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Monthly archive: September, 2008

Higher Taxes in a Nutshell

September 27, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

Louis R. Woodhill has written an excellent piece explaining how taxation affects business. It’s a lengthy piece, and I had to read it twice, but it has some excellent points in it that Obama supporters cannot afford to misunderstand. It’s one explanation why good intentions and what appear to be good ideas for economics that sound good and look good on paper, but do not take into account residual effects and unintended consequences, especially consequences directly antithetical to the purpose of the good intentions and ideas. 

It’s well worth reading.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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“What Happened to Market Discipline?” by John Stossel

September 24, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

I’ve always found John Stossel’s philosophy of economics well-defended by his journalistic integrity. He’s been the bane of the left-wing media, yet he’s been a beacon of truth. And yet again, Stossel gets it right when he explained why “capitalism” didn’t work out for our economy this time around: because it wasn’t actually capitalism! 

Read his article here. 

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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At least Bill Clinton gets it!

September 23, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

Bill Clinton describes EXACTLY the Palin appeal, and was actually pretty descriptive and charitable. 

People look at her, and they say, ‘All those kids. Something that happens in everybody’s family. I’m glad she loves her daughter and she’s not ashamed of her. Glad that girl’s going around with her boyfriend. Glad they’re going to get married.’

My view is … why say, ever, anything bad about a person? Why don’t we like them and celebrate them and be happy for her elevation to the ticket? And just say that she was a good choice for him and we disagree with them?

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Political Leanings

September 23, 2008, by Doug 2 comments

Government cannot provide equity. And it cannot take proper care of everyone. The best thing government can do for progress is protect our liberties.

Read more →

Thomas Sowell on the Financial Bail-out

September 22, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

Thomas Sowell has written two-part series called “A Political ‘Solution’,” and I highly recommend reading it. Sowell is a researcher at the Hoover Institute at Stanford University. Here are some highlights from the article:

…bailing out people who made ill-advised mortgages makes no more sense that bailing out people who lost their life savings in Las Vegas casinos. It makes political sense only to people like Senator Dodd, who are among the reasons for the financial mess in the first place…. People usually stop making ill-advised decisions when they are forced to face the consequences of those decisions, not when politicians come to their rescue and make the taxpayers pay for decisions that the taxpayers had nothing to do with.

Don’t make any bets on how this situation is going to turn out– except that we can predict that politicians will blame the “greed” of other people.

The hybrid public-and-private nature of these financial giants amounts to “privatizing profit and socializing risk,” since taxpayers get stuck with the tab when high-risk finances don’t work out.

Click here for Part One.

Click here for Part Two.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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“Butt Scratching and Bass Fishing”

September 21, 2008, by Doug 7 comments

Dave Ramsey has written an excellent article describing from a personal, real-world scenario of what higher taxes for the “rich” is really doing. When it comes to talking taxation, it’s very easy to assume that those defined as “rich” can afford to pay taxes, or to put it Joe Biden’s way, “It’s their patriotic duty” to pay higher taxes. It’s easy because when we talk about “the rich,” images of Paris Hilton, Donald Trump, and Warren Buffet immediately come to mind. They are rich by any standard, and yes, they can afford to pay a little extra (not that they should). But those who are millionaires are not the Hilton’s and Trumps of this world. They are your neighbor. They are people living in your city, in your county, and they are the same people who employ you and me. Some of them are even the same folk who donate a lot of money to charities who care for the poor, sick, and unemployed. 

But I won’t steal Dave’s thunder… his article can be found by clicking here.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Delegation Gone Amok?

September 18, 2008, by Shiree 2 comments

“Conservatives, as well as liberals, would undoubtedly be happier living in the kind of world envisioned by the left.” -Thomas Sowell

I am radically in favor of social justice. If an areligious government’s plan to assist the poor and provide greater opportunity to all Americans were trustworthy, I quickly would jump on board. The trouble for me is not some elitist social agenda or deluded belief that the free market will eventually obliterate poverty (though historically it has lifted more people out of poverty than any other societal structure). The trouble for me is that I am fully convinced that even the most well-intended government will most definitely fail to do bring about the social justice it sets out to accomplish, and in its attempt will also severely stifle the creativity, ingenuity, and spirit of its people that made this country great in the first place. Even more so, as a follower of Jesus, I am especially concerned about placing the power to impact poverty into the hands of government, which will ultimately stifle the individual freedoms of socially-minded organizations to follow their beliefs in hiring personnel and structuring programming (government monies can’t be used in “discriminatory” ways, after all). When we elect government officials who wish to tax the rich in order to care for the poor, we not only elect to have our money governed by the powers that be (which sets us up for our money to be stewarded poorly), but we also sell our freedom to think, believe, and offer charity as we wish. It’s not only our money that is turned over. It’s also our freedom to creatively offer social justice in ways that we personally endorse. 

On another note, was the message of Christ first and foremost directed to the government? Does it really please God more when we vote to have our government care for the poor, a commission that was clearly given to the followers of Jesus–to those who believe in and choose to follow the way of Jesus? Sure, it can be argued that the government can be used as a tool through which to fulfill the command of Christ to care for the poor. But aren’t we just giving ourselves more opportunity to shirk our personal responsibility when we concur that the government knows best how to do this work? How was it ever extrapolated from scripture that Jesus was commanding Christians to submit to heavy taxation so as to pass off their Christian responsibility to a secular government that restricts freedom of belief as it creates non-discriminatory societal interventions? And while it is true that social programs provide wonderful avenues through which the church can build relationships with the world, shouldn’t we be leading the way for societal change, rather than succumbing to the government’s way of handling things? The greatest commandment was to first love God and secondly love our neighbors as we love ourselves. But do we really need to rely on the government to help us do this? Sounds like delegation gone amuck to me.

I’ve lived in the third world, I’ve visited the poorest countries in the western hemisphere, I’ve lived in inner city Philadelphia, and I’ve worked in one of Lancaster city’s poorest schools. I know what poverty looks like and it’s truly horrible. I hate it! I dream of a world where there is no poverty, where the rich are willingly generous, where the poor are able to rise up out of bad circumstances, and where status is not measured according to a person’s possessions but according to the goodness of their heart. Sadly, I do not believe that humans have what it takes to create such a place. And I most definitely don’t believe that government—entrapped by bureaucratic inefficiencies, legislative quibbles, and group think volatilities—has the power to do it. 

A reformed society—where the lame can walk, the blind can see, and the poor are liberated—sounds wonderful! I’m in favor! The question is, how do we get there? Is the government truly the best avenue to societal change? The reality is that Americans have proven their collective charity, energy, and willpower to change and improve. The American government (with the exception of military protection and NASA) has not.

Shiree

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Obama can’t even Google!

September 17, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

From Forbes magazine in 2000:

In certain ways, McCain was a natural Web candidate. Chairman of the Senate Telecommunications Subcommittee and regarded as the U.S. Senate’s savviest technologist, McCain is an inveterate devotee of email. His nightly ritual is to read his email together with his wife, Cindy. The injuries he incurred as a Vietnam POW make it painful for McCain to type. Instead, he dictates responses that his wife types on a laptop. “She’s a whiz on the keyboard, and I’m so laborious,” McCain admits. 

So McCain can’t e-mail, and apparently Obama can’t do a simple Google search to find out the real story about John McCain. Not sure how this fits with no negative attach ads against a person (rather than policies), but I’m pretty sure this one crosses the line.

And I thought he was the candidate of change.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Brian McLaren on Obama vs. McCain – Part 1

September 17, 2008, by Doug 3 comments

Brian McLaren is one of the most influential “author mentors” in my spiritual journey. I’ve read all but his latest book, and most of those I bought the day they came out. I love McLaren’s writing style, his message, and his thoughtful critiques. He writes with a subtle sense of humor and sarcasm, yet his message is poignant. I have actually met McLaren, and he is a friendly and down to earth person, not some arrogant celebrity evangelical. He loves Jesus, and he wants to see the kingdom of God manifest here on earth. His writings have made me comfortable with what many evangelicals would call liberal theology. 

Recently McLaren has publicly endorsed Barack Obama for President. He has begun a series on his blog explaining each of his reasons for his choice, and hopes that we will vote for him as well. To my surprise and delight, what I read in his first post was thoughtful, engaging, and exposed the negative narrative that John McCain lives from and speaks from, which was his primary point in the first post. 

I’m not ready to join McLaren in his support, but for any believer who isn’t an Obama supporter, what McLaren has to say is truly worth reading. I disagree with several points McLaren makes, primarily points that are inaccurate in their factuality rather than the main point or message behind it. 

