Crossfire wrote:You guys amaze me. When I was in high school, I was still blissfully unaware that my teachers (or my parents) could possibly be wrong about anything. I believed pretty much everything that fell out of their mouths. Well, maybe not my parents...
It wasn't until I was on my own, and paying bills and taxes, that I slowly came to the realization that I was not a democrat, after all.
Hey, I may be slow, but I DID eventually get there!
I'll never forget the first time my son got a real paycheck with itemized withholding. Boy was he PO'd.
I was a democrat until 1996 when I switched parties because the democrat party had moved so far to the left. And also, as I aged I became increasingly conservative....so it was a little of both. Lately, I self-identify as a conservative more than as a republican......the republican party being increasingly such a disappointment at the national level over the past decade or so. What's interesting to me is that I also tend to self-identify as a populist, which tends to irritate some of my fellow conservatives. But, I'm not a populist in the sense of "progressive." Rather, I'm a populist in the sense that I take fully to heart the originalist interpretation of the Constitution—which says that those powers not specifically granted to the federal government
by The People, reside in the several states
and with The People. I'm not advocating for a system different than the original representative democracy in the form of a republic as founded by our forefathers. What I
am advocating is a return to those founding principles in which The People controlled a limited government rather than the other way around, where a bloated government controls The People.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT