Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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This came to me by forward. As with this Kuo fellow, I
thought the admissions rather important because they are
believeable. No doubt some assertions will, or have, been
denied, or perhaps the ol, 'I'll just ignore em' approach was
utilized but there are some things herein Christians need
investigate.respectsPS On the whole, I was shocked to discover I rather agreed
with the author. Enjy.Christians and Big GovernmentDear,There was a day when social conservatives were united with
economic conservatives in the belief that small, limited
government was not only good for our economy and the
prosperity of American families, but essential to protect
traditional family values. We all fought for a limited federal
government -- a government that had the decency to respect
the American people by staying out of their lives. Small
government meant that all Christians could practice their faith
as they saw fit. Big government violates those rights by
meddling in our lives, misusing our hard-earned money, and
dictating cultural norms to us. We were and are rightly
outraged when government imposes wrong-headed values
through its monopoly of schools, government-funded "art,"
and taxpayer funded "family planning."As a united conservative movement, we win when we defend
traditional values against big government pretensions to
impose its brand of "morality" on the American people. We
lose when we attempt to use government power to impose
our values on others.I am a devout Christian. I am a so-called "values voter." As a
member of Congress and as Majority Leader, I believe I
faithfully served our values. One of my proudest moments in
Congress was beating the Democrats’ attempts to meddle in
the affairs of families that had chosen to opt out of secular
government education by home-schooling their children. I
took on the entire political establishment, but we only won
because thousands of Christian home-schoolers demanded
that Congress keep its nose out of their decision to raise and
educate their children as they saw fit.I am also a free market economist by training, and I believe
that economic freedom is vitally important in the defense of
the American family. Big issues like retirement security, tax
reform, school choice and spending restraint will determine
whether or not families will be dependent and subservient to
government. Who owns your retirement? Who decides how
you provide for your family’s future. Can you leave your estate
to your grandchildren, or is it the government's? Will the
government socially engineer your life through the tax code?
Will liberal education bureaucrats determine your child’s
education? These are all issues that used to matter to the
political leadership of Christian conservative voters.And while for most in the Christian conservative movement
these issues still resonate, the same cannot be said for some
of our Washington, D.C.-based religious leaders. Right after I
had left Congress and joined FreedomWorks, we found
ourselves embroiled in a major tax fight in Alabama. Oddly,
an old friend, Bob Riley, had been elected governor only to
immediately reverse course, cut a deal with the teachers
union, and advocate a massive tax increase to prop up the
failing government school system. It was "what Jesus would
do," he said. I took personal offense to that, as did many of
the voters who had just worked so hard to elect him Governor.
Our activists had joined forces with local Christian
conservatives, including the Alabama Christian Coalition, to
fight both bad policy and a sense of personal betrayal.We were blindsided when the national leadership of the
Christian Coalition endorsed the Governor’s proposed tax
increase, joining forces with liberal interests in the state that
had actively worked against our values for a generation. In the
end we won, thanks in no small part to the fact that members
of the local Christian Coalition chapter parted ways with the
national organization and stood with Alabama FreedomWorks,
the Alabama Policy Institute, local taxpayer organizations, and
a host of other small government advocates all united in the
effort to stop a big government tax-hike scheme.Today, the national Christian Coalition has joined forces with
MoveOn.org in another government grab of private property
dealing specifically with ownership of the Internet. They are
wrong on the specifics of the issue, and they are wrong to
associate with and comfort radical liberals who have
demonstrated nothing but disdain for conservative values.
Armey’s Axiom: Make a deal with the Devil, and you are the
junior partner.Another Armey's Axiom says that if it is about power, you
lose. And unfortunately when it comes to James Dobson, my
personal experience has been that the man is most interested
in political power.As Majority Leader, I remember vividly a meeting with the
House leadership where Dobson scolded us for having failed
to "deliver" for Christian conservatives, that we owed our
majority to him, and that he had the power to take our jobs
back. This offended me, and I told him so.In a later meeting Dobson and a colleague came into my office
to lobby against a trade bill, asking me to stop the legislation
from going to the House floor. They were wrong on the issue,
and I told them no. Would you at least postpone the vote, they
asked? We have a direct mail fundraising letter about to go
out to our membership, they said.I wondered then if their opposition to the bill was driven less
by their moral compass and more by the need to rile their
membership and increase revenue. I wondered then, if these
self-appointed Christian leaders, like many politicians, had
come to Washington to do good, but had instead done well
for themselves.Dobson later ran an orchestrated campaign against me in my
race to retain the Majority Leader post, telling my colleagues
that I was not a good Christian. I prefer to leave that decision
to Lord God Almighty on Judgment Day.Maybe you can understand why I have recently been quoted
referring to this person as a "bully."And it continues today, as Focus on the Family deliberately
perpetuates the lie that I am a consultant to the ACLU. I have
never had any relationship with the ACLU and oppose most of
that organization’s work. The ACLU has twisted "civil liberty"
to mean something quite the opposite.Nowhere was it more wrong, with more disastrous policy
ends, than in the Terri Schiavo intervention. While her case
was heartbreaking, our Founders created a government built
on checks and balances, not a nation run by an arbitrary and
imperial Congress. Congress cannot simply override our entire
