"Mitt Romney’s selection of Paul Ryan as his running mate underscores the central question posed by this campaign: Should cold selfishness become the template for our society, or do we still believe in community?
Romney wanted the election to be seen as a referendum on the success or failure of President Obama’s economic policies. Instead, he has revealed that the campaign is really a choice between two starkly different philosophies. One could be summed up as: “We’re all in this together.” The other: “I’ve got mine.”
This sense of the balance between individualism and community fueled the American Century. Romney and Ryan apparently don’t believe in it.
It is well known that Ryan, at least for most of his career, has been enamored of the ideas of Ayn Rand, the novelist (“Atlas Shrugged,” “The Fountainhead”) whose interminable books tout self-interest as the highest, noblest human calling and equate capitalist success with moral virtue. Ryan now disavows Rand’s worldview, primarily because she was an atheist, but he lavishly praised her ideas as recently as 2009.
What about Romney? While he has never pledged allegiance to the Cult of Rand, his view of society seems basically the same.
At least three times in recent days, as part of his response to President Obama’s “You didn’t build that” peroration, Romney has told campaign audiences variations of the following: “When a young person makes the honor roll, I know he took a school bus to get to the school, but I don’t give the bus driver credit for the honor roll.”
When he delivered that line in Manassas on Saturday with Ryan in tow, Romney drew wild applause. He went on to say that a person who gets a promotion and raise at work, and who commutes to the office by car, doesn’t owe anything to the clerk at the motor vehicles department who processes driver’s licenses.
What I hear Romney saying, and I suspect many others will also hear, is that the little people don’t contribute and don’t count.
I don’t know whether Romney’s sons ever rode the bus to school. I do know that for most parents, it matters greatly who picks up their children in the morning and drops them off in the afternoon.
It may not be the driver’s job to help with algebra homework, but he or she bears enormous responsibility for safely handling the most precious cargo imaginable. A good bus driver gets to know the children, maintains order and discipline, deals with harassment and bullying. Romney may not realize it, but a good driver plays an important role in ensuring a child’s physical and emotional well-being — and may, in fact, be the first adult to whom the child proudly displays a report card with all A’s.
School bus drivers don’t make a lot of money. Nor, for that matter, do the clerks who help keep unqualified drivers and unsafe vehicles off the streets. But these workers are not mere cogs in a machine designed to service those who make more money. They are part of a community.
The same is true of teachers, police officers, firefighters and others whom Romney and Ryan dismiss as minions of “big government” rather than public servants.
And what do the Republicans offer their supposed heroes, the entrepreneurs who start small businesses? The few who succeed wildly would be rewarded with tax cuts so huge that they, like Romney, might one day have a dressage horse competing in the Olympics. Most of those who just manage to scrape by, or whose businesses fail, could look forward to only as much health care in their senior years as they are able to afford, and not one bit more.
This is a campaign Democrats should relish. The United States became the world’s dominant economic, political and military power by recognizing that we are all in this together. School bus drivers, too."
5 comments:
Yawn. Is that what the left is going to run on this election? Repubs are for rich people and hate the poor. Please say yes, please pursue that campaign strategy. Obamas personal wealth has grown enormously while in politics, did you know Romney got a huge inheritance from his Dad when he died? Did you know he donated every cent of it to charity? Do you know he took no salary as governor of Mass? This job is a paycut for him, not so for Obama. Obama said 'you didnt build that" he meant it. Because he had help his entire life. He wants equality of outcome not opportunity, it is his way or the highway, and I hope he loses.
Thanks for sharing :)
re: "he meant it." What do that mean? That you're justified in taking that line out of context because "you didn't make that" makes for effective Romney stump speach zingers? You don't have to agree with what he said, but at least disagree with the message he delivered and not a hand picked 4 word extraction. What's the point in having a debate when you can make up "facts" out of partial sentences.
Romney may be a fantastically charitable guy, but that's not the point of the article. It's about the polices and ideas he promotes for the entire country, including the budget his now VP has tried to pass, which minimizes government to the point of near non-existance(which is not that much of an exaggeration).
Again, you are free to be on board with that vision, but let's not distract ourselves lame assertions such as Obama took the job as President because he needed the pay raise.
"He had help all his life." You're talking about Romney, right?
Aaand, thank YOU for sharing! :)
Some eye candy for you. Enjoy! : )
http://youtu.be/pSAGR0arBUo
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