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Romney, Obama have shared values

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Every four years as the presidential campaign ramps up I get this feeling I can’t seem to shake, and though it seems obvious to me, I can’t find all that many people who agree with it. As far as I can see our choices for president do not represent two starkly contrasting visions of what this country can be, but rather they represent highly nuanced, barely distinguishable views of what this country can be.

This year, in spite of the usual sturm und drang I have that feeling again. Yes Romney wants to repeal the Affordable Health Care Act, something he won’t be able to do without at least 60 Republican senators in tow, and wants to undo some of the regulations that arose in the wake of the economic melt-down of early 2008. There has also been a fair bit of ink spilled about the Republican desire to lower taxes further and the Democratic desire to raise them more.

All of this means there are some differences of approach, and they matter, but in all this I can’t find any fundamental differences in values. Both of our candidates are, as always, committed to an open democracy and the rule of law. Both believe deeply that capitalism is the best economic system humanity has ever created, the one best suited to create incentives both to production and co-operation. Those who would argue that Obama is secretly a socialist are, well, secretly mistaken. Both believe in private ownership of property. Both are committed to maintaining the United States as the world’s largest economy and the world’s greatest military power. Both agree that you don’t simply abandon the poorest and most vulnerable members of society; there needs to be some sort of social safety net for them. Both want to lower unemployment. Both are against discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color, sex and sexual orientation. Both agree that our social fabric is best held together by a partnership between the private and public sectors. What we have, once again, is not a clash of fundamental values, but rather a nuanced disagreement over how best to fulfill and maintain those values, and what mixture of private and public contribution to the commonweal is best. 

RNS file photo
RNS file photo

At some level we all know this, and yet play along. A couple of examples will suffice. It was Senator Obama who spoke eloquently against the individual mandate to purchase insurance from private providers. Republicans had first raised the idea, and candidate Hilary Clinton was for it. Now President Obama is the insurance mandate hero, opposed equally heroically by the Republicans.The “Neo- Con” Bush, as we recall, sponsored the first TARP, and pushed through the largest increase in Medicare —  the prescription drug entitlement — in the history of the program. In the early 1960s it was the Kennedy led liberal Democrats who argued for a tax cut in order to stimulate the economy; they were opposed by the fiscal hawks, conservative Republicans who argued that it makes no sense to try to balance the budget by cutting taxes.  “Voodoo economics” anyone? Even the briefest look at the history of political parties in this country over the past 50 years illustrates just how fungible they are, and a longer look yields even more dramatic results.

We really are, in spite of the rhetoric, a single people with a single overarching culture, albeit one with numerous subcultures within it. The vast majority of us want the same things, believe in the same things, hope for the same things, and part of the reason we allow ourselves to scream so loudly is because, unlike certain other societies in this world — where sectarian and civil violence are never far away — the stakes are actually quite low. We aren’t all Christians anymore, but we are still very highly united spiritually as well as culturally. Whether Obama is re-elected or Romney unseats him that is not going to change.  If “we the people” would notice that and stop rewarding candidates for divisive rhetoric the campaigns would become more honest, more informative, and more meaningful.

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Bill Ellis
Bill Ellis
Rev. Bill Ellis is dean of St. John’s Cathedral. He has a bachelor’s degree in history, a Master of Divinity and holds an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from Church Divinity School of the Pacific.

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Eric Blauer
Eric Blauer
11 years ago

“but in all this I can’t find any fundamental differences in values.”

Abortion is one major ‘value’ issue for some religious people and those values on paper are different. One is prolife, one is prochoice..

So I guess it depends on if you agree with a canadiates values as well.

But in general, I agree with you….there isn’t much choice this year. A fact I loathe as a former Ron Paul fan and now worn out and dissilutioned political junkie.

The system is a joke, positions don’t matter, you can claim a word and vote and act in a different manner. You can now be a warmonger and a noble peace prize winner, you can claim solidarity with the worker and fund big business like a pimp, you can peddle pittance to the poor and grind thier face in the dust with policies that don’t change anything but the size of the divide between the rich and the poor.

On and on it goes until….you create the meaningless state of politics that you highlight here, no difference…period.

Bill Ellis
Bill Ellis
11 years ago

You make a good point regarding abortion, though it is not clear to me how far apart Romney and Obama are. Ryan, as I understand it, is against abortion in virtually every case, but that is not what Romney has said. So far as I can tell he will make no effort to change any laws regarding abortion. Your support of Ron Paul is to me more telling. There is a guy who would truly and completely change the direction of the country; whether people like him or not he represents a completely different way of understanding how society should work and what the relationship of government to the private sector should be. Had Paul been able to get the nomination I likely would not have written this piece.

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