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A spectre is haunting America – the spectre
of divisiveness. All the powers of old
grudges have entered into an unholy alignment to excite this spectre:
freethinker and evangelical, Moore and Limbaugh, urban radicals and
exurban commuters. Where is the party in opposition that has
not been decried as divisive by its opponents in power?
Where is the Opposition that has not hurled the branding
reproach of divisiveness against more advanced opposition parties, as
well as against its reactionary adversaries? Two things result from this fact: 1. Moderation is sadly needed by
all American powers to become itself a power.
2. It is high time that Moderates should openly, in the face of the whole world, publish their views, their aims, their tendencies, and meet this nursery tale of the spectre of divisiveness with a manifesto of moderation itself. To this end, a Party of One assembled in
Duluth and sketched the following manifesto, to be published, sadly, in
only one newspaper and in only the English language. A moderate party would be based on four
principles: 1. Strive for a balance between
individual
liberty and public good.
2. Discuss issues openly and respectfully. 3. Provide and pay for government services at the appropriate level. 4. Use party policies as guidelines. Individual officeholders are free to make independent decisions based on the first three principles. We need a balance between individual liberty
and public good because too much liberty for some leads to harm to
others and too much public good leads to loss of liberty for all. On the other hand, too little liberty leads to
a lack of creativity and too little public good leads to a lack of
infrastructure to support creativity and the movement of people, goods,
and ideas. We need open and respectful discussion of
issues to allow voice for a wide range of ideas. Hardened
opinions lead only to more hardened opinions. “Our
side is right and your side is wrong.” Ideas
lead to more ideas. Rather than debates to
win voters to one candidate or another, we need conversations to define
what the real problems are and what possible solutions are available. We need to provide for government services
at the appropriate levels as well as levy the taxes at those levels
that provide the services. We avoid taxes
at lower levels of government and demand more services from higher
levels of government. This has several
pernicious effects. As we avoid taxes at
lower levels, local governments have few resources to provide the
services local communities want. The
demand for the local services does not go away but is pushed up to
higher government levels. Higher
government levels need to raise taxes to pay for those services. Provision of services from outside the local
community leads to services out of proportion to local needs resulting
in poor delivery, excessive requirements, or unused services and
equipment. As taxes at higher levels go
up, the ability to tax at lower levels goes down. Inevitably,
taxes at higher levels reach a point where voters rebel, the services
provided at the higher level are cut, and the lower levels are unable
to make up for those cuts. We need politicians who follow a broad set
of guidelines rather than a detailed list of party policies. When parties have detailed policies we move
toward groupthink rather than individual liberty, and groupthink is not
good for the common good. The United
States Senate is often called “the greatest deliberative body in the
world.” This may be true in some committee
hearings, but hardened opinions has led to more posturing and less
deliberating in the general sessions. Hardened
opinions are being demonstrated in state legislatures and city councils
as well. What are some policy examples that might
follow from these principles? One of the most divisive issues is abortion. One side wants no abortions anytime anywhere;
the opposite side wants no government interference in abortions anytime
anywhere. The only way to have no
abortions is to keep all fertile females away from all fertile males. That would move far away from the first
principle of individual liberty. Even if
mixing of the sexes were permitted for married couples what happens
when a pregnancy goes seriously awry? Do
we sacrifice both the mother and the fetus to a principle of no
abortions? The basic problem is unwanted
pregnancies. To reduce abortions we need
to reduce unwanted pregnancies. The proven
ways to reduce unwanted pregnancies are to reduce abusive family
situations, poverty, and ignorance. The
real discussion should be how to implement policies to reduce these
problems. The right charges that the left is weak on
defense and the left charges that the right is militaristic. But what is defense? Is
it military might that is suitable against mass armies?
Or is it international co-operation to resolve disputes? Is it high-tech weaponry that can take out
selected targets? Or is it international
police co-operation to root out terrorist cells before they can strike? Freedom and democracy are words brandished
like swords by those who claim them as their own goals.
Is freedom only granted to those who agree with a
government? Or is it the freedom to
express unpopular opinions? Is democracy
only granted to those who vote for a dominant party and begrudgingly
given to a large-scale opposition? Or is
democracy an open society in which people feel free to exercise their
right “to petition the Government for redress of grievances”? ©2004, 2006, 2007 Melvyn D. Magree |