I found this column interesting so I am posting it here followed by my comments to the author. He's 95% right.
Gridlock isn't always a bad thing.
By Lloyd Brown
November 25, 2012 Sun Sentinel
Two
friends, one a Democrat and one a conservative, have told me recently that Republicans in
Congress need to compromise so the government can "get things done."
One
of them actually said it is better to do something than nothing.
No. It is not. Doing the
wrong thing can be much worse than doing nothing.
This is especially true when you are talking about trying to
influence the nation's economy
Contrary
to popular liberal belief, politicians do not "run the economy."
Decisions made daily by millions of Americans, each pursuing his own best
interests, determine the course of the economy.
However,
politicians are quick to take credit when the economy is doing well and expert
at dodging and blaming free enterprise when it goes bad.
The
economy goes up and down with or without politicians meddling, much like the
average temperature on the Earth fluctuates.
More
often than not, when government acts to help, the action is either too late or
harmful.
Generally,
liberals want to spend more of other people's money, a course of action that
they fantasize will help the economy, while conservatives want to spend less.
Compromise
is only an option when both sides are going in the same direction and the
question is how far to go. If you want to drive 500 miles in one day on your
vacation and your wife wants to drive 300 miles, you drive 400. Or, in my
house, 300. That's compromise.
But
if two people are in a car at an intersection and one wants to turn left but
the other wants to go right, what is the compromise?
I
don't recall liberals being interested in compromise from 2000-2006, when they
were working day and night to derail President George W. Bush's
plans.
After
liberals gained control of Congress in 2006, the economy began turning south.
They had virtually complete control of the government after 2008 and didn't
need any compromising. Yet, they didn't fix anything.
If
they couldn't fix it by themselves, why do they need conservatives to help
them?
You
know the answer: So they can share the blame when things go wrong.
America's
voters apparently have chosen to live in a welfare state. But the majority
still cannot tyrannize a minority – at least as long as the Constitution is in
effect.
Therefore,
conservatives in Congress have a duty to represent their minority constituents
and oppose bad policy.
The
nation is $16 trillion in debt. The government does not even take in enough
money to pay for interest on that debt and entitlements. It must borrow the
money it spends for everything else – from the most banal bureaucracy to the Department of
Defense. National defense is the government's primary role and it is
fulfilling that role with money it borrows from other nations, including
potential enemies such as China.
That
is considered bad policy by the millions of Americans who voted for responsible
government.
Things
are bad, but they can get worse.
Sometimes,
gridlock is good.
Lloyd Brown was in the newspaper business nearly 50 years,
beginning as a copy boy and retiring as editorial page editor of the Florida
Times-Union in Jacksonville.
He can be reached at lloydb39@bellsouth.net.© Florida Voices
Dear Mr. Brown,
Your column today is right on. Absolutely correct in almost every point except one, which is pretty good. You state that "the majority still cannot tyrannize a minority-at least as long as the Constitution is in effect". Unfortunately, the Constitution is being ignored or overridden by the Obama administration or liberal judges. The reason we are in the mess we are in is that Conservatives and Republicans have compromised over and over in the mistaken belief that the liberals will keep their word or stop the incessant push to bring Socialism or Communism to the country. My saying is; "Bad people rely on the good will of good people to get bad things done". Most honorable, honest people cannot fathom that the left has an agenda other than taking care of the poor. It’s power, plain and simple. And to retain that power they must continue to enslave the poor, keep them uneducated, ignorant and most of all, dependant on the government for their well being---and get them to the polls.
I look forward to reading your next column.
R. J. Brinkman
Fort Lauderdale
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