Posts Tagged ‘Ron Miller’

Latest From Ron Miller

A debate between Republicans and a snide comment from a commentator revealed to me the slope of the downward slide our nation is experiencing. While there’s a lot of talk these days about individual liberty and free enterprise, we are deliberately sawing off the third leg of the stool, and it can no longer bear the weight of responsibility and accountability in a free nation.

Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels, whose unusual candor and tight-fisted fiscal management has boosted him to 2012 presidential prospect status, said a few days ago that it’s time for conservatives “to call a truce on the so-called social issues.” He went on to say, “We’re going to just have to agree to get along for a little while” until the pressing fiscal issues our nation faces are on their way to resolution.

Former Arkansas governor and television personality Mike Huckabee, himself a potential contender for the White House in 2012 after his failed but overachieving run in 2008, reacted with disappointment to Governor Daniels’ statement:

    As I’ve made clear, I really like Governor Daniels, and I consider him a friend and colleague, but his comments mirror those of the GOP establishment who view values voters dismissively as “single-minded.”  The fact is that every value voter I know is truly committed to fiscal conservatism, but many fiscal conservatives and libertarians range from disinterest to contempt for social issues.

Governor Huckabee went on to illustrate the consequences of poor moral decisions on our economy, public safety and national security, from poverty and crime in the inner cities to corruption and unethical behavior on Wall Street. He emphasized that “MORALITY AND THE ECONOMY are inextricably linked.” Bad moral choices have economic consequences that affect everyone’s pocketbook.

Apparently morality doesn’t rate as far as Dave Weigel is concerned. Mr. Weigel’s blog, “Right Now”, is the Washington Post’s latest half-hearted attempt at placating its dwindling base of conservative readers.

One would think that a conservative blog would be written and moderated by a conservative, right? Instead, they hire a professed libertarian whose posture toward American conservatives is not unlike that of an anthropologist toward a primitive tribe.

His characterization of the disagreement between Governors Daniels and Huckabee was as cynical as it gets:

    I think everyone’s a winner here — Daniels gets a (probably expected) moment of McCain-like straight talk endearing him to the less-than-socially-conservative press corps, while Huckabee gets to attack what is basically a non-existent threat.

Mr. Weigel isn’t alone in treating politics like a board game, but I know Governor Daniels from his days as the director of the Office of Management and Budget under President George W. Bush, and I’ve met Governor Huckabee, read his book From Hope to Higher Ground, and supported his presidential campaign. These are serious and committed men, and their statements are a matter of conviction, not competition.

The last words of Mr. Weigel’s statement, however, calling the issues about which Governor Huckabee is concerned “a non-existent threat”, were particularly contemptuous. He needs to get out from behind his desk and look around a little more.

I sent my first book, Sellout: Musings from Uncle Tom’s Porch, to the publisher this week, and as I read Mr. Weigel’s words, I thought back to the moral issues about which I wrote that have hampered the ascendancy of the black community.

The dissolution of the black family, due to government social programs that disincentivized the presence of a man in the house, propelled the out-of wedlock birth rate in the black community from 24% in 1965 to 72% this year. Children born into single-parent homes are much more likely to drop out of school, live in poverty, commit crimes, and wind up in prison. All of these outcomes have economic consequences for everyone.

Abortion has murdered more black people than all other causes of death combined. Black women make up 13% of all females in the United States, but account for 36% of all abortions. Blacks have spent $4 billion to kill their babies, when that money could have been used to start businesses, create wealth and free us from dependence on government social programs. The casual disregard for life represented by abortion carries over into adulthood, where 94% of blacks are murdered by other blacks.

The detritus of the sexual revolution, which devalued men, marriage and parenthood, has left young black men rudderless and resentful. With the concepts of family and marriage being redefined to suit the tastes of a self-indulgent culture, these young people are without fathers to teach them to be men rather than sperm donors.

Black women have sex with these young men, but have been convinced by the culture that they don’t need a man to raise a child. Black men use the diminution of sexual mores, and the availability of abortion on demand, to justify indiscriminate, uncommitted sex with multiple partners.

Through it all, the children suffer, the cycle of poverty continues, and they become wards of the state, whether inside or outside of prison.

These are all moral decisions. And all of them have acute fiscal consequences.

Governor Daniels is not alone in his call for social and cultural issues to be placed on the back burner. The GOP has long courted social conservatives because they are allies on fiscal and national security issues, but pays lip service at best to their concerns. The Tea Party movement has treated all but one social issue, gun rights, as if they were radioactive.

Great empires of the past collapsed because they ignored the moral decay in their midst. The great American experiment has endured because we balanced individual liberty and free enterprise with morality and virtue. Self-government isn’t possible without morality to temper the sin that is in all of us.

A friend and candidate for U.S. Congress, Charles Lollar, has a political parable to describe the three-legged stool of which I spoke at the beginning of this column. Picture two men, both of whom are free.

