I remember my very first voting experience. It was 1988. I was nine years old. Our elementary school had a mock election between Ronald Reagan and Michal Dukakis. I don't remember who won, but I know that I cast a ballot for Dukakis. And why wouldn't I? Like most kids, I absorbed my parent's political associations. I have continued those associations over the years but for my own reasons and not my parent's. I have voted for members of multiple parties over the years. I voted for Jim Leach and still cannot believe he was swept out in the fallout of the latest Iraq Military Engagement. I voted for Sen. Grassley and cannot believe how he has changed over the years (or perhaps I'm more vested in ongoing politics). I also cannot look past many of the greatest achievements, in my mind's eye, over the past 100 years that Democratic representatives have been a part of. But my roots run deeper...
Although nearly 200 years old, I consider myself to have a political belief system that stems from the Democratic-Republican Party's ideals of democracy. One of the most important beliefs of this is at the core of republicanism (notice the small "r"). It asserts that people have unalienable rights that cannot be voted away by a majority of voters. (Forgive the poor notations...John Phillip Reid, Constitutional History of the American Revolution (2003)) Unalienable rights are those that endowed upon us and cannot be subject to any changes in law. Furthermore, I still believe in the fight of privilege, aristocracy (and now more likely plutocracy) and corruption within society and our government.
I'm not naive to think that these have been solely Democratic Party carrying banners. Hell, even when the party was formed in the 1820s and 1830s, the standard barer for the party employed and encouraged the use of the "spoils system." Party issues ebb and flow. Republicans used to be pro environment. Democrats where pro-slavery. I may not always be a member of the Democratic Party, but I am now as I can easily identify my own beliefs with those the party continues to put forward at their local, state, and national levels. I don't agree with everything the national party agrees with.
That said, here we go:
I believe that whenever the rights of any of our citizens are threatened, the rights of all are endangered. I think (and hope) that those in the Democratic Party take seriously the obligation to preserve, protect, and secure basic constitutional and civil rights. That we have a government that consistently and fairly serves and protects all people. I believe that government should assure equal access to opportunity and guarantee the unimpeded right to vote for all U.S. citizens. I fear, much like Jefferson did, that unlimited expansion of commerce and industry would lead to the growth of a class of wage laborers who relied on others for income and sustenance. The workers would no longer be independent voters. Romney has urged business leaders to pressure their employees on how to vote. This is merely one example of many.
I believe that our military forces should be sufficient to defend our country from attack and should be deployed for that purpose only. Preemptive attacks by our military should not be an option, and any military action against another country should be preceded by a Congressional declaration of war. I vehemently disagree with President Obama's use of Drone Strikes in which a mere 2% of those killed are terrorists. An unchecked military is one of the greatest threats to our democratic-republican livelihoods. It is now a financial, job-creating behemoth. We all remember President Eisenhower's line of warning about the military industrial complex. But what many of us forget is the next line...
"We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties
or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an
alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the
huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful
methods and goals so that security and liberty may prosper together." -President Dwight Eisenhower, Farewell Address to the Nation, 17 January, 1961.
I believe that the government needs to continue its stewardship of our land and resources. In so doing, the United States should be leading the world in new energy technologies. Oh, we are picking winners and losers now? The U.S. government always has and always will. That is the nature of government. The stewardship of land and resources has far more implications to many future generations than the dollar amount that I pay for a gallon of gasoline (which the U.S. cannot influence if we truly believe in the market).
I believe (and I cannot believe that this sort of statement even needs to be said) that women have the right of choice. No "qualifiers."
I believe in a progressive tax code that ensures people pay a fair share to their ability and regardless of income source. Every person has a right to food, shelter, health, employment, and education. It is unfortunate that not every person can obtain all of these things on their own doing but this is the world we live in. We are to aid and help our fellow citizens. As the majority of us cannot help each other on our own, I do believe it is our government's right to expect us to.
I am proud of the achievements that the U.S. government has made and passed on to its citizenry. These include, but are not limited to, NASA spin-off technologies (i.e. freeze drying, water purification, artificial limbs, transparent ceramics, solar power, etc...), major works projects (i.e. Interstate Highway System), and GPS.
I'm proud to be a member of a party that brought us the Civil Rights Act, fair labor standards, Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Head Start, and OSHA.
I am proud of the achievements that the U.S. government has made and passed on to its citizenry. These include, but are not limited to, NASA spin-off technologies (i.e. freeze drying, water purification, artificial limbs, transparent ceramics, solar power, etc...), major works projects (i.e. Interstate Highway System), and GPS.
I'm proud to be a member of a party that brought us the Civil Rights Act, fair labor standards, Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Head Start, and OSHA.
These are merely a few thoughts from the evening. I am a Democrat. Things change, but I don't seem them changing for a while.
"No society can make a perpetual constitution or even a perpetual law. The earth belongs always to the living generation." Thomas Jefferson, Letter to James Madison, 1789.
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