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TheRealJuliane
Guest
Here’s the most basic difference between the Democrat/Liberal and the Republican/Conservative, forget all the inflammatory rhetoric just above.
Democrats believe that “the government” should help citizens and be involved in just about every aspect of our lives. They believe that some government institution should be in charge of and regulating everything we do from the moment we open our eyes in the morning (what you can eat, wear, wash your body and hair with, the kind of light bulb you can use in your house, how much and what kind of power you use, what car you drive, what is in the gasoline you put in your car, etc. etc. etc.) to the moment we close our eyes at night (what you should eat for dinner, what should be in your pillow, etc. etc. etc.). The federal government especially is relied upon for paternalistic care, from cradle to grave, but state governments are also expected to step in and help the population (local disasters, for example). Democrats are not afraid of government and trust the people who run “the government” to care for them in a way that they approve of. The more government, the better.
I put “the government” into quotes because of course there is no such thing as “the government.” That is a collection of people and the institutions we form, and building a huge federal governmental structure means that we are giving over our rights to other people, who may not have our best outcome in mind.
Republicans (especially those who consider themselves conservative) generally believe that government should be as small as possible, restricted to only those areas that society needs for protection. They believe that less restriction and intrusion means that people will have more freedom to do the right thing, with the help of God. They are very approving of the Bill of Rights and also the Constitution’s limited powers of government. The less government, the better.
Of course there are many other differences, just one is that the Democrat party platform includes both access to abortion and euthanasia. That should be problematic for Catholics, but somehow, 53% of all Catholics voted for current President Barack Hussein Obama, who, as a Senator, voted to deny a baby born alive during an abortion even the most basic medical care.
Here is the link to the Democrat Party platform. This is from 2008 but I don’t think they’ve changed anything.
Democratic Party Platform
Democrats believe that “the government” should help citizens and be involved in just about every aspect of our lives. They believe that some government institution should be in charge of and regulating everything we do from the moment we open our eyes in the morning (what you can eat, wear, wash your body and hair with, the kind of light bulb you can use in your house, how much and what kind of power you use, what car you drive, what is in the gasoline you put in your car, etc. etc. etc.) to the moment we close our eyes at night (what you should eat for dinner, what should be in your pillow, etc. etc. etc.). The federal government especially is relied upon for paternalistic care, from cradle to grave, but state governments are also expected to step in and help the population (local disasters, for example). Democrats are not afraid of government and trust the people who run “the government” to care for them in a way that they approve of. The more government, the better.
I put “the government” into quotes because of course there is no such thing as “the government.” That is a collection of people and the institutions we form, and building a huge federal governmental structure means that we are giving over our rights to other people, who may not have our best outcome in mind.
Republicans (especially those who consider themselves conservative) generally believe that government should be as small as possible, restricted to only those areas that society needs for protection. They believe that less restriction and intrusion means that people will have more freedom to do the right thing, with the help of God. They are very approving of the Bill of Rights and also the Constitution’s limited powers of government. The less government, the better.
Of course there are many other differences, just one is that the Democrat party platform includes both access to abortion and euthanasia. That should be problematic for Catholics, but somehow, 53% of all Catholics voted for current President Barack Hussein Obama, who, as a Senator, voted to deny a baby born alive during an abortion even the most basic medical care.
Here is the link to the Democrat Party platform. This is from 2008 but I don’t think they’ve changed anything.
Democratic Party Platform