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Intergenerational Swindles?: Mark Levin

The one thing that conservatives never mention when they claim that current spending is stealing from our grand-children is that we achieve something in return for our spending and that what we achieve is passed on to our grand-children, potentially enriching their lives and fortunes. Building a better educational system, a better health care system, a better transportation system, a better energy system, all these will be passed on to our grand-children and they will be the better for the spending we do today. But conservatives never mention this.

Every generation stands on the shoulders of past generations. The good life that we enjoy today in a gift from past generations. We, ourselves, did nothing to earn this gift, which we all receive at birth. "Individual responsibility" is necessary to husband that gift, but did not create that gift.

Our welfare state (what conservatives refer to as America) is the greatest state the world has ever know precisely because it is a welfare state.

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Levin: "On the Constitution"

From whence comes the legitimacy of one generation binding another? Levin says: "(The Constitution) connects one generation to the next by restraining the present generation from society experimentation and government excess." But it doesn't follow that the present generation must accept what the founders wanted or intended. Conservatives are big on liberty, but they deny the present generation the liberty to accept, reject, modify or pick and choose what we want to follow in the Constitution. If the people are sovereign why isn't the present generation sovereign instead of the Founder's generation being sovereign. If government is based on consent of the governed how can Levin justify not recognizing the consent of the present generation.

Levin simply demonstrates a fundamental conservative error, that of legitimacy. The Constitution should be interpreted in an Originalist way only if the present generation formally legitimizes that it should be.

Levin also engages in some pseudo anthropology, viz: ""One of the fundamental ways man adapts is to acquire and possess property. It is how he makes his home, find or grows food,makes clothing, and generally improves his life. Private property is not an artificial construct. It is endemic to human nature and survival."

Actually, man's activities were originally tribal or communistic. Where did Levin get that drivel?

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Levin: "On Prudence and Progress"

Levin cites Edmund Burke on the necessity for a slow change which will reform but not fundamentally change an institution. Levin doesn't really get into Burke's idea that institutions are the culmination of thousands of years of human experience and, hence, are "good." Burke fails to recognize or account for the evil that may also accrue over thousands of years. However Levin does include a quote from Burke referencing "evil men." This exposes the inadequacies of Burke's observations. Levin also does not reference Burke's belief that God, "Divine Providence" in Burke's language, created the classes and gave each individual in a class the necessary characteristics he would need for that class: intelligence and character for the aristocrats; broad backs for the peasants. Burke was no fan of democracy. Which brings us to the following:

WORSHIP OF INEQUALITY: Levin embraces a key philosophy of conservatism, that men are inherently unequal, and quotes Eric Hoffer about men's thirst for equality, our thirst to eliminate distinctions among us. Conservatives still worship inequality as "God's will." This is a blatant error which runs through every aspect of conservative philosophy.

Proud Liberal

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