by emersonbiggins » Wed 03 May 2006, 11:07:39
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', 'I')n the conservative/Republican camp, true believers would look to market principles to solve the supply problem (high price of oil encourages alternative fuels) while also turning to ANWR, coastal drilling and coal to get us out of the crisis.
For the true conservative camp, I agree. However, the republicans are hardly what you describe when it comes to free-marketeers. For every democrat who has authored a price-gouging inquiry or a "windfall profits tax" bill, there has been a republican co-signer or cheerleader. It seems true partisanship can be had, but only through scapegoating. It's called pandering, and both parties are guilty of it. Both sides of the aisle are not about to give up living on the government dole, claiming mortgage interest tax credits and building new freeways to nowhere while spending this country into oblivion. If you're looking towards free-market solutions, you'll not find them in either party. At least the demos don't equivocate on this.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', 'W')hen a politician steps up and says this, and then says we need to band together to rely on ourselves in our own local communities, I will vote for him or her.
The principles of the Democratic party are dead. Long live the new party.
I also hope that a new party emerges that is centered on relocalization. As it means that current politicians will be cutting their own throats and lessening their influence on the states from the federal level, I don't hope for much change from the status quo. It will have to come from within.