state and federal legal system to intervene in one person’s
situation. It was truly a chilling act.Imagine the precedent-setting nature of such an action when
a different House of Representatives, one with "Speaker Nancy
Pelosi" wielding the gavel, holds power.Freedom works. Freedom is a gift from God Almighty, and we
have a responsibility to protect it. Christians face a temptation
to power when we are fortunate enough to have a majority of
support in Congress. But government can never advance a
faith that is freely given, and it is corrosive to even try. Just
look at Europe, where decades of nanny-state activism—
including taxpayer support for churches and for religious
political parties— have severely eroded the faith. In America
today, too many of our Christian leaders fail to recognize the
temptation to power and the danger it holds for our society
and our faith.And so America’s Christian conservative movement is
confronted with this divide: small government advocates who
want to practice their faith independent of heavy-handed
government versus big government sympathizers who want to
impose their version of "righteousness" on others through the
hammer of law.We must avoid the temptation to use the power of
government to perfect our society and its citizens. That is the
same urge that drives the Left and the socialists, and I can
assure you that every program or power we give government
today in the name of our values can be turned against us
when the day comes where a majority of Congress is hostile
to us.Instead, we need to limit the sphere of government and create
civil space where private institutions, individual responsibility
and religious faith can flourish. By reducing the size of the
welfare state, we increase the importance of the works of
Christian charities and our church communities. By reducing
the tax burden on families, we make it easier for Christian
households to tithe or for young mothers to stay home to
raise their children. The same is true for retirement security
based on ownership. Reducing the ever-growing reach of the
federal government means local communities, and more
important, parents, are free to establish the standards and
values for the education of their children.Consider the welfare reform we passed in 1996. By reducing
bureaucracy and dependency and emphasizing work and
responsibility, we changed conditions for an entire segment of
our society. Since welfare reform passed, teen pregnancy,
welfare caseloads, and the number of abortions in America
have all declined. That is the kind of policy change that values
voters need to support, and it is the result of limiting
government’s power over our lives.Our movement must avoid the temptations of power and
those who would twist the good intentions of Christian voters
to support policies that undermine freedom and grow
government. Freedom is what gives America its unique place
in the world, and protecting and expanding our freedom is
what creates the space necessary to keep our faith strong and
growing. Sincerely,
Dick Armey
Chairman
FreedomWorks
© 2006 FreeodmWorks. All Rights Reserved. FreedomWorks
1775 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, 11th Floor
Washington, D.C. 20006
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
This came to me by forward. As with this Kuo fellow, I
thought the admissions rather important because they are
believeable. No doubt some assertions will, or have, been
denied, or perhaps the ol, 'I'll just ignore em' approach was
utilized but there are some things herein Christians need
investigate.respectsPS On the whole, I was shocked to discover I rather agreed
with the author. Enjy.Christians and Big GovernmentDear,There was a day when social conservatives were united with
economic conservatives in the belief that small, limited
government was not only good for our economy and the
prosperity of American families, but essential to protect
traditional family values. We all fought for a limited federal
government -- a government that had the decency to respect
the American people by staying out of their lives. Small
government meant that all Christians could practice their faith
as they saw fit. Big government violates those rights by
meddling in our lives, misusing our hard-earned money, and
dictating cultural norms to us. We were and are rightly
outraged when government imposes wrong-headed values
through its monopoly of schools, government-funded "art,"
and taxpayer funded "family planning."As a united conservative movement, we win when we defend
traditional values against big government pretensions to
impose its brand of "morality" on the American people. We
lose when we attempt to use government power to impose
our values on others.I am a devout Christian. I am a so-called "values voter." As a
member of Congress and as Majority Leader, I believe I
faithfully served our values. One of my proudest moments in
Congress was beating the Democrats’ attempts to meddle in
the affairs of families that had chosen to opt out of secular
government education by home-schooling their children. I
took on the entire political establishment, but we only won
because thousands of Christian home-schoolers demanded
that Congress keep its nose out of their decision to raise and
educate their children as they saw fit.I am also a free market economist by training, and I believe
that economic freedom is vitally important in the defense of
the American family. Big issues like retirement security, tax
reform, school choice and spending restraint will determine
whether or not families will be dependent and subservient to
government. Who owns your retirement? Who decides how
you provide for your family’s future. Can you leave your estate
to your grandchildren, or is it the government's? Will the
government socially engineer your life through the tax code?
Will liberal education bureaucrats determine your child’s
education? These are all issues that used to matter to the
political leadership of Christian conservative voters.And while for most in the Christian conservative movement
these issues still resonate, the same cannot be said for some
of our Washington, D.C.-based religious leaders. Right after I
had left Congress and joined FreedomWorks, we found
ourselves embroiled in a major tax fight in Alabama. Oddly,
an old friend, Bob Riley, had been elected governor only to
immediately reverse course, cut a deal with the teachers
union, and advocate a massive tax increase to prop up the
failing government school system. It was "what Jesus would
do," he said. I took personal offense to that, as did many of
the voters who had just worked so hard to elect him Governor.
