Written on
October 6th,
2016
Published
on October 7th,
2016
Dear Editor,
After following the race for U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois's 10th District for a full year, I am still not convinced that either candidate is preferable to the other, nor that either candidate shares a majority of my views.
After following the race for U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois's 10th District for a full year, I am still not convinced that either candidate is preferable to the other, nor that either candidate shares a majority of my views.
While I share many of
Congressman Dold's positions on trade, and many of Mr. Schneider's
positions on marriage, their similarity regarding most other issues
is troubling. Both candidates' voting records have contributed to
increased taxes and spending, and to the growth of the size and scope
of the federal government. There is no reason to expect that either
one of them will not continue these patterns if elected.
Both candidates support
the same disastrous foreign policy towards the Middle East which has
weakened our credibility and leadership abroad over the last several
decades. Both support expansions of domestic surveillance which
undermine due process and which are destructive of privacy. Both
candidates have supported measures that interfere with the right to
keep and bear arms; measures which diminish our abilities to defend
ourselves from violent crime.
On health, both
candidates have opposed efforts to defund and repeal Obamacare, the
bailout of the health insurance industry which has increased health
spending, while subjecting the medical sector to unnecessary new
taxes and regulations. Both support continued federal funding for
organizations that provide abortions, an extremely contentious policy
which in no way promotes the general welfare.
On immigration, both
have praised the executive-penned DREAM Act, which would contravene
congressional authority on naturalization policy. Both candidates
have voted to oppose the personalization of Social Security, and have
been reticent about taking steps toward a reasonable drug policy.
Most importantly, in
this “year of the outsider” election, neither candidate has stuck
his neck out to support new proposals to help solve problems that
have persisted in our country for decades. Neither has said anything
original or refreshing about labor policy; nor has either of them
demonstrated a unique way of understanding the relationship between
taxation, economic productivity, and ecology.
Moreover, they do not
seem to subscribe to the notion that our freedoms and rights
(including the freedoms to marry, travel, work, buy and sell, drink,
smoke, vote, and defend oneself) are natural, fundamental, and
inalienable; that they cannot be voted away by legislatures, nor
turned into privileges to be sold or revoked at the whim of
government.
The 10th
District needs another choice in this election.
- Joseph W. Kopsick
Lake Bluff,
Illinois
Write-In Candidate for U.S. House (IL-10)
Write-In Candidate for U.S. House (IL-10)
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