Sergeant Thorne wrote:I'm not really familiar with Ayn Rand , but I looked over the Wikipedia article about her (what an awful name-change--she had a beautiful name). I don't see any reason, right off-hand, to draw a link between her and Ron Paul. Is there a link there, or is that an assumption on your part?
most of the Tea Party philosophy is directly drawn from her writings(by their own claims). Rep. Paul Ryan, for instance, makes "Atlas Shrugged" required reading for staff members.
You seem to be saying that a Ron Paul presidency would consolidate wealth and power in the hands of the super-wealthy. This seems to me to be a total contradiction of everything he stands for, and in my opinion it doesn't even make sense as an unintended result of any of his proposed policies. Please elaborate.
fair enough question. In my opinion, Paul's approach would choke off economic mobility for the vast majority of Americans living in a post-industrial society, as his thinking reflects strict adherence to a model of government that was derived for 1790 or thereabouts. The founders were clearly bright enough to know that change(unknowable in detail) would occur, and thus designed a very malleable plan forward. They even proved they supported fundamental change by making one of the initial acts, post ratification, the passing of ten Amendments. Paul wishes to stay with such a limited concept of government that it would essentially lead to a massive percentage of Americans unable to access sufficient credit, access to education or healthcare. Ultimately, it would force them on a downward economic spiral, which would consolidate both wealth and power in a limited few(well, that's sort of the status quo, but it would make moving between classes near-impossible).
So it follows then that we the people must be taxed for the furthering of science. Tell me, when did the goals of science supplant the protection of individual liberty and property as our government's/country's primary concern? I'm not going to down-play the importance of scientific discovery and understanding, which is huge, in my mind, but it cannot determine our political landscape in the face of more fundamental concerns. Science is to serve us, not the other way around.
science IS to serve us, and in promoting sound and advanced science, all of US benefit. That is government's role, to make the society better for as many of US as possible. I love how folks always break it down to people being taxed. How, exactly, should a government be funded?
In a way, what you, and others here touch on is (to my feeble mind) the core debate that the nation as a whole has danced around. Sometime, and it better be soon, we have to have a national discussion around a few core items:
1. What role do the people wish government to play by way of a social safety net?
2. What other items do the people deem necessary that would most efficiently fall to government
(Defense and commerce jump to mind as obvious, but there are many others)?
3. Do we wish to maintain of broad-reaching foreign policy, a strict isolationist policy or one between
those extremes?
when the above 3 are settled, to the satisfaction of the majority, the question becomes, how to fund those things fairly and equitably. Sounds pretty straightforward, but as a nation, we've been ducking this for decades. The vast majority seem to be highly supportive of Social Security, Medicare, aid to the poor of a basic nature, education and research funding, vigorous(massive?) Defense, and a host of environmental and other protective regulatory programs. Yet, they do not wish to pay for them, or even consider a rational plan to do so. It is pure avoidance of responsibility on a society-wide basis.
"The Party told you to reject all evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command."
George Orwell---"1984"