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Home Archives for Democrat Party

2/4/2009 By Ben Leave a Comment

Jon Henke’s Advice: Keep Our Eyes on The Real Problem Before Us

If you really want to engage in a serious debate about how to implement free market conservative policy solutions with a practical eye on messaging and political coalition building, then you ought to be reading what Jon Henke has to say. Be prepared: you won't get a rosy-eyed view or a mealy-mouthed answer. I appreciated what Jon wrote yesterday about a Republican response to the growing push toward government-sponsored universal health care (Tom Daschle's distracting tax problems aside). I'm not interested in the particularities of the health care debate right now, but if you are, might I recommend you check out the following: Patient Power WE Stand Firm State Policy Network blog However, it's Henke's conclusion that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Colorado Politics, Fiscal Policy, General, Health Care, National Politics, PPC Tagged With: appreciate, Big Government, coalition building, conservative, Democrat Party, free market, futile, government, growing push, heavy lifting, ideological ball, insightful, Jon Henke, limited government, limiting, long-term solutions, mealy-mouthed answer, messaging, Patient Power, policy solutions, political, political success, practical eye, principle, readers, recommend, Republican, response, rosy-eyed view, serious debate, State Policy Network, structural, tax problems, The Problem, Tom Daschle, two-party system, universal health care, We Stand Firm, wrong

7/3/2008 By Ben 9 Comments

1861 Was Not 1776: An Essay

Update: An astute observer has corrected a factual mistake. James Madison wrote "much of" - not "most of" - the Federalist. Alexander Hamilton wrote more, though Madison wrote many of the key essays that frame the meaning of Union. My faux pas. The following is adapted and expanded from an email listserv essay I wrote recently, inspired initially in response to the following phrase someone had written: "The American Republic created by the founding fathers was destroyed by the civil war...." Here is my argument why libertarians should think long and hard before embracing a defense of the Confederate cause: Quite simply, the noble libertarian impulse to champion resistance to government encroachment on people's freedoms has led many … [Read more...]

Filed Under: General, History, My Life Tagged With: "cornerstone" principle, "Peculiar Institution", 13th Amendment, 14th Amendment, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Allen Guelzo, American Burke, analogy, Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson, antebellum, antislavery, antislavery cause, civil libertarian, civil liberties, Claremont Review of Books, Confederacy, Confederate Constitution, conscription, Daniel Webster, Declaration of Independence, Deep South, Democrat Party, dictatorship, Dred Scott decision, economic nationalization, Emancipation Proclamation, federal government power, Fire-Eaters, Fort Pickens, Fort Sumter, Founders, Fugitive Slave Act, global holocaust, Great Britain, Henry Clay, historian, House Divided Speech, income tax, James Madison, Jefferson Davis, Jeffrey Hummel, John Calhoun, Kansas-Nebraska Act, Leviathan state, libertarians, Maryland State Legislature, neo-Confederates, nuclear bombs, Nullification Crisis, party platform, personal liberty laws, plantation slavery, popular sovereignty, pro-Southern, Progressives, racism, radical abolitionists, Republican Party, republican principles, right of revolution, Robert E. Lee, secession, Second Inaugural Address, slaveholders, slavery, South Carolina, states rights, statist, tariffs, Tennessee, Thomas DiLorenzo, Tim Sandefur, U.S. Congress, U.S. Constitution, U.S. Supreme Court, Unionists, Virginia, Western territories, Whig, Woodrow Wilson, World War II, writ of habeas corpus, Yankees

6/6/2008 By Ben 2 Comments

What Does Bill Ritter Know about Court to Gamble Taxpayer Dollars?

Yesterday, highlighting Governor Bill Ritter's arrogant response to the recent court decision finding his property tax hike unconstitutional, Republican leaders in the state legislature Mike May and Andy McElhany dashed off a scathing letter:It is irresponsible to assume that the Colorado Supreme Court will overturn the decision of the District Court that your property tax proposal from last year is unconstitutional. A new analysis by Legislative Council shows that the cost of doing nothing to address this possibility, before the budget goes into effect on July 1, 2008, will be $272 million! The price of inaction is too great. Serving in the justice system, you saw how difficult it is to win on appeal, and must recognize the need for … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General, History Tagged With: 2008 election, Andy McElhany, Best Destiny, Bill Ritter, budget buster, Colorado, Colorado Attorney General, Colorado Supreme Court, Democrat Party, Denver District Court, Dred Scott, education reform, Grand Junction Sentinel, inaugural address, James Buchanan, John Suthers, Legislative Council, Mike May, Mike Saccone, partisan politics, property tax hike, Republicans, Rocky Mountain Right, slavery, special session, U.S. history

4/8/2008 By Ben Leave a Comment

What are Colorado Dems Hiding?

Based on stories like this one at Colorado Senate News today, it's all but apparent that Colorado Democrats have no real interest in open, transparent government:A Republican staffer was ejected from a Senate Democrat caucus meeting today at an eatery near the Capitol, raising concerns by Republican leaders that the ruling party might be debating public policy in private--a violation of state law. By law, when two or more members of the General Assembly meet to discuss legislative business--regardless of the location--other members of the public cannot be refused entry. There are no exceptions for members of an opposing political party or the news media. The meeting had been announced on the Senate floor today by Democrat Sen. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Colorado Politics, Education, General Tagged With: Colorado Senate News, Democrat Party, law-breaking, open government, State board of education

4/1/2008 By Ben Leave a Comment

State Democrats’ Budget Extravagance Out of Touch with Man on the Street

The clever crew at Colorado Senate News took questions about the Democrats' state budget to the man on the street and got some predictably disgruntled responses:Just under $700,000 to give more prison inmates their GEDs? How about another $20,000 for the state's wine promotions board so it can promote--what else--wine? Or, $676,000 for salary hikes to the state agency that runs Medicaid health coverage for the poor? And then there's $150,000 in legal fees to defend the governor against a lawsuit charging him with pushing through last year's property-tax hike in violation of the state constitution. Those and other line items in the Democrat-authored 2008-09 budget, now pending before the Senate, were put to the public today when … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Colorado Politics, Fiscal Policy, General Tagged With: bloated state budget, Colorado Senate News, Democrat Party, property tax hike

2/4/2008 By Ben Leave a Comment

Attend Your Caucus Tomorrow

Colorado's registered Republicans and Democrats, don't forget that tomorrow evening is caucus time - your chance to pick a Presidential candidate, make your voice heard, and elect the delegates to the county and state assembly. Looks like there will be unusually high interest in 2008. The Denver Post has the basic information here:Colorado voters registered as Democrats or Republicans can participate in Tuesday's party caucuses, as long as they were registered before Dec. 5. Here's how: Process: At a caucus, state political parties hold presidential preference polls and conduct other party business. Democrats require a candidate to receive at least 15 percent of the available votes. Republicans hold a straight vote. Schedule: Caucuses … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Colorado Politics, General, National Politics Tagged With: Colorado Caucus, Democrat Party, Republican Party

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About Me

Ben DeGrow
Grateful and growing Christian, devoted husband and father of 3, public policy analyst, returned to Michigan by way of Colorado, conservative writer, lifelong learner, Detroit Tigers fan.

Recent Posts

  • AI-Enhanced Cyberbullying: The Dark Side of Teen Innovation
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Completing the Blogroll

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bendegrow-at-gmail.com

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