One exercises his individual liberty through hard work and productivity, while the other fritters the time away on leisure activities. Free enterprise is what allows one man to achieve a great harvest, while the other man has little to show for little effort.

When the hard times strike, one man is prepared to weather the storm, while the other is buffeted by it. At this stage, the man who used his individual liberty and practice of free enterprise to create prosperity for himself and his family could easily gloat as his neighbor suffers, and he could even turn his neighbor away if he came begging. After all, both men had the same opportunity to succeed, and one took advantage of it while the other squandered it.

This is where the third leg of the stool comes into play. It is the man of the successful harvest inviting in his neighbor, and not only feeding him, but offering his assistance by preparing him for the next producing season.

Individual liberty, free enterprise, and morality and virtue are the traits that define the American culture. To the extent we remove the controversial but necessary debate on issues of morality from the public square, and focus solely on dollars and bullets, we are out of balance and in danger of tipping over.

Ron Miller, of Huntingtown, is a military veteran, conservative writer and activist, communications director for the Calvert County Republican Party, and executive director of Regular Folks United, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.  Ron is a regular contributor to RegularFolksUnited.comAmerican Thinker, and RedCounty.com. You can also follow Ron on his website TeamRonMiller.com, as well as Twitter and Facebook.

Ron Miller Weekly Update – Again, Top Line writing, Attacks O’Malley and Governor O’Malley in process

Ron Miller Executive Director of Regular Folks United

Let’s pretend the nation is in the grip of a global recession that shows few signs of abating. Your state government has been running up billion-dollar plus annual deficits due to dramatically reduced revenue, and an inexplicable compulsion to spend money, even when the law requires a balanced budget.  Tax increases to close the gap would be hugely unpopular, because you’ve already burdened the people with the largest tax increase in that state’s history.

Yet, despite the facts on the ground, the state allocates $9.5 million to a non –profit organization that openly aids and harbors lawbreakers, while at the same time furloughing or laying off state workers. People who point out this egregious misuse of taxpayer dollars, rather than being hailed for demanding responsible stewardship of the people’s money, are instead pilloried as racists.

What’s that? This isn’t a pretense? It’s really happening? Never mind.

Only in Maryland could such a travesty occur. CASA de Maryland, an immigrant support organization that openly and unapologetically defies the laws of our country by aiding and harboring illegal aliens, operates in part with public funding from Montgomery County and the State of Maryland.

Incidentally, the fact that one of the organization’s private benefactors is George Soros would worry most sane state officials, but they aren’t in the majority in Maryland.

Private funding aside, it’s the abuse of public funds that should have every Maryland voter steamed.

On Governor Martin O’Malley’s official discussion page, a thread titled, “Stop funding organizations like CASA de Maryland that provide assistance to illegal immigrants” elicited this response from the state:

The State of Maryland has provided limited funding support to Casa de Maryland.  In FY 2009, CASA received $1 million in capital funding for the renovation of a Multi-Cultural Service Center in Langley Park, Maryland and $33,000 in Community Development Tax Credits.

In effect, when confronted about taxpayer money being spent on a lawbreaking organization, Governor O’Malley’s response is essentially, “Well, we only gave them a little.” That reminds me of another Will Rogers gem, “It’s easy being a humorist when you’ve got the whole government working for you.”

Except this isn’t funny.

When money is tight, shouldn’t government fund only the most essential services?

Frankly, I think government should get out of the business of giving taxpayer money to non-profit organizations, period. As a friend and mentor of mine wisely says, “I’m sure it’s a worthy cause, but should taxpayers be paying for it?”

$15 million in Maryland taxpayer dollars went to fund bond bills, which finance pet projects for legislators to buy votes in their home districts. The list of projects the state is funding in the midst of its greatest fiscal challenge will blow your mind.

Why should some private organizations be favored with our tax dollars over others? What if I object to that organization’s mission or tactics?

Should pro-life taxpayers have their money funding Planned Parenthood? Where is the funding for crisis pregnancy centers to at least pretend there is balance in how the government allocates public funds to non-profits?

Why does most government money for non-profits go to liberal causes? Who gets to decide which non-profits are worthy and which ones aren’t?

Should an organization that flaunts its defiance of the law get a single red cent of taxpayer money?

Will Rogers once said, “When you’re in a hole, the first thing to do is quit digging.” Not spending money on non-essential projects would be a start. Such a move would demonstrate sound fiscal stewardship, responsible governance and respect for the blood, toil, tears and sweat of the taxpayers who actually earned the money and created the wealth.

Of course, Will Rogers also said, “I don’t make jokes. I just watch the government and report the facts.”

Except this isn’t funny.

Ron Miller, of Huntingtown, is a military veteran, conservative writer and activist, communications director for the Calvert County Republican Party, and executive director of Regular Folks United, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.  Ron is a regular contributor to RegularFolksUnited.comAmerican Thinker, and RedCounty.com. You can also follow Ron on his website TeamRonMiller.com, as well as Twitter and Facebook.