Well, lookey here EV, You and me in disagreement - Probably for the first time ever.
1. His enthusiastic support for immoral, unconstitutional “fetal pain” and other regulatory bills which violate the Fifth and the Fourteenth Amendment’s explicit equal protection and due process requirements and encode governmental permission to kill babies, all of the babies, as long as they are killed on schedule, or by some arbitrary set of man-made rules.
I agree with you in spirit - You know my views on this issue mirror yours - Outside of the obvious religious reasons, my main argument for Life has always been Equal Protection, heavy toward 'Due Process/Just Cause' - Thus, in my mind you are precisely right.
Providing increment, structure, and definitions, by the nature of the argument, assumes (takes for granted) that life is a right the government can legitimately take away, thus by inference, it declares the government to be the giver/owner of the right in the first place - A grave abuse to the Constitution and the DOI.
However, In committing to the Pro-Life movement, I recognize that the coalition formed therein is composed of somewhat diverse views. The concern of some of those folks leans more toward saving babies (go figure, eh?) than dwelling on the letter of the law. In that:
1.) I understand that differences exist and that Cruz's view fall well in the right of an already rightly bent organization... His is a decidedly Pro-Life view.
2.)I recognize that the definition and increment already exist in the present form of abortion law - and that Cruz's view drives that current criteria vastly to the right, and in the process, causes life to be protected sooner for many children at risk...
3.) And since the damage is already done (criteria already presently established) tinkering with the criteria is not adding injury - and if we ever get a court or a congress willing to address the issue head on, these new criteria perish with the overturning. It does not provide further damage or risk, and will certainly save lives.
The only downside to supporting Cruz in this endeavor is to provide a more comfortable point of justification. As people are more comfortable, it becomes harder to make them willing to address the letter of the law - which I fully admit must necessarily be addressed. But saving babies ultimately is the point, and I will give this one to Cruz.
2. His constitutional republic-destroying judicial supremacist views.
I am not well versed in his position here, although I see where you are coming from - Considering his long association with the court, and that his fame is largely derived therein, I can understand his preference. However, my question to you would be, since Cruz is by far the most federalist oriented candidate that has been on the horizon in my lifetime, Can you set aside your disdain for an idea that is already the mainstream view, in order to get things done wrt state sovereignty? IOW, in the trade off, Judicial supremacy already exists in the mind of legislators... So it is not adding any insult to injury... but we gain a powerful positioning for Federalism... If we can't fix it all anyway, is it worth the trade to fix some of it?
3. His pro-choice for states position on marriage.
Again, is the glass half empty or half full? My argument against his position is harm to reciprocity - But it also puts a tourniquet on the states' wound - If it can be done, within months all of flyover country will have passed laws preventing further erosion on the subject of gay marriage. It isn't the right fix - Congress should be jealous for their authority and impeach it's way through the courts with abandon- That's the proper fix (and only real fix). It will not stop until judges fear for their position. But, it is a fix, and will stop the bleeding. Is that worth a nod?
4. His horrid tax plan, which retains the federal income tax, while piling an insidious value-added tax in on top of it.
Oh, that's not good. Can you give me some links? I thought he was a flat tax/ fair tax guy... Won't work if you leave income tax, or any other tax in place, they'll just raise both and grab more.
5. His support for the continuation of the unconstitutional treasury-busting, posterity-robbing centerpiece socialistic programs of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society.
That's rather too broad a statement to comment upon. Is it your position that Cruz is big gov then? Because I find that hard to believe.
I am more than inclined to support Cruz - He is not perfect. He's too young, with a pretty short record. He doesn't have much for DefCons... But even with his shortened resume, he is by far and away the most Conservative thing we've seen in a long, long time. I am rather disinclined to pass that up.
Take your time in replying - It's Shabbat, and I really shouldn't be wading around in politics at all... I will await/attend your reply in the evening or on the morrow...
Shabbat Shalom, brother.
Ted Cruz’s and Rand Paul’s Strange Embrace of the VAT
Ted Cruz’s “Business Flat Tax:” A Primer
Ted Cruz’s “Business Flat Tax” is what most tax policy experts would call a “tax-inclusive subtraction-method value-added tax” (VAT) or a “business transfer tax” (BTT).
http://taxfoundation.org/blog/ted-cruz-s-business-flat-tax-primer
You don’t understand how damaging the Cruz position, and the position of the rest of these “leaders” of the GOP, is on life. What it amounts to, time and time again, is the surrender of the only real moral, constitutional and legal argument against abortion on demand.
It’s been tried over and over for four decades, and it has accomplished nothing, except to further embed permission to commit abortions into our statutes.
Those who continue down this failed path are really telling you that they will do nothing of any substance to end the abortion holocaust.
(CNSNews.com) - “If I’m elected in November 2016, I hope to lead the effort to...preserve and strengthen Social Security and Medicare for decades going forward,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) told Fox News’s Neil Cavuto on Thursday....
...”The reforms I would like to see — and I’m campaigning on fundamental reform to preserve entitlements...
....”It’s not worth tilting at windmills. I don’t know. I wasn’t alive then,” he told Harwood. “What I do know is that today, we have got to preserve and reform Medicare.”....