After a lifetime voting for and working for Democratic candidates
and independents, I'm finally going to make the switch and become a Republican.
The reasons are many, not the least of which is age. I turned 55 recently
and, having lived more than half my life, I can't afford to worry anymore
about the other guy. It's time for me.
As a Republican, I can now proudly -- indeed, defiantly -- pledge to
never again vote for anyone who raises taxes for any reason. To hell with
roads, bridges, schools, police and fire protection, Medicare, Social Security
and regulation of the airwaves.
President Bush has promised to give me more tax cuts even though our
federal government owes trillions of dollars to its creditors. But that's
someone else's problem, not mine. Republicans are about the here and now, and
I'm here now.
As a Republican, I can favor exploiting the environment for everything
she's got. No need to worry about quaint notions like posterity and natural
legacy. There are plenty of resources left for everyone, and if we don't use
them, someone else will.
I want a party that doesn't worry about things before we have to.
Republicans refuse to get hog-tied by theories such as global warming, ozone
depletion, fished-out oceans and disappearing wetlands. The real problems --
if there are any -- aren't forecast to take hold for at least 50 years. So
what do I care? I'll be dead.
As a Republican, I can swagger and clamor for war -- in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Colombia, wherever -- even though I've never fought in one or
even been in the military. I can claim that we're fighting for Democracy,
ignoring reports of torture at Abu Ghraib, Bagram Air Base and Guantanamo Bay,
and a spreading gulag of secret detention centers around the world.
Freedom, as every American should know after spending $300 billion for
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, isn't free.
As a Republican, I can insist on strict moral values when it comes to sex
and ignore the growing moral chasms in business, politics, sports, journalism
and the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church.
A society that loses control of its sexual urges faces unwanted
pregnancies, socially transmitted disease, broken families. Those overzealous
about wealth, however, produce only a higher GDP, lifelong security for their
family and more minimum wage jobs for the lower classes. What's wrong with
that?
As a Republican, I can favor strict punishment of criminals, except for
those who happen to be my friends or neighbors. Isn't that the very definition
of community -- looking out for friends and family?
I will be pro-death penalty and anti-abortion, pro-child but anti-child
care, for education but against funding of public schools. As a Republican,
I'll have a better chance of getting to spout my opinions in the media, which
for some reason seems convinced that since Bush was re-elected with the
smallest electoral margin of any sitting president in history, liberals are
passe.
As a Republican, I'll say goodbye to "old Jesus" and hello to "new Jesus.
" Sure Christ started out as a liberal Jew, and look where that got him.
Compassion, love and diatribes against the rich only encourage the weak and
punish the most successful among us. The Jesus that Republicans worship is a
muscular, decisive, pro-war crusader hard at work cleansing the world of
evildoers, not, God forbid, turning the other cheek.
My decision to become a Republican didn't come easily. For years I clung
to the idea that the foundation of a democratic society was our implied social
contract, each of us committing some level of personal sacrifice to the common
good of all.
I regarded taxes as dues we pay for better roads and schools, safe
inspection of meat and dairy products, maintenance of parks and protection of
wilderness areas. I see now that looking out for the common good resulted in
shortchanging the most important element in this formula -- me.
Let Democrats continue promising the "greatest good for the greatest
number." Republicans clearly have my number -- No. 1.
I'm sure a lot of my friends reading this will ask me, "How can you
sleep?" My answer will be, "Who's got time? I'm busy earning money." While
they're bellyaching about rising deficits, the outsourcing of jobs and
casualties in Iraq, I'll be marveling at the march of freedom in the Middle
East, upticks in the GDP and the president's plan to link Social Security to
the magic of the marketplace.
As a Republican, I simply won't listen to bad news anymore. Bad news
doesn't get me or my family anywhere. If you don't have anything good to say
about somebody, don't say anything at all -- unless it happens to be about a
Democrat, of course.
Jeff Gillenkirk was a speechwriter for former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo. He lives in San Francisco.
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