Voter response to the presidential debates reveal that while foreign policy and other topics are important, fixing the economy is uppermost in their minds. This is understandable. 23 million people unemployed touches many millions of families now living in fear of perpetual unemployment and decline of their material wellbeing. Mitt Romney may well introduce new policies that will grow the economy and create new jobs, as happened under Ronald Reagan. A thriving economy, with more people paying taxes will ensure more revenue to the government and more than offsets any tax-rate reductions. Kennedy and Reagan proved this.
But these measures will only treat the symptoms of a deeper metabolic dysfunction of the body politic. And, like all quick pharmaceutical fixes, the symptoms may temporarily disappear, but the underlying disease will continue to ravish the political body. Unfortunately, the saying that the money is in the medicine and not the cure, is also true in politics. Money and power is magnified by perpetuating the causes of political dependency of the mass of the people on big socialistic government.
Just as the ‘cure is to be found in the cause’ so the cure of our economic decline should be sought in the causes of our economic collapse. On one level one can trace our present economic disease to the adoption of socialistic principles a hundred years ago during the so-called progressive era from Teddy to Franklin Roosevelt. Both parties are culpable. It is true that the progressive income tax and the Federal Reserve banking system, social security and the welfare state are all planks in the Marxist/Socialist agenda and were foreign to the letter and spirit of our Constitution; but these measures were in reality only reflections of a deeper metabolic disorder in American society.
We first strayed from the religious and moral principles, enshrined in our Declaration of Independence and Constitution, and which our founding fathers established for our guidance and our prosperity, before we embarked upon the road to economic serfdom and disintegration. Trading liberty for security is never an event but always a process – often indiscernible or readily excused under exigent circumstances. Unless we experience a moral restoration, no fleeting economic quick fixes will arrest American’s slide into third world status. That moral restoration must start with the individual. When the individual regains moral sanity, greed will diminish, fraud will stop its march through our ranks and our sound judgment and right thinking will be regained. May God bless America.
Melodie
2012.10.24I’d vote for you if you ran for president! I agree that taking God continuously out of the picture in all walks of life in America, we are destined to take the wrong fork in the road to prophecy. Thanks for the blog Jim!
James Henderson
2012.10.24You are correct in your insight. Moreover, taking God out of the public square or market place of ideas is selective. We bend over backwards under a false interpretation of the First Amendment to remove the “Christian” God from the public square, but we do not banish other “gods.” Rather under pluralism, we import truckloads of false gods to replace the Christian God. What we overlook is that all law and public poliy is shaped by our concept of God or gods. There is no law that does not have a religious foundation, for laws are ultimately shaped by our worldviews and these are religious and moral constructs, however strongly and loudly we protest against this fact. America’s laws are now being shaped by false religious ideologies and the result is a steady loss of freedom under these false ideologies. The present socialistic ideology that is shaping our laws and public policy is founded upon a pantheistic and evolutionary religious model. Our founding fathers based our laws and Constitution on the “creation model” as mentioned by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration. The first leads to bondage and economic stagnation and the latter to true freedom and prosperity.