Boston Herald

GOP: Party of life, liberty, opportunit­y

- By STAR PARKER Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

According to the Pew Research Center, 66 percent of those supporting Democratic candidates and 18 percent of those supporting Republican candidates say, “If a person is rich, it is because he or she had more advantages in life than most other people.”

This from a new Pew survey of Democratic and Republican voters, going into the midterm elections.

There couldn’t be a bolder picture of the deep division between Democrats and Republican­s regarding what America is about.

Consider the richest man in America, Jeff Bezos. He’s the founder and chairman of Amazon and is worth well over $100B, depending on where the stock market ends up on any given day.

Bezos was born to a teenage mother and a father who was an alcoholic. The marriage lasted one year. When Bezos was 4 years old, his mother married Mike Bezos, a Cuban immigrant who arrived in the USA when he was 15.

Per accounts of the family, Bezos’ stepfather was an ambitious, hardworkin­g man. But there is nothing in the story that would suggest something extraordin­ary or some kind of formula for producing one of richest men in the world.

In 1994, as the new internet technology emerged, Bezos saw the potential, quit a good job at an investment firm, and founded Amazon.

According to Forbes Magazine, which annually publishes a list of the 400 wealthiest Americans, 69 percent are self-made.

How about Oprah Winfrey, worth $2.8 billion, according to Forbes? She was born poor, on a farm in Mississipp­i, to unmarried parents, and raised by her grandmothe­r.

No, the American story is not about one’s life being determined by circumstan­ces. Individual­s have free choice and must ultimately take responsibi­lity for the course of their own lives.

Sometimes I wonder how many Americans have actually read our Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. “Government­s are instituted among men,” according to our founding document, “to secure these rights” of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Government, in the American vision, exists to protect individual freedom, not to decide who should have what and invade individual private space, capture private property and income, and redistribu­te it to others based on what politician­s think.

Not surprising­ly, according to the same Pew survey, 68 percent of those supporting Democratic candidates, versus 29 percent of those supporting Republican candidates, believe “if a person is poor, it is more due to circumstan­ces beyond his or her control.”

The survey contains a list of issues, all consistent­ly showing that Democrats want government to run our lives and that Republican­s believe in freedom. There is only one place that Democrats want personal freedom. They want freedom for women to kill their unborn children.

That’s the picture and what we’re looking at in the upcoming midterms. Are we going to have a free country, as envisioned by our nation’s founders? Will we have a nation that respects the sanctity of life and the right and responsibi­lity of each individual to choose their personal destiny?

Or will we live in a nation where our destiny is determined by a political class and political connection­s?

Local elections have national implicatio­ns.

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