Author, Speaker, Instructor, Radio Host“If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking.” -- U.S. General George S. Patton Jr.
What we are seeing is a glaring example of the difference between individualism and collectivism; Liberty versus Tyranny.
The first sentence of a CNN article regarding the McCarthy battle for Speaker of the House, and the twenty or so Republicans standing firm against him, exclaimed, "Kevin McCarthy is so desperate to be speaker, he’s ready to gut his own power just to get the job."
The lefty news machine that is barely keeping its head above water follows the authoritarian leanings of its political ideology, viewing the political system as being a system of power. The statement is eye-opening, fully explaining why the Democrats are never willing to truly compromise with their colleagues across the aisle. To compromise, in their authoritarian "one-party-rule" mind, is a loss of power. Compromise to them is weakness. Capitulation. While a certain amount of power surely exists in the Halls of Congress, they (and many of us who don't hold office in the government) have forgotten that when our Constitution was written the offices created were not supposed to be about power, but about service. A good Speaker of the House is not one desperate to achieve the position, nor is it a position that they should consider as being one of power. A good Speaker of the House is not about power, but about debate, working with the group as a whole, and one who is willing to listen to the minority voice.
That is why the House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate were originally designed to be so different from each other. The democratic processes of choosing the members of the House of Representatives were designed to ensure the States with the larger populations, and the cities, had the stronger voice. But, the U.S. Senate, being two-senators per State who were chosen by a state legislature that was also designed in a manner with dissimilar chambers, ensured the voice of the Senate was that of the rural areas. In Federalist Paper #10 James Madison explained that the best way to keep a faction from taking over or controlling the system is to make sure its opposition has a voice that can be heard, as well. Debate, a difference of opinion, and compromise are all good things for maintaining liberty.
CNN's article called the battle in the House of Representatives "embarrassing," but to be honest their hivemind thinking that everyone should just mindlessly step into line and vote as one (Star Trek's Borg come to mind) is what is embarrassing.
I am proud of the conservative Republicans who stood up against the establishment saying, "No, we are not going to just vote for your offering because you say so. We believe there is a suitable alternative."
McCarthy was not the best candidate. Jim Jordan was vastly a better proposal. There are others that are also heads and tails above McCarthy. Kevin McCarthy is more of the same old, "we have to be more like the Democrats to defeat the Democrats" attitude, as well as a person who drinks from the same power trough as all of the other "professional politicians" we have come to despise and loathe. For once I want the GOP to say, "We aren't feeding the anti-constitutional big government leviathan anymore! It is time to stand up for a limited government as the Constitution originally designed. It is time to offer a contrast to the Democrats. It is time to say 'enough is enough'."
CNN called those who stood against McCarthy "right-wing radicals." I call them a breath of fresh air. CNN says the fact that it took multiple votes "humiliating". I call it refreshing. It is not humiliating to think for yourself, and say no to a power-play provided once again by the party leadership who doesn't care about what is best for the country, but what is best for their power, their position, and their wallets.
The Freedom Caucus, led by Matt Gaetz and Chip Roy, made proposals for McCarthy that were largely eventually agreed to. Were McCarthy's concessions genuine? I hope so. But, again, in the end I applause the Freedom Caucus, and I appreciate the Republican Party who, in about a week's worth of debating during the first week of 2023 revealed to us that not all of them are mindless automatons that simply agree with party leadership, no matter the offering.
-- Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary
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