Tempora mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis ("Times change, and we change with them").

Friday, November 2, 2012

Is 2012 the Most Important Election of our Lives?

Charles Krauthammer, writing in the National Review Online, believes it just might be. 

An Obama second term means that the movement toward European-style social democracy continues, in part by legislation, in part by executive decree. The American experiment — the more individualistic, energetic, innovative, risk-taking model of democratic governance — continues to recede, yielding to the supervised life of the entitlement state. 
If Obama loses, however, his presidency becomes a historical parenthesis, a passing interlude of overreaching hyper-liberalism, rejected by a center-right country that is 80 percent nonliberal. 
A Romney win, however, 
...could guide the country to the restoration of a more austere and modest government with more restrained entitlements and a more equitable and efficient tax code. Those achievements alone would mark a new trajectory — a return to what Reagan started three decades ago. 
Krauthammer concludes: 
Every four years we are told that the coming election is the most important of one’s life. This time it might actually be true. At stake is the relation between citizen and state, the very nature of the American social contract.
A brief but insightful analysis. Here's the entire article. 

 "The Choice," by Charles Krauthammer (National Review Online, November 1, 2012)




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