His first reason is what he calls the framing story. McCain lives in a “warrior narrative,” described McLaren, that emphasizes an us-them attitude toward our enemies. McLaren believes this is bogus and unsatisfactory in foreign policy. Barack Obama, on the other hand, preaches “a reconciliation narrative, a peace-building narrative, a collaboration narrative.” McLaren explains his endorsement of this framing story for two reasons:

First, I am a committed Christian, and I believe a narrative of reconciliation is in harmony with the teachings of Jesus. Conversely, a narrative of domination and defeat is not: it is the way of Caesar, or what Jesus called “the kingdoms of this world”….

Second, I believe we have crossed a threshold in my lifetime. Senator McCain, because of his age and his viewpoint, lives on the older side of that threshold. This doesn’t mean he is evil, but it means he is responding in ways that are no longer appropriate to a world that no longer exists, and in that way, his viewpoint is no longer helpful.

On those two points, I’d like to respond. First, I am a committed Christian also, and I do believe the narrative of reconciliation is in harmony with the teachings of Jesus. But so is calling a spade a spade (or evil what it is: evil), and so is defending and protecting those whom we have been entrusted to protect. For me personally, that means my family. For the government, that means the citizens of that nation and all within its borders. 

On his second point, I think McLaren ignores the reality that we still live in a world full of appropriate dichotomies. While I agree that not all conflict can be reduced to two polar opposite sides, and by no means is any conflict simplistic, McLaren’s dissatisfaction with the “warrior narrative” is simply another perspective of a postmodern Western Christian who has reacted often against his modernistic and fundamentalist upbringing (and for very good reasons). For those who wish to have no part in reconciling with the West, let alone Christians, but rather seek bloody retribution, we cannot offer reconciliation. We can only offer to defeat them. If it were only so easy to extend a reconciliatory hand.

On a personal level, we can turn the other cheek or let a man take more than just the coat off our backs. But a single human being (and his administration) do not have the authority to turn my cheek or let my enemy take the clothes of my back. That is my choice to make. A President is under oath to protect me, not act as a priest or mediator of reconciliation to my enemies. Granted, it might be part of the method of protection, but at best, it merely sets an example. At worst it may cost the lives of others, especially when the enemy doesn’t care about our reconciliation.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Libertarian Quote #1

September 11, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

“The Christian religion posits an all-powerful God who nevertheless permits humanity to turn its back on Him. This shows an extreme respect for free will and for the very sort of individual choice that is banned by Democrats and Republicans alike as they attempt to enforce their will upon the people through the power of government.” 

Source link here.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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“More of the Same”?

September 11, 2008, by Doug 2 comments

I’m baffled every time I hear Barack Obama and other Democratic leaders cite that John McCain will be “more of the same,” attempting to connect him to George W. Bush and his policies of the past 7 years. I’ve always seen McCain as more of a thorn in Bush’s flesh than anything, really, and I truly don’t get how it is “more of the same.” The more I hear it, the more I keep thinking, “What’s he talking about!?” So I guess we must examine some negatives that have happened in the past seven years:

1. Unprecedented government spending. This equals inflation, devaluing of the dollar, and more reliance on the federal government for our needs. It also sets up the American people to expect the government to bail the people out when they are in trouble.

2. Wasteful government spending. Do I need to describe this?

3. Fewer choices for retirement. Social Security still prohibits the people from doing what they want with their own money. It still remains a negative return on investment, and it is going bankrupt (yet another example of government not managing my money properly).

4. Fewer choices for education. Parents are still forced to send their children to a school dictated by the government, rather than where they want to send them. Children are still “stuck” in underfunded schools rather than being in schools of their own choice because apparently government is only pro-choice with abortion. Unless you have money/wealth, you have no choice but to send your kids to failing schools.

What is becoming clear to me is that Obama-Biden will be more of the same: bigger government, fewer choices, and wasteful energy spent with the people’s money and at their expense. Not that John McCain and Sarah Palin have offered us the opposite, but they have not campaigned on a big-government-promises-to-give-you-everything-you-need platform.

I don’t want a messiah. I want to live my life on my own so I can love my neighbor. I do want to give you my money so you can pay yourself to help my neighbor in ways that I disagree with, or in ineffective ways. I want the ability to save my money for my children’s education, and choose to send them to the school of my choice without needing to be wealthy.

What Barack Obama really means when he said that the old way isn’t working is this: “Government being in most of your life isn’t really working for America. But we’re going to change that. Government will take care of you, and will work for you, and will provide you all you need so you can provide for yourself all the things you want. Leave it to us. We know best.”

Not sure I really want that.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Is Freedom an Orphan?

September 6, 2008, by Doug No comments yet

Check out this article. What do you think?

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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