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November’s Choices
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Gazillions
We are in terrible
straits this presidential election. We have a choice between a president
who has posed more of a danger to personal freedom than any in the
past 150 years and a Republican team that wants to return to Bush-style
big government.
President Barack
Obama has begun to show his hand at private fundraisers and in unscripted
comments during his campaign. And the essence of his revelations
is dark. His vision of a shared prosperity should frighten everyone
who believes in freedom, because it is obvious that the president
doesn’t. He believes the federal government somehow possesses power
from some source other than the Constitution that enables it to
take from the rich and give to the poor. He calls this "a new
vision of an America in which prosperity is shared," and he
declared, "If you've got a business, you didn’t build that.
Somebody else made that happen."
Today in America,
nearly half of all households receive either a salary or some financial
benefit from the government; the other half pay for it. In Obama’s
vision for America, no one will be permitted to become too rich,
no matter his skills and hard work. He somehow believes that government
seizures and transfers of wealth generate prosperity. We know, of
course, that the opposite occurs. Seizing wealth through taxation
removes it from the private sector for investment. That produces
job losses and government dependence on a massive scale.
The federal
government has a debt of $16 trillion. We have that debt because
both political parties have chosen to spend today and put the burden
of paying for the spending onto future generations. The debt keeps
increasing, and the feds have no intention of paying it off. Every
time the government has wanted to increase its lawful power to borrow
since World War II, members of Congress and presidents from both
parties have permitted it to do so.
Last week,
Gov. Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee for president,
blasted Obama for borrowing more than one trillion dollars in just
the past year. He must have forgotten to look at the voting record
of his designated running mate, Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan.
Ryan voted
for nearly every request to raise the debt ceiling during his 14
years in Congress. He voted for TARP, the GM bailout and most of
the recent stimulus giveaways. He also voted to pay for the Iraq
and Afghanistan wars on a credit card, which added another trillion
dollars to the government’s debt. And he voted to assault the Constitution
by supporting the Patriot Act and its extensions, as well as Obama’s
unconstitutional proposal to use the military to arrest Americans
on American soil and detain those arrested indefinitely.
We have a rough
idea of how Obama would bring about government control of private
industry through Obamacare and Dodd-Frank. From Ryan’s voting record,
we have a rough idea of what Romney-Ryan would bring us: more of
the Bush-era big government. In other words, Ryan is just another
big-government Republican holding himself out as a fiscal conservative.
Even his controversial budget proposals – which the House approved,
but the Senate declined to address – would have increased
government spending. It was less of an increase than Obama wanted,
which is why the Senate Democrats refused to consider it, but it
was not a cut in spending.
I am a firm
believer that the Constitution means what it says. The federal government
can only do what the Constitution authorizes it to do. The modern-day
Republican and Democratic Parties have made a shambles of that principle.
Nevertheless, I understand the "anybody but Obama" urge
among those who fear his excesses, as do I. Obama has killed innocents,
altered laws, rejected his oath to enforce the law faithfully, and
threatened to assault the liberty and property of Americans he hates
and fears.
Even though
Ryan is a smart and humble and likeable man who was once a disciple
of Ayn Rand on economics, as am I, the Republicans want the Bush
days of war and spending beyond our means and assaults on civil
liberties to return. The Bush years were bad for freedom; without
them, we would not have had an Obama administration.
Which do you
want?
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
August 17, 2012
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case
for Personal Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano
and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit creators.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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