An Op-Ed Of Yore
PITTSBURGH
POST-GAZETTE
By
Rudolph Weingartner
Congress
appears to be almost wholly polarized, with liberals on one side and
conservatives on the other. But many suspect, sometimes backed up by one poll
or another, that the rest of the country is not so bifurcated, that countless
citizens have not been captured by one or another ideology but merely lean this
way or that, everywhere harboring reservations.
Rather
than try to compete with pollsters by also counting noses, I've devised a
simple test that might help readers know just where they stand on the political
continuum and, by inference, others of our countrymen. Answering my questions
may tell you what you already know, but you also might learn something about
yourself that had been veiled, obscured.
First,
two cautions. I am not dealing here with contentious cultural or social issues,
such as abortion, but only economic ones. And my little test is crude; the
reader must judge whether it is better than nothing.
Let
me begin by describing a fictional, utopian United States where [a] everyone
who wants to work and is able to do so has a job; [b] everyone has access to
competent health care; [c] the elderly and the handicapped are not left
destitute; [d] the country's budget is usually in balance.
My
test is aimed at those who agree that each of these four conditions constitutes
a good thing, even if they doubt that they are attainable. You are now invited
to state what you are willing or not willing to have the government do to bring
us closer to such a desirable society.
Regarding
[a], jobs, give yourself three points if you think the government should create
public jobs to keep down unemployment; two points if the government should
spend money to stimulate the economy; one point if the market should be left to
solve employment problems.
Regarding
[b], health care, three points for a single-payer system like Canada's; two
points for government to subsidize health insurance as needed; one point for
government to provide, at most, vouchers for private health care.
Regarding
[c], Social Security, three points for raising the payroll tax to preserve the
retirement disability system; two points for increasing the age of eligibility;
one point for privatization.
Regarding
[d], the budget, three points for raising taxes to balance it; two points for
raising taxes and cutting government spending; one point for reducing spending
only.
The
highest score possible is 12 points, representing dyed-in-the-wool liberals,
strong believers in an active government. The lowest score possible is three
points, representing staunch conservatives who believe in the smallest
government possible.
Now
note that there remains a considerable range of nine steps between the poles.
Indeed, while I have always thought of myself as a committed liberal, my
position turns out not to be that pure.
For
jobs, I get two points for government stimulus. For health care, I would be
happy with subsidies, another two points. For Social Security, I'm for some tax
increase together with upping the age of eligibility, giving me two and a half
points. Finally, to balance the budget, I also take the middle ground: both
raise taxes and reduce spending, for another two points. That comes to eight
and a half points -- a wishy-washy liberal, far from a pure liberal's 12.
What's
true of me might well be true of you; indeed, a sizable fraction of the voting
population likely hold positions far from either extreme. Let's let Congress
know.
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