California Is a Communist Hellhole
Meet the Pair of Socialists Who Recruited Graham Platner. You Can See How...
This Intruder Broke Into an Armed Homeowner's Residence and Immediately Regretted It
This GOP Holdout Is Now on Board With the SAVE America Act
Scott Jennings Says Ballot Harvesting Should Be Punted Into the Sun
NY Congressional Candidate Pushed COVID Theory Pushed by China, and She Just Might...
Zohran Mamdani Has an Historically Illiterate Take on Soccer
Embedded Evil
Qintel Puts Pittsburgh on the Map for Cyber Intelligence
The SPLC Is Being Grilled on Capitol Hill—Watch Jim Jordan Accuse Them of...
Gavin Newsom Has a Solution to California's Election Process. And It's Exactly What...
JD Vance Calls Out California's Election System As Public Scrutiny Mounts
Spencer Pratt Loses His Bid for Los Angeles Mayor
Trump Vows Response to Iran Shooting Down American Helicopter
Sickening: African Migrant Brutally Stabs, Attempts to Decapitate Man in Belfast
Tipsheet

100 Reasons - and One Big Question

100 Reasons - and One Big Question

There are hundreds -- or trillions! -- of reasons to vote for Mitt Romney and against Barack Obama.  But let's stick with 100.

Hugh Hewitt set them out for you.  Here they are in audio.  Here they are in writing.  Feel free to share with undecideds  (hard to believe there are any of them left).

Advertisement

All Hugh's list is convincing to me.  Ultimately, though, for me there is one mega-question, with three flowing directly from it.

What kind of a country do I want to leave my children?

(1) Is freedom -- and the opportunity to achieve great things -- most important to me (Romney)? Or does "equality" -- as defined and enforced by the government -- matter more (Obama)? (Both sides believe in a "safety net" and a panoply of government services for the truly needy.  That's a far cry from "you didn't build that" and "spreading the wealth around.")

(2) Do I want a country with a vibrant civil society -- where houses of worship, charities, individuals and private institutions have important, influential and respected roles in our communal life (Romney)? Or do I want a society where government is pretty much the "whole enchilada" when it comes to providing services and other "public goods" -- and private institutions are almost totally irrelevant, operating only at the sufferance of government (Obama)?

Advertisement

(3) Do I want an America that is positioned to remain a good and exceptional country, with a special place in the world, and an undisputed "superpower" because of our military and economic strength (Romney)? Or am I more comfortable with an America that recognizes its own exceptionalism is really nothing too special (comparable to what the Greeks or Brits feel), is willing to "lead from behind" and accept its place as just one more country among all the other countries of the world (Obama)?

Romney, Romney & Romney.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos