Politics has everything to do with morality and nothing to do with the way things are. Politics, simply put, are qualitative and not quantitative; they are a state of being and a state of mind. One cannot help but whole heartedly defend one’s stance on an issue without citing some basic, foundational morality. However, one cannot accept a political standing without calling more beliefs into question; they didn’t ask which moralities belong on which side, they split them down the middle causing us to become dissonant and defensive, as well as assimilating our own beliefs to conform completely to one side or the other.
The game of politics is of a gain-lose style; one can pick any “party” they believe fits them best, but that morality is only the attractant. There is a very simple break down of classes: upper class, middle class, and working class. Given that people and their history is cyclical every hundred years or so (in this country anyway), people should (hence the morality of politics) pick the political ideology based on benefits. The Republican Party does not benefit somebody of the working class, and in fact no party does, but the political ideology of a commune does. The working class is the first step into society after nature; they are better off working co-existing with one another as opposed to competing with one another.
The middle class is being torn in two not only because of the great morality divide but also because of the competition within the class. Beneficially speaking, those within the middle class are better off keeping with a democratic ideology. This would not only maintain the middle class, much in the same way as a communist working class, but it would also help solidify the defining barriers so many politicians and political zealots have been trying to do for the sake of judgment. There is no doubt that the upper class is in power and thus has the optimal gain as conservatively minded ideologists; they earned their property, based on a compact out of fear thousands of years ago, and regardless of any religious affiliation material goods hold the highest supremacy.
Political morality is based purely on one foundation belief: money is power. Based on this sole belief, a new morality for politics emerges: ideological beneficence. The power no longer belongs to the people, thus any voting doesn’t make much of a difference anymore; however, siding with one or a group of a benefiting political party would ultimately put one into the gain, whether it’s noticeable or not. Political parties no longer have classicalist beliefs or foundations and have only benefited those in direct contact with the party in power; it’s time that the people realizing their common enemy is not those with opposing beliefs but those who have been gaining from our division. Power is definite and as one gains, another loses; it’s no longer about who is right or wrong, this morality has been dated and now is obsolete. One’s beliefs are no longer in question, it’s time one takes back their beliefs and start reaping the benefits of being human again.
This country wasn’t built on family values or freedom; it was built on property.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
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