I was reading this over in the Bush v. Kerry debate just a few minutes ago. I thought it would be nice to raise this issue into a larger context, which I am doing now.Oh please . . . Kerry sticking up for the middle class? You've been listening to too much democratic non-sense Wink
Fact is, in the USA, we vote who we feel would be the best candidate for president, and part of that is voting for the man that most represents your own belief systems. I disagree with Kerry on his economic policies (I'm a die hard capitalist), his foreign policies (I have no interest in any "global tests," and as far as I'm concerned the U.N. can just be disbanded), and I most certainly disagree with his social policies (gay marriage, abortion, etc.).
There's an inherent dicotomy between the Christian Fiath and Conservative Republicans that I've never quite understood. Fred Barnes of the Weekly Standard picked up on this issue a couple of years ago and wrote about it somewhat. Dittoheads might note that Fred Barnes is an editor of the Weekly Standard, the same people who put the "neo" in neo-con.
Basically, the rub is this: How can one justifiy their position as both a Christian and Conservative who believes in ltd gov't with respect to commerce? The goals of the two philosophies are opposed to one another. Chrsitianity itself calls for love and faith. It calls for people to give unto others. These features of Christianity I find very appealing. On the other hand, Conservativism calls for the call of the wild or the "last one standing wins". It's not quite a pure captialist system because in a purely captialist system we'd have more more competition. In our country, we don't have competition. We have oglopolies that frown on competing with they can and merge with each other when they can't.
Case in point, the reader above. The reader later advocates that if the person truely cared about the poor, the person would advocate a flat tax. A flat tax benefits the rich more than the lower class because the percentage of income taken does not progressively rise with the rise in income. The truth is that low income wage earners pay a 7.5% tax on all income and an add'l 10% on the first 15,000 or so. Switching to a flat tax of 20% for all wage earners would actually increase his burden. The tax would become more regressive, not less. I pay far more in taxes than most since I'm self employed. I get to pay a "self employment" tax of another 7.5% which I despise, even more so after Bush's proposal to cut social security payouts.