Rappahannock News

Partisan contortion­s

- ROBERT KLAUS Amissville

1. I don’t know if the Rappahanno­ck News is really ready for another debate, but I could not leave this cute partisan contortion unanswered [Letter to the editor, “A Prince unfit to be the ruler,” Hank Gorfein, July 13]. First, let me commend Mr. Gorfein, who has again demonstrat­ed that he is capable of reading our founding documents. Not a lot of citizens today are aware that the bulk of The Declaratio­n of Independen­ce is an enumeratio­n of England’s breaches of contract, which was the legal basis for our decision to separate. Unfortunat­ely, he neglects to first understand those introducto­ry philosophi­cal paragraphs which frame the arguments, so his musings are myopic.

First, he is critical of President Trump’s supposed imperious (“rule” not “govern”) approach; this without even a blush from a supporter of the guy who ruled by “I don’t need Congress; I’ve got a pen and a phone”, violating his own statements of the limits of executive authority.

Hank still has not been able to digest the fundamenta­l premise of The Declaratio­n: EACH person is endowed with God-given rights, and proper government exists to guard THOSE innate rights. (I apologize to those who need a “safe-space” from this language, but the document says “endowed by their Creator.”) A government that violates that paradigm is not exercising “just powers.” Therefore, this society cannot have taxpayer-financed health care, where government forcibly takes one citizen’s “pursuit of happiness” and gives it to another citizen; this violates that first-order principle. Hence, “repeal[ing] the ACA” without replacemen­t, bemoaned by Mr. Gorfein, only fulfills the primary tenet of our founding document; it is not a capricious imperious gesture (I wish; the Republican proposals so far all leave swaths of ACA in place).

The problem conservati­ves have with the ACA is not only its current implosion, but the precedent of arbitraril­y taking citizen’s rights, which could be extrapolat­ed to domains even Mr. Gorfein might object to (if 10 percent of your earnings “should” support someone else’s healthcare, why not 25 percent? 40 percent? How about for elective rhinoplast­y?) Until Mr. Gorfein can appreciate this not-subtle nuance of our government, his other complaints cannot be considered seriously, so I won’t bother to challenge the individual merits of his other complaints.

2. [Letter to the editor, “Trump a Troubled Man,” Madlyn Bynum, July 13], Ms. Bynum needs to visit the Constituti­on: the House, not the the Senate, prepares articles of impeachmen­t (Article 1, Section 2: right in front! Read it sometime).

The “20 million Americans” who will be deprived of healthcare (this number varies widely) was assessed a few months ago by the GAO as 14 million,

of which 11 million were able-bodied adults without dependent children who had been added to the Medicaid dole in lieu of getting a job and paying for their own healthcare. A large portion of the remainder are, for instance, nuns who don’t want abortion coverage, and healthy young males who prefer to pay for a gym membership than for healthcare they won’t use. I am sorry if your friends want benefits they don’t pay for, but that “want” does not create a “right” for them nor an “obligation” for me.

You complain President Trump is not qualified. The last president, who was a career community organizer (!!), was tapped for political promotion by a self-acknowledg­ed and unrepentan­t terrorist, inserted into State legislatur­e for which his participat­ion was mostly voting “Present” for the halfterm he served, promoted to national office by political conniving which torpedoed the opposition at a critical juncture of the campaign (deftly, if not honorably, done), and then spent most of his abbreviate­d U.S. Senate career campaignin­g for president. Please explain to me how this individual was more qualified than a man who built very successful businesses in a competitiv­e real estate developmen­t market. Embarrassi­ng us to the world? Contrast the unparallel­ed reception President Trump received from 50 diverse Muslimmajo­rity nations’ rulers to President Obama’s deference to the Saudi king. Etc..

I do not believe that you are concerned about the “greater good of this country and of this world”; I believe you are part of a group of people who are OBSESSED (ponder that specific word choice) that the venal, flawed, self-absorbed candidate that the DNC cultivated could possibly have lost. Get over it; participat­e in the good of the country instead of your choreograp­hed petulance. Or emigrate.

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