I Want To Be A Republican So Badly

Screen Shot 2015-06-19 at 10.03.47 AM

Republicans are the worst.

Okay, are you significantly riled up yet? I was once told that if you had to give a speech, you should start it with an incendiary first line to captivate your audience. Given that 97% of TFM’s readership identifies as a Republican according to a poll I just made up, I think I accomplished that. In reality, what I mean is that I’d really like to vote the party line, but the party is really fucking me. I know, I usually tell dick jokes, but I think it’s time for some real talk.

Here’s the thing. I was born and raised in Texas, in a socially conservative family that didn’t talk about politics. In fact, my parents went out of their way to not tell me and my brothers their political views. But because of my surroundings, I was a straight up neo-con from age 14-18. I voted for Dubya in my sixth grade election. Then I went to college, started a triple major in economics, finance, and accounting, read Ayn Rand, became a libertarian, and worked on Ron Paul’s 2008 campaign. I thought I had it all figured out. Hell, I was the editor of our business review, and made my article advocating for the gold standard a front page piece. Then I switched to a straight political science major with a focus in international relations and learned some sense.

So, seven years later, where am I now, politically? Well, if you ask my roommates, I’m a liberal, apparently. In spite of the many times I’ve tried to explain my political leanings to them, they just assume because I’m willing to at least entertain the economics of single payer healthcare, I’m clearly a left-wing ding dong who thinks Jon Stewart is a non-biased source of news for young people. But in fact, I have been, and will continue to be, registered as a Republican. Why? Because I’m really hoping that the party that used to have most things right can get back to that point. I consider myself a conservative, and I believe that the party that allegedly represents that has been fucking up for at least the last 25 years. Here’s why.

The economy is allegedly what Republicans stake their beliefs on. Lower taxes, balanced budgets, deregulation, lower government spending, individual responsibility, and privatization. The problem is that some of those things have become more popular over others in recent iterations of Republican control. Lower taxes is great as a concept, but we still have to pay for the shit that we’re committing to. So we should commit to fewer things, right? Fox News pundits love to mention the National Debt Clock so much, I’m pretty sure they would let it fuck their spouse if it wanted to. You wanna know one of the main reasons why our debt is so insane? Military spending. As a dude who hates Al-Qaeda and wanted just military action against its supporters, Iraq was a stupid fucking decision, and has cost us more tax dollars than any meager social safety net has.

Speaking of social safety nets, let’s start with entitlements. Social Security is broken. Republicans seem to trumpet this fact more than they try to fix it, but I’ll give them the win, given that Democrats don’t even seem to be worried. Regular welfare is so small compared to the actual problem that I don’t even care. Unemployment and food stamps become a politicized issue every time a conservative candidate talks (welfare queens and all that), but the percentage of the budget taken up by those programs is so insignificant compared to the abuses of the system that it ends up lower on my totem pole of problems than the Kardashians. That’s right, I’d rather government intervention in reality TV show programming before we touch poverty entitlements — that’s how insignificant they are.

Okay, so social issues. The big three are gay marriage, marijuana legalization, and abortion. This is where age is a factor. By the way, for how acceptable weed was for the entirety of the ‘60s and ‘70s, I still don’t understand how this is still an issue. You’d think that Baby Boomers would have smoked enough weed in their day to not give a shit about it. Either way, the answer to all three is easy, and conveniently the same. If you wanna piss off old people, who are admittedly the Republican base right now (I wonder why), then sure, go the wrong way on these. But if you want to survive as a party, guess what? Not only do we as young people not care about any of those three issues, you’