From here and from there - 18
Do you care to guess who wrote this:
Since leaving office I’ve written about public policy from a new perspective: outside looking in. I’ve come to realize that protecting freedom of choice in our everyday lives is essential to maintaining a healthy civil society.
Why do we think we are helping adult consumers by taking away their options? We don’t take away cars because we don’t like some people speeding. We allow state lotteries despite knowing some people are betting their grocery money. Everyone is exposed to economic risks of some kind. But we don’t operate mindlessly in trying to smooth out every theoretical wrinkle in life.
The nature of freedom of choice is that some people will misuse their responsibility and hurt themselves in the process. We should do our best to educate them, but without diminishing choice for everyone else.
No it wasn’t written by Goldwater nor by Ron Paul, It was actually written by George McGovern - the democratic candidate in 1972 which was consider than radical left. I can only dream to have a republican nominee that is that conservative…
Gorge Will has very little good to say about Castro:
In the wise man’s prisons — according to Armando Valladares’s memoir of 22 years in them ("Against All Hope") — some doors are welded shut and prisoners are fed watery soup sometimes laced with glass, or dead rats, or half a cow’s intestine, rectum included, containing feces. In 2003, the wise man’s pulverizing police state, always struggling to reduce Cuba’s civil society to a dust of individuals, sentenced 78 democracy advocates, after one-day secret trials, to up to 28 years in those prisons. Pilgrims praising Cuban health care call to mind Pat Moynihan’s acerbic observation that when travel to China was liberalized, many visitors seemed more impressed by the absence of flies than by the absence of freedom.
Castro has ruled Cuba during 10 U.S. presidencies and longer than the Soviet Union ruled Eastern Europe. The Economist has called him "a Caribbean King Lear." Raging on his island heath, with nothing to celebrate except his endurance, his creativity has come down to this: He has added a category to the taxonomy of world regimes — government by costume party. Useful at last, the Comandante, dressed for success in his military fatigues, presides over a museum of Marxism.
I didn’t need this article to know that I married the perfect wife, but according to this research I must be in heaven:
Tags: Castro, Cuba, Goldwater, Libertarianism, Marxism, Ron Paul, The Free MarketBut while a compliant and submissive wife was expected back in the post-war years, modern men actually respect a woman who will stand up to them, with 59 per cent rating it as an important feature of their relationship.
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