Monday, July 25, 2011

Politics and Religion

Well I have always heard that these are two topics that you should not talk about in polite company. There is sure to be argument if you bring up either subject since people seem to be so divided on both issues. But should we as believers really hide our political feelings/leanings so we don't offend anyone who might believe differently? Or should we be open about what we believe in the hopes that they might come to believe the same way and make it easier for "our team" to win? Quite honestly I don't know the correct answer to that one, but I tend to make my feelings known on both Facebook and Twitter. So if you are curious about which way I lean, you can easily find out by reading through my posts. But you can't find out the little nuances of "how I lean" by doing so, therefore I'm still not sure that it makes sense to "go public" with what you believe.
For instance, if you kept up with most of my Facebook and Twitter posts lately you would find out that the debt limit issue is one I have strong opinions about. By reading those posts you might come to the conclusion that I am a very right leaning Republican. And I wouldn't challenge that label. In many ways I suppose I am very right leaning. I'm not so sure about the Republican part though. Maybe Libertarian would fit better, or Reagan Conservative, or Fiscal Conservative. Oh, I don't know, all of these labels make me nuts. What I do know is that I get pretty upset when I hear Democrats using the term "fairness" during these debates. What is "fair" about taking money from one person who worked hard to earn that money to care for their family, and giving it to someone else, who may or may not have done anything to put themselves in the situation that they are in. Another term that I link closely to that "fairness" is the term "more fortunate", as in saying that those of us who are "more fortunate" than others should give our fair share to those who are "less fortunate". I beg to differ with these people, but there is nothing "more fortunate" about where I am in life. I am where I am in life because of the decisions that I made. There have been many times in my life when things were a lot tougher financially than they are now, and that was also because of the decisions I made in life. Some of those decisions were choosing to drink, to use drugs, to smoke cigarettes, and not to go to school to further my education. All of those decisions affected my bottom line negatively. Booze and drugs aren't cheap. Neither are cigarettes. Not to mention the negative impact that boozing and drugging tend to have on your ability to obtain and keep good employment. Was it someone else's fault that I made those decisions? Absolutely not. Neither should it have been there responsibility to bail me out of the mess that I got myself into by making those decisions. The refusal to continue my education was just laziness. It was not the result of an inability to learn, I made straight A's in school and could absorb new material easily. And I "tested" well. No, my decision not to continue my education beyond high school was my own, made out of boredom with school at the time. I joined the military instead and then when I got out of the Army I took the easy route out and worked in lower paying jobs because they were easily obtainable and they didn't drug test as much. I could have used the GI bill to continue my education but instead I squandered the years those benefits were available to me. That was no one else's fault but mine. I married and had a child, and there were times when we struggled for a place to live and food on the table. But it was still the result of the poor decisions we were making, not because we were "less fortunate" than anyone else. When I see people who remind me of the past me it makes me a little angry. They are out looking for someone else to foot the bill for them while they languish in the world they created by their own faulty decision making processes. And while those who are truly "less fortunate" than some of us have to suffer because of program shortages, these fake "less fortunate" people continue to show up at the doctors office and the hospital looking for medical treatment. And they show up in nicer cars than the medical assistant who rooms them drives. They talk on the latest high tech cell phones that the clerical workers who maintain their records and check them out can't afford. They spend their government paychecks on tattoo's and hair styles while you and I feed their children, who all have some type of government insurance to pay for their healthcare, while the nurse who draws the blood for their health screenings struggles to make it and has to shop at the Goodwill Store to cloth her kids.
The system is broken, and perhaps beyond repair. Maybe it is time to disband it all and start all over again. For those who are truly "less fortunate" there are government programs, churches, and other non-profit agencies around to assist them. I personally support the works of our church, another non-profit homeless shelter, and two other agencies who help those in need. So I do my "fair share". I prefer that I do so willingly and not by government strong arming me into it.