Our activists had joined forces with local Christian
conservatives, including the Alabama Christian Coalition, to
fight both bad policy and a sense of personal betrayal.We were blindsided when the national leadership of the
Christian Coalition endorsed the Governor’s proposed tax
increase, joining forces with liberal interests in the state that
had actively worked against our values for a generation. In the
end we won, thanks in no small part to the fact that members
of the local Christian Coalition chapter parted ways with the
national organization and stood with Alabama FreedomWorks,
the Alabama Policy Institute, local taxpayer organizations, and
a host of other small government advocates all united in the
effort to stop a big government tax-hike scheme.Today, the national Christian Coalition has joined forces with
MoveOn.org in another government grab of private property
dealing specifically with ownership of the Internet. They are
wrong on the specifics of the issue, and they are wrong to
associate with and comfort radical liberals who have
demonstrated nothing but disdain for conservative values.
Armey’s Axiom: Make a deal with the Devil, and you are the
junior partner.Another Armey's Axiom says that if it is about power, you
lose. And unfortunately when it comes to James Dobson, my
personal experience has been that the man is most interested
in political power.As Majority Leader, I remember vividly a meeting with the
House leadership where Dobson scolded us for having failed
to "deliver" for Christian conservatives, that we owed our
majority to him, and that he had the power to take our jobs
back. This offended me, and I told him so.In a later meeting Dobson and a colleague came into my office
to lobby against a trade bill, asking me to stop the legislation
from going to the House floor. They were wrong on the issue,
and I told them no. Would you at least postpone the vote, they
asked? We have a direct mail fundraising letter about to go
out to our membership, they said.I wondered then if their opposition to the bill was driven less
by their moral compass and more by the need to rile their
membership and increase revenue. I wondered then, if these
self-appointed Christian leaders, like many politicians, had
come to Washington to do good, but had instead done well
for themselves.Dobson later ran an orchestrated campaign against me in my
race to retain the Majority Leader post, telling my colleagues
that I was not a good Christian. I prefer to leave that decision
to Lord God Almighty on Judgment Day.Maybe you can understand why I have recently been quoted
referring to this person as a "bully."And it continues today, as Focus on the Family deliberately
perpetuates the lie that I am a consultant to the ACLU. I have
never had any relationship with the ACLU and oppose most of
that organization’s work. The ACLU has twisted "civil liberty"
to mean something quite the opposite.Nowhere was it more wrong, with more disastrous policy
ends, than in the Terri Schiavo intervention. While her case
was heartbreaking, our Founders created a government built
on checks and balances, not a nation run by an arbitrary and
imperial Congress. Congress cannot simply override our entire
state and federal legal system to intervene in one person’s
situation. It was truly a chilling act.Imagine the precedent-setting nature of such an action when
a different House of Representatives, one with "Speaker Nancy
Pelosi" wielding the gavel, holds power.Freedom works. Freedom is a gift from God Almighty, and we
have a responsibility to protect it. Christians face a temptation
to power when we are fortunate enough to have a majority of
support in Congress. But government can never advance a
faith that is freely given, and it is corrosive to even try. Just
look at Europe, where decades of nanny-state activism—
including taxpayer support for churches and for religious
political parties— have severely eroded the faith. In America
today, too many of our Christian leaders fail to recognize the
temptation to power and the danger it holds for our society
and our faith.And so America’s Christian conservative movement is
confronted with this divide: small government advocates who
want to practice their faith independent of heavy-handed
government versus big government sympathizers who want to
impose their version of "righteousness" on others through the
hammer of law.We must avoid the temptation to use the power of
government to perfect our society and its citizens. That is the
same urge that drives the Left and the socialists, and I can
assure you that every program or power we give government
today in the name of our values can be turned against us
when the day comes where a majority of Congress is hostile
to us.Instead, we need to limit the sphere of government and create
civil space where private institutions, individual responsibility
and religious faith can flourish. By reducing the size of the
welfare state, we increase the importance of the works of
Christian charities and our church communities. By reducing
the tax burden on families, we make it easier for Christian
households to tithe or for young mothers to stay home to
raise their children. The same is true for retirement security
based on ownership. Reducing the ever-growing reach of the
federal government means local communities, and more
important, parents, are free to establish the standards and
values for the education of their children.Consider the welfare reform we passed in 1996. By reducing
bureaucracy and dependency and emphasizing work and
responsibility, we changed conditions for an entire segment of
our society. Since welfare reform passed, teen pregnancy,
welfare caseloads, and the number of abortions in America
have all declined. That is the kind of policy change that values
voters need to support, and it is the result of limiting
government’s power over our lives.Our movement must avoid the temptations of power and
those who would twist the good intentions of Christian voters
to support policies that undermine freedom and grow
government. Freedom is what gives America its unique place
in the world, and protecting and expanding our freedom is
what creates the space necessary to keep our faith strong and
growing. Sincerely,
Dick Armey
Chairman
FreedomWorks
© 2006 FreeodmWorks. All Rights Reserved. FreedomWorks
1775 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, 11th Floor
Washington, D.C. 20006
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
