Rarely does the concern of the middle-class reach a point where they
start protesting the government en masse. The passage of ObamaCare and
the impending financial ruin of our country is now one of those times.
Despite immense opposition, Barack Obama and the Democrats in Congress
forced through a health care bill, not to improve people's health care
but to expand the power of the state over them. It is the height of
arrogance. As ObamaCare moves closer to reality, we know the resulting
intrusion of government in our lives will not allow us to continue to
live as we have before.
We
know the government can't keep running huge deficits and think there
will be no consequences. We know the federal and many state budgets are
already broke, and that hard times are coming. We know that Obama is
deliberately trying to drive the country off a cliff with debt our
grandchildren can never repay. And we know that when we speak out
against this madness, they will malign us and likely smear us as
racists.
Until recently, many have avoided speaking publicly about politics, and
we now know that must change too. We could never live with ourselves if
we sat by and did nothing while liberals dismantle the country. We need
heroic action, and we know we are the ones who must be the heroes. Each
of us need to reach deep and summon what may not come naturally, and
bring out the hero that resides inside.
A
hero is someone motivated to act beyond his or her own self-interest.
It's that person faced with an overwhelming challenge or moral dilemma
who acts for the greater good. He or she acts in the interest of duty,
honor, and country.
Think of the iconic hero Rick Blaine (played by Humphrey Bogart) in the
movie "Casablanca." In it, he is a world-weary American in a lawless
town. As lost love and horrendous world events spiral beyond his
control, he is faced with the uncomfortable necessity of standing up for
good. At first Rick shrugs, "I'm not interested in the politics. The
problems of the world are not in my department. I'm a saloon keeper."
His response is typical of many of us today.
Rick
eventually comes to the realization that he can no longer run away from
himself in drink and self-pity. He knows the only way to move forward is
bravely to act on the side of good. His inner hero emerges. At great
risk, and some sorrow, Rick puts the courageous underground Nazi
resistance leader and his wife on the plane to Lisbon so they can
continue their movement.
With
the daily assault by progressives on our values, we know that all we
hold dear about this county they oppose. Like Rick, we know we too must
get off the bench and strive for what is right. And we know we must do
it soon.
We
know we must fight back now before ObamaCare takes effect, not years
from now when the benefits become embedded. We know the massive
expansion of the federal government into personal health care will drive
health insurance providers out of business and force employers to dump
their workers on to the government plan.
Obama thinks he can initially hide the negative effects, hooking us on
new benefits until they become entrenched, and putting off the reduced
care, the cost overruns, and the tax hikes that are sure to come so we
will not make the connection between this horrible legislation and the
resulting economic carnage. Like so much about this man, this deception
is nefarious and dishonest.
But
his plan may be backfiring. Suddenly, the steady encroachment of
socialism these many decades is very noticeable by tens of millions of
ordinary people who care deeply about their county, and they are taking
to the streets.
We
must start now at working to repeal this health care debacle and remove
Obama and his cronies from office. And we must get out of our comfort
zone and do what we may have never done before. We must be sure to vote.
And we must peacefully do the tasks of manning picket lines at rallies,
encouraging our family and friends to get involved, working the phones
lines and canvassing precincts to elect conservatives, and more. In
short, we must become heroes for the republic.
The
cancer of progressivism didn't start with Barack Obama and his corrupt
Congress, but we can see to it that it ends with them. We must never
forget the outrage we felt that Sunday in March when these people forced
this legislative monstrosity upon us. Let that outrage spur your inner
hero on.