Here's my take on what I believe to be the underlying issue. The Right and the Left have a basic disagreement about whether everyone has equal value, and whether each of us has a responsibility to help others meet their basic needs. People on the Right would generally say "no" to at least one of these propositions, and people on the Left would generally say "yes" to both.
The "too much power" question is a red herring, on both the Right and the Left (by "power" I mean "influence to get what you want"). They just have different opinions about who should have it, and what it should be used for; see the "underlying issue" above. The Right judges people's value by how much power they have, so in their view we should all be able to compete to get as much as possible, and then have no restrictions on how we can use it (and if you can't compete, even to survive, no one should have to share with you). The Left would rather have everyone be guaranteed enough power to take care of themselves (through the agency of the government which, at least theoretically, represents everyone), with whatever is left available for individual gain and subject to restrictions on harming people and the rest of the planet which we all depend on for survival.
Like it or not, there is a roughly equal constituency for both points of view, and our government functions as intended when both sides are equally represented in its control. Arguably since the Reagan years, control of the government has trended more toward the Right than the Left. It is a symptom of just how far to the Right we've gone that a moderate like Barack Obama can be seriously accused of being a socialist (I was on the Right most of that time, and Obama is more like Reagan than any of the current crop would like to admit). We're now paying the price for that imbalance, effectively replaying the history of the lead-up to the Great Depression of the last century, but without the resources to grow out of it. The Right is justifiably concerned that the pendulum is poised to swing in the Left's direction, as the damage caused by their systematic sabotage of government's controls over private concentration of power becomes obvious, along with their complicity in it. They share blame with moderates who claimed to be on the Left, and now find their jobs threatened because they didn't perform the vital balancing function that the name implied they would.
When everyone's to blame, who can you vote for but the outsiders? But what if the "outsiders" are just more moderates, or even more radically to the Right than those currently in office? Theoretically, if every politician were a moderate we would have a balanced government, but there are still enough partisans on the Right that the balance may not shift enough without more partisans on the Left to offset them. Unfortunately, we have the choices we have. One thing's for sure, though: tipping the balance even more (or a lot) to the Right is definitely the wrong thing to do.
Published by Brad Jarvis
Brad Jarvis is a writer with a background in science and engineering. He enjoys learning, trying to make sense of the world, and sharing what he thinks he knows with others. He is the author of the novel... View profile
- The Importance of Values and Standards in MarriageSee if the values and standards of importance to you are important to the person you want to marry. Can you live with the differences? Find out how to tell if you are really compatible.
- Nurses' and Nursing Students' Guide to Doing a General Overview of Labs ValuesLab values are often taught one by one by memorizing what they mean individually and the numbers of the normal range. This overview allows you to look at the labs as a whole and understand what they mean all together.
QPRwines 2001-2004 West Coast Pinot Noir ValuesWhen combining all the vintages by score and price, the 2004 vintage has 21 "Great Value" wines, the 2003 has 19 "Great Values", the 2002 has 15 and the 2001 has four "Great Val...- Increasing Vehicle Safety: Side-View MirrorsAccording to the NHSTA, there is a way to position your side-view mirrors to eliminate blind spots. In addition, accidents can be reduced by over 17% when a convex side-view mirror is used.
- NteQ Lesson Plan for SE Hinton's the OutsidersThis is a lesson plan I created for my Master's program in Education for the novel The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton. It is designed for grades 8-12, and is easilly adaptable. It uses the NteQ lesson format, a format which...
- In Two Minds. (Left and Right Handed Thinking)
- Restoring a Balance
- A New Political Party is Needed
- Analyze a Sociological Issue
- 2000 and 2001 QPRwine Cabernet Sauvignon Wine Values
- Common Lab Values You Need to Know to Administer Medications
- Today's Values VS. Yesterday's Values
- Government has been trending Right for 30 years.
- Moderates, not liberals, are in currently in the majority.
- Restoring balance requires that we not elect more people from the Right.



