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  by Bonnie Kristian
 February 20, 2014
 from 
			Rare Website
 
			  
			  
			
 
 
 
			
			 
			  
			  
			  
				
					
						
							
							Cats vs. dogs... 
							Coke vs. Pepsi... 
							Democrats vs. Republicans... 
				These are the "great divisions" of 
				american 
				life... 
				  
				But what if one of those rivalries isn't actually much of 
				a division at all?   
				Don't worry, I'm not trying to 
				reignite the cola wars of the 90s. (Besides, we all know Coke is 
				the clear winner: Do you order a Jack and Pepsi?) No, I'm 
				talking about Democrats and Republicans - or rather, the 
				out-of-date and out-of-step establishments of both parties.   
				For libertarians, saying both 
				parties are the same is a common theme. Democrat and Republican 
				partisans dismiss such critiques as cynical or
				
				unserious, but there's a real case to be made if we look at 
				the cold, hard facts.   
				
				Here are 7 big reasons there's no difference between 
				establishment Democrats and Republicans:   
					
						
						
						
						Both support endless war 
						It's been more than a decade 
						since the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and 
						America's entanglements are far from over.    
						Though Bush is remembered as 
						the consummate hawk, Nobel Peace Prize winner Obama has 
						used his time in office to start or maintain additional 
						wars in Pakistan, Libya, Yemen, and Somalia.    
						Now, he wants to
						
						add Syria to the list. My generation can barely 
						remember peace - and there's no
						
						end in sight for a foreign policy with devastating
						
						human and
						
						financial costs.    
						
						
						Both engage in out-of-control spending 
						Yes, deficit spending has 
						accelerated under Barack Obama. But you know what? There 
						was also a massive acceleration under Bush. The fact is,
						
						debt is a bipartisan problem, and neither party is 
						innocent.    
						With $17 trillion of debt (and 
						rapidly counting) as the consequence of decades of 
						bipartisan irresponsibility,
						
						the time has passed for pointing fingers and dubbing 
						a slightly slower rate of spending growth a "historic 
						cut."    
						
						
						Both ignore our most basic rights 
						
						
						CNN recently asked "When can a government kill its 
						own people?" but for
						
						President Obama and some old guard GOP leaders like
						
						Sen. John McCain, that question has already been 
						answered: Pretty much whenever it's convenient.   
						In fact, the U.S. government 
						has already
						
						assassinated a 16-year-old American citizen by drone 
						strike, killing a boy who was neither accused nor 
						suspected of any crime. 
						
						 
					 
 
						
						
						
						Both have no respect 
						for the rule of law 
						Obama swept into office 
						promising a new attention to the rule of law after years 
						of (correct) 
						complaints that Bush often ignored it.  
							
						 
						Bush and his GOP Congress 
						were rightly critiqued for
						rampantly flouting the Constitution, especially the 
						4th and 5th Amendments (rights to 
						privacy and a fair trial).    
						But as
						Gitmo remains open, the
						NDAA makes indefinite detention a possibility for 
						any American, and the
						list of NSA abuses reaches absurd proportions, 
						Obama's campaign promise is overdue for a death 
						certificate.    
						
						
						Both are bought and paid for by big 
						business 
						You know what's the best 
						original idea in politics today? Making politicians
						wear suits like NASCAR drivers, which display their 
						biggest corporate sponsors.    
						
						Democrats and
						Republicans alike would be
						plastered with logos. So is it any wonder that many 
						of these same businesses get massive favors from the 
						government at taxpayers' expense?    
						DC spends upwards of
						$100 billion on corporate welfare annually, not to 
						mention huge one-off expenditures like the bailouts. 
						  
						  
						
						     
						
						
						Both care most about their own power 
						President Obama recently
						joked, "That's the good thing about being president, 
						I can do whatever I want."    
						And while he was just 
						kidding around, his humor was in line with the 
						bipartisan presidential mindset. In the recent State of 
						the Union address, the President
						announced his intention to continue expanding the 
						power of the Executive at Congress' expense.    
						Republicans were duly upset 
						at this power grab, but historically GOP Presidents have 
						actually
						averaged slightly 
						more executive orders than 
						Democrats have.    
						
						
						Both have a long record of expanding 
						government and shrinking liberty 
						Finally, take a look at the 
						big picture: 
							
								
								
								Our government is 
								reading our emails and monitoring our calls.
								
								It gropes us at the 
								airport,
								wants to keep track of our cars, and
								plans to subject us to random security 
								sweeps at concerts and train stations.
								
								We can't decide for 
								ourselves what to consume, whether to buy 
								insurance, or who to marry.
								
								All our income
								until mid-April goes directly to the 
								government.
								
								America has the 
								highest
								incarceration rate in the world, and 
								minorities are subject to unfair, 
								disproportionate punishment. 
				Is this really the land of the free?   
				In 2014, it's very difficult to 
				answer that question in the affirmative. But it's easy to see 
				that partisanship isn't the answer - and neither is bipartisan 
				big government.    
				As America moves toward a new, 
				liberty-friendly
				
				policy consensus, let's toss this outdated left vs. right 
				rivalry and focus on the real fight: 
					
						
						Washington vs. us...  
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