rotor wrote:Basically the question should be, do you want more government or less government? Do you want more ridiculous laws or less laws? Think about it. Originally the concept was that people served part time in the congress and went back to their real jobs, much like the Texas legislature which meets every two years. When you have career politicians, what do they do? They pass laws, many of them sound good on paper but in reality are nightmares, like Obamacare, like assault rifle bans, etc. If you believe in a conservative view of government perhaps we should take more of the libertarian view that the sole purpose of government is to provide a military to protect us from foreign invasion, provide a banking and currency system and perhaps not a lot more. Right now we concentrate on "gun control" in this group, adding more stupid laws to the tons of other stupid laws out there. Don't forget, CHL was the reversal of previous law banning conceal carry- passed by the legislature. I think we should lean to less governmnet, fewer laws, end career politicians existence and let them return to a real job instead of vegetating and controlling our lives for example like Harry Reed does. Might as well be a dictator. So, I support term limits, less government, fewer laws especially those that make progressives feel good but take away my constitutional rights (Ms Feinstein are you reading this?)
I'm with you in sympathies, but that is because of frustration. Others are right that if we had term limits, it would remove the "need" politicians feel to get reelected. It is that "need" which moderates their behaviors......in some cases. It encourages their behaviors in others. For instance, the more radically leftists Nancy Pelosi behaves, the more she guarantees her reelections. So whether or not term limits affects reelection is largely a product of the rationality or insanity of their constituencies. For instance.......and I never really liked the guy as a politician.......I would wager that during his many terms in Congress, Ron Paul's supporters would not have supported term limits because it would have eliminated their "spiritual leader" (in political terms), who was a major figure in libertarian history. And yet, because they are also strongly libertarian, they would have likely supported term limits for everyone
else. So this is a classic example of term limits cutting both ways for the same voters. I think Charles and others are right.....if we had term limits right
now, with nothing to lose in terms of reelection, all those "blue dog" democrats who consistently vote pro-gun might very well have helped to pass an AWB.....not to mention those squishy republicans who are often categorized as RINOs.
That's why I don't think term limiting is ultimately a good idea. And yet, we still have a need to prevent the venal and the corrupt from getting elected. That is why I believe that the answer is to make the job unattractive on its face, so that only those who are properly motivated would
want the job. Right now, congresspersons live like royalty.......on our nickel. Let them live like royalty on
their nickel. Cut the pay in half. In 1789, a congressman received a $6 per diem. That was it. Any expenses beyond that came either out of their own pockets, or out of subsidies paid for directly by their own states. The citizens of VA were not required to subsidize the activities of the representative from MA, beyond the cost of a boarding house and paper pens and ink. Today, a congressman makes $174,00/year, paid for by ALL the taxpayers, PLUS all of their operating costs, paid for by ALL of the taxpayers, plus healthcare for life, paid for by ALL the taxpayers, plus a retirement package available only to themselves, in which they are fully vested before having
completed one single term. If Obama had lost his first presidential campaign, he would have had these benefits for life by virtue of having served 2 years of a 6 year senatorial term.
Cut that $174,00/year in half, and now you have $87,000/year, which puts a congressman squarely into the middle class. Take away their ridiculous perks, and now they have to live like the rest of us live. Alternatively, $87,000 is $7,250/month....so limit their pay to only while congress is actually in session. Then, the rest of the year they have to live like the rest of us, and have a JOB. And several million residents of the DC area manage to live on far less than $7,250 per month, so if a congressperson can't do it, then there is good reason to not trust them with the nation's pursestrings. In other words, take away every incentive they have to STAY in DC.
Here's why: They think their job is to pass laws. Therefore, they justify their existence by passing lots of them. We are in trouble because we have too many laws. Since term limits affects
good representatives as well as the bad, the answer is to stop giving bad people a reason to run for office. Let them give their energies to some other enterprise. They only enter politics because it is profitable for them. Making it unprofitable eliminates them, and leaves only those with servant hearts.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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