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Sunday, April 06, 2008
Austin Hill :: Townhall.com Columnist
I'm A Conservative Republican, But......
by Austin Hill
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It’s alarming to me how often I encounter people who are self-described “Conservatives” or “Conservative Republicans,” yet are quite comfortable with ideas and principles that are the antithesis of the “conservative,” “limited government” vision that has been the apex of the Republican Party for nearly all of my life.

More money taken away from private individuals in taxes. More governmental regulation of private affairs. More governmental intrusion into the lives of individual citizens. More of my “needs” being met by the government. At an increasing rate, ideas such as these are just fine for Republicans, so long as the expansion of government makes one feel better.

I understand John’s frustration with gasoline prices. But the U.S. Government that he seeks to harness so as to “reign in” oil company profits is the very same U.S. Government that has restricted or forbidden the development of many of our domestic oil supplies, and that requires oil companies to produce and sell both region-specific, and season-specific “blends” of gasoline, in varying parts of the country.

In short, the government that John believes can “save him” from the injustice of high gasoline prices has, by its own well-intended meddling, driven the price of gasoline upward.

And John is not alone in his questionable “conservatism.” During the Republican primary election process, the only presidential candidate to receive an endorsement from the ranks of social conservative leadership was a politician who raised taxes and opposed children’s educational choice initiatives while he was Governor of Arkansas - - Mike Huckabee.

Apparently “big government” politicians are just fine for some Republicans, as long as the candidate is sufficiently “pro family” and attends the right church.

In my home state of Arizona, the Republican-led legislature has ushered-in a whole new level of government “snooping” into the lives of private individuals, requiring all employers in the state to participate in the collection of personal background information of employees. The goal was to enable employers to verify the citizenship status of their workers, and to crack-down on the hiring of “illegals.”

Yet the collection of citizens’ personal background information - - facilitated through a federal government database - - forms the basis of a “national I.D. card,” an idea that Republicans found to be abhorrent only a few years ago.

No matter how uncertain or “unfair” the private sector economy may seem; no matter how comforting politicians’ promises of “free healthcare” may feel; no matter how “right” it may seem to vote for candidates who share common faith commitments; all Americans would do well to develop a healthy sense of skepticism about the government’s ability to “fix” our nation’s problems, and to reject politicians who promise such “fixes.”

And “Conservative Republicans” would do well to recall Ronald Reagan’s words of nearly 28 years ago: “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problems; government is the problem.”

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About The Author
Austin Hill is a Talk Show Host At Boise, Idaho's 580 KIDO Radio, and a frequent Guest Host on the Fox Newstalk Radio Network. He is the Author of "White House Confidential: The Little Book Of Weird Presidential History," And Co-Author of the forthcoming title "The Virtues Of Capitalism: A Moral Case For Free Markets" (Northfield/Moody Press, 2010).
 
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I am a conservative Republican
Horse Patootee, This is another socialist/communist hiding out under the guize of conservative/republican! There is no such thing as excessive profits in the U.S.! If you get the speculators out of oil then prices may drop. Oil is a commodity just like beef and brocolli. The purpose of American business is to make as much profit as can be made. Not so in communist lands, the State controls everything and business slowly rot and die! Electing people like Billary Clinton/Brack Obama will rapidly get you into full blown Communism. Four years but eight for sure!


Is this a joke?
The volume of the author's ideas
is a good summary of reasons for government to leave corporations alone, but the fact he does not even consider the possibility that this issue originates from just another case of corporate price fixing is implausible.

The caller obviously would have welcomed an investigation into whether the oil companies have been illegally colluding to control the supply of oil to drive up prices. And doing this would simply be enforcing existing regulations, which exist to protect society from corporate crime.

But the author just didn't get it? Yeah, right.

All kinds of publically-owned corporations, including energy corporations, are well-known to engage in criminal schemes, such as reducing supply, to increase their prices and thereby increase their profits. This is done to enrich the corporate leaders, although the shareholders may also benefit. The fact that shareholders benefit does not mean a thing, because corporate insiders are often among the biggest shareholders, and much of their compensation is based on how much profit they make for the company anyway.

Such schemes are obviously criminal,
so if some simpleton would suggest
that proper regulation is anti-conservative, it would be interesting to see where he would, in fact, ever approve of enforcing regulation of corporations.
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