In Context

Tad on Facebook

16 September 2012

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Tad’s Mood Today

And he used to call Edison “My light-fingered homey” right to his face. Ed totally didn’t even get it.

He used to say it all the time, too. That’s one of the reasons he was so cool. And he used to call Edison “My light-fingered homey” right to his face. Ed totally didn’t even get it.

Thing I commonly say to household pets and people on television: “The reason for your problem is that you are an idiot.”

15 September 2012

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Tad’s Mood Today

I like Abba more that most straight guys do. Still, I think they overestimated how cool this was going to look by a smidge.

I like Abba more that most straight guys do. Still, I think they overestimated how cool this was going to look by a smidge.

“Put the man down, Giant Baby. You don't know where he's been.”

“Put the man down, Giant Baby. You don’t know where he’s been.”

A non-political post, but I’d like to put my politics in context for some of my more conservative friends, so they can see we’re not as different as they may have suspected.

I consider my most important roles in this order: father, husband, writer, citizen. My wife and I have built our own business over the years, and it is a classic small business: we work all the time, pretty much seven days a week. We have been slammed by the recession, as were many others in many walks of life, and of course our own book industry has been in crazy flux during that time. My/our income has shrunk to about a third of what it was just five or six years ago, and we have had to make adjustments accordingly, including parting with our beloved, long-term assistant. (Not ending the very important friendship, of course. We’re grateful we still have that.)

I am not speaking from some high place of economic security when I rant about politics, although I’m in better shape than many people, which I try to remember every day. My tax dollars are just as important to me as anyone else’s, and I want to know where they’re spent and why. I also believe in individual responsibility, and that the best base for a system of economics and government is a free market. How that market should be regulated and the responsibility (and regulation) of corporations, most definitely including banks, may be areas where some of you and I differ, but I do not believe in government-directed (or “command”) economies. They have been almost uniformly disastrous in practice and I do not trust a government to determine my ability to make an income any more than I trust it to tell me what to see, read, think, or believe. I certainly do not trust government to make women’s health decisions for them, so I am adamantly pro-choice. This does NOT mean I think abortion is a good thing, only that I think it’s a necessary option, and it’s none of your damn business whether a woman exercises that option or not.

This is a CIVIL society, not a religious one. Your (or anyone else’s) religious rights take a back seat to what the community agrees is best, even if you deem that anti-religious. All religious beliefs are equal, and all are subordinate to the community. That’s what the separation of church and state means, and it’s vital. The historical example of religious states is generally an ugly one. As an American, your beliefs remain your own and cannot be silenced…but you can’t force them on me or the rest of the community if we don’t agree. If you don’t like that, then go and live in a country with only your own religion as an option. The rest of us want a more dynamic, richer environment for ourselves and our children. And practicality suggests that is also a more economically vibrant environment as well.

I am not a member of a religious group, but I welcome it in the lives of any who want it. My wife and I are keen believers in citizenship, even at the neighborhood level, and our teenage children, without religious training or fear of punishment after death, are among the most truthful, kind-hearted, moral people I know. I get furious when “morality” is confused (or even deliberately substituted) for religious indoctrination. My kids are good because it’s healthy and happy and right to be good to others. They also, like many of their generation, find it hard to believe the craziness of earlier generations’ mistreatment of minority and outlier groups. Bless ’em.

My political beliefs have come into being by trial and error, by questioning and researching. I’ve been doing it an almost depressingly long time. I consider myself to be ultimately a practical person who wants the best possible world for everyone, even those who disagree strongly with me. I do not automatically assume I’m right, but I’m not easy to bamboozle with alarmist flimflam, either. I’ll discuss anything in a civil way, but even if you AGREE with me, I don’t have much patience for blind allegiance to any cause, or ad hominem arguments. Just because you think somebody’s ugly or a creep doesn’t negate their beliefs, at least not for me.

I love my country, for all its flaws, and unlike some people, I have lived and traveled in lots of other places. I speak more than one language, and that has helped shape me too. Still, I have loved America all my life. Just because you love it in a different way than I do, or love different aspects than I do, don’t you dare fool yourself for a moment that you are more of a patriot than I am.

Context clear? Then back to the election-season arguments.


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1 thought on “In Context

  1. Tad, if you could inform me of a place that has socialized medicine, where medical care is better than America I would appreciate the info. I too have done a lot of research on this subject and have discovered that you can track the rise in healthcare costs with the implementation of MORE socialistic practices. Healthcare costs didn’t break my parents
    but that was precisely because insurance companies weren’t forced to cover testing that doctor’s didn’t feel was necessary. The profit margin in healthcare insurance is small, the large sums that are reported as profit are based on the sheer numbers of insured.
    Also, if people having coverage was the real issue, why would we tax “Cadillac Policies” which penalizes people for upping their coverage. Why would we have provisions in our healthcare about how much gold you can buy? (yes, it’s in there)
    I don’t know if you actually read these posts, but if you do, can I just say your Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn Trilogy rocked?! I love your writing and hope you keep it up for years to come.

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