-thousand square foot private home.

The “do-as-I-say-not-as-I-do” approach of Clinton and Edwards, wherein they criticize the existence of an American wealthy class while at the same time surrounding themselves with wealth‘s comforts, is a travesty.

But most problematic about Clinton, Edwards, and Obama, is their apparent disregard for the ways in which wealth is created, and their hostility for those who engage in that enterprise.

heir proposals seem to bare no resemblance to very basic economic principles, and the thoughts of, oh, say, Adam Smith.

Often regarded as an economist and the “father of capitalism,” Smith was a moral philosopher from the Seventeen-hundreds who surmised that governments become oppressive when they control a nation’s wealth, and that governments are far less effective in managing wealth than are individual persons.

And how about recent history as our teacher? In Hillary’s lifetime alone the world has seen the painful, brutal collapse of multiple “we’re in this together” societies, including East Germany and the entire Soviet Union, and the slow, excruciating implosions of oppressive North Korea and Cuba.

No serious recent contender for the American presidency has proposed an American government devoid of any social safety net, nor has any candidate suggested that some Americans should necessarily do without adequate food, housing and healthcare.

Yet the Democratic front-runners can’t think beyond the centuries-old idea of economic re-distribution - - a process of government taking things away from those who seem to “have,” and giving things away to those who seem to “have not” - - an idea that has itself produced devastating consequences.

Their repeated promises to punish rich folks (and, yes, taking away an individual’s money is “punishment”) might make for strategic politicking during a Democratic primary season, but it is most certainly NOT good for the country and its future. When government focuses primarily on “the good of all” rather than on safe-guarding the liberties of the individual, we all become cogs in the big government wheel - - and in that scenario, everyone suffers, especially the poorest among us.

Ultimately, Clinton, Obama and Edwards fail to acknowledge that their utopian visions are wholesale reliant on the hard work, creativity, risk-taking, and wealth creation of America’s entrepreneurs.

Oh, and, by the way…some of those people just happen to be wealthy.



Austin Hill currently co-hosts the afternoon talk show on NewsTalk 960 KKNT radio in Phoenix and author of White House Confidential: Revised and Expanded Edition .


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 06/03/2007 4:22:59 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
calling it instead an “on your own society,” and expressing her preference for a “we’re in this together” society. And what does this mean? For Clinton, a “were in this together” society is a society of “shared responsibility” - - AND “shared prosperity.”

The sad thing is that people under 30 are by and large buying into her view of things. They think the job of government is to give them stuff and do things for them so life is good.

The concepts of liberty and individual freedom AND responsibility are alien things to them, covers for "selfishness". (I was recently told I believed in this selfishness, even though the person telling me this makes three times what I make in a year--and *I'M* the selfish one for "not wanting to share with those who have less." I asked him "I'll share with anyone in this room who makes less per year than I do." Silence.)

The libs have maneuvered so that if one questions this collectivist vision you are laughed off as a McCarthyite who finds commies under your bed.

The death of honest discussion of the IDEAS behind what this country was founded to be will pave the way to socialism in the USA. "Labels don't mean anything", which translates into "We don't care what it's called, just give us stuff--healthcare, housing, etc. The 'fat cats' have theirs, we deserve ours!"

They "deserve" this stuff because they were born. They don't have any idea who an economic system works, and their idea of a political system is "a system that redistributes wealth so no one goes hungry or has need."

This mindset trickles down into the individual, where liberal teachers engage students over FEEEEEEEELING instead of intellect. I have teachers in my school who can't spell teaching kids who can't spell, and the admins don't care.

Geez, did I go off on a tangent...

2 posted on 06/03/2007 4:33:51 AM PDT by Darkwolf377 (Anti-socialist Bostonian, Pro-Life Atheist)
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To: Kaslin
Let’s be clear” Mrs. Clinton remarked as she argued for raising taxes, “it’s not as if America hasn’t been successful in the past six years…”

Wait a minute! Just last year we were hearing from all the Democrats about how BAD it all was and how the Middle Class was in dire straights. "Worse Economy since Hoover" etc etc etc. So which is it Democrats?

3 posted on 06/03/2007 4:34:20 AM PDT by MNJohnnie (If you will try being smarter, I will try being nicer.)
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To: Kaslin

You always can identify a lib when the individual refutes or challenges the fact that tax-cuts actually bring in revenue. Of course, a true socialist or commie wouldn’t even bother arguing the point... they’d either change the subject or start calling you cruel... or racist.


4 posted on 06/03/2007 4:38:24 AM PDT by johnny7 ("But that one on the far left... he had crazy eyes")
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To: Darkwolf377
The death of honest discussion of the IDEAS behind what this country was founded to be will pave the way to socialism in the USA. "Labels don't mean anything", which translates into "We don't care what it's called, just give us stuff--healthcare, housing, etc. The 'fat cats' have theirs, we deserve ours!

Man you sure nailed it. The really aggravating things is they "Don't do labels" but their entire political philosophy revolves around nothing but slogans. The Left merely throws around slogans in place of ideas.

5 posted on 06/03/2007 5:33:42 AM PDT by MNJohnnie (If you will try being smarter, I will try being nicer.)
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To: Kaslin


6 posted on 06/03/2007 6:05:17 AM PDT by Condor51 (Rudy makes John Kerry look like a Right Wing 'Gun Nut' Extremist)
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