Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: RiflemanSharpe; ohioWfan; Miss Marple; Dane; Area51; B4Ranch
I absolutely understand your feelings and your love for this country.
What you desire to accomplish is something that must be accomplished. I think where you and I disagree is in the method you propose. You believe you will send a message to the President/Republicans if you don't vote GOP but third party. I believe you will send a message also. The wrong kind.

Please hear me out now... I don't think just voting third party is going to accomplish anything because you are trying to solve the problem from the fruit down. It's like cutting the grass and cutting off the top of dandelions and believing you have solved your weed problem. You have not... the root is intact and the dandelion will grow back.

If you can't convince the people that they need to give up their entitlements for the economical health and security of the county... no politician, who espouses that they do will be elected.

That's why Howard Metzenbaum, (Ohio) only had to run one type of ad against any conservative running in Ohio. "That mean ole conservative is going to take away your social security." Worked like a dream every time. So what we have now in Ohio are two very centrist Republicans. The only kind that could be elected.

There has to be a fundamental shift away from the "give-me" state that was created since The Depression and back to fiscal responsibility. It's like turning a big ship of state. It's not going to happen over night. It won't happen if you stay home from the polls.. And it certainly won't happen if conservatives believe that the only work that needs to be done is a protest vote.

No... there is much needed education of the society that has to be conducted from the ground up. If we aren't willing to start there... then we are kidding ourselves.

Not to elect Bush is to elect Kerry. Yes... a message would have been sent... but not to the right "party." Those who remain in power will see that the entitlement train must be kept running or they are voted out. Right... Left... do not decide elections. The center decides election.

Personal interest versus national interest... there is really only one winner in that type of contest. The people have proven over and over that it is personal interest. And election results confirm this over and over again.

So, instead of cutting off our noses to spite our face... we need to vote for the President and work not just for conservative candidates, but work harder to teach the American people that they can't keep voting themselves money out of the pubic treasury... to do so will be the ruin of the nation.

991 posted on 01/30/2004 5:15:05 AM PST by carton253 (I have no genius at seeming.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 952 | View Replies ]


To: carton253
Thanks for your excellent analysis, carton.

This might be of interest to anyone who is legitimately concerned about this issue (as opposed to those who have used it gleefully as an excuse to bash the President).

The NEA has CHANGED under this President, and the changes are in line with his efforts to move this sinking culture back toward morality.

Those who don't want the government to spend a dime on the arts will still not be pleased, but those who believe the NEA is still foul, will not be AS displeased.......

"Farewell Mapplethorpe, Hello Shakespeare"
The NEA, the W. way.

By Roger Kimball

Under normal circumstances, the White House announcement that the president was seeking a big budget increase for the National Endowment for the Arts might have been grounds for dismay. Pronounce the acronym "NEA," and most people think Robert Mapplethorpe, photographs of crucifixes floating in urine, and performance artists prancing about naked, smeared with chocolate, and skirling about the evils of patriarchy.

Thanks, but no thanks.

But things have changed, and changed for the better at the NEA. The reason can be summed up in two trochees: Dana Gioia, the distinguished poet and critic who is the Endowment's new chairman.

Within a matter of months, Mr. Gioia has transformed that moribund institution into a vibrant force for the preservation and transmission of artistic culture. He has cut out the cutting edge and put back the art. Instead of supporting repellent "transgressive" freaks, he has instituted an important new program to bring Shakespeare to communities across America. And by Shakespeare I mean Shakespeare, not some PoMo rendition that portrays Hamlet in drag or sets A Midsummer Night's Dream in a concentration camp. (Check the website www.shakespeareinamericancommunities.org for more information.)

Mr. Gioia is moving on other fronts as well. He has hired a number of able deputies who care about art and understand that what the public wants is more access to good art — opera, poetry, theater, literature — not greater exposure to social pathology dressed up as art. After a couple of decades of cultural schizophrenia, the NEA has become a clear-sighted, robust institution intent on bringing important art to the American people.

It's quite odd, really. People keep telling us — that is, professors and CNN commentators and Hollywood actors keep telling us — how very stupid President Bush is. Yet everywhere one looks he is supporting some of the most intelligent and dynamic people ever to occupy their cultural posts. Dana Gioia at the NEA, his counterpart Bruce Cole at the National Endowment for the Humanities, Leon Kass and his panel of distinguished scientists and philosophers at the President's Council on Bioethics (see their website www.bioethics.gov to get a sense of the good work they are doing on clarifying the enormous moral issues surrounding the debate over biotechnology). The Left keeps screaming about how dim George Bush is, but in the meantime, he has illuminated one area of public life after another with immensely talented and articulate people.

There is plenty of room for debate about whether and to what extent government should be directly involved in funding culture. But there can be no argument that if we are going have public support of the arts, it should be done in an enlightened and life-affirming way. This is the George Bush approach to cultural reinvigoration. Conservatives — by which term I mean people who are interested in conserving what is best from the past — should applaud his efforts. After years in the wilderness, the NEA has finally come home.

— Roger Kimball is managing editor of The New Criterion and author of Art's Prospect: The Challenge of Tradition in an Age of Celebrit http://nationalreview.com/comment/kimball200401291138.asp

992 posted on 01/30/2004 6:31:04 AM PST by ohioWfan (BUSH 2004 - Leadership, Integrity, Morality)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 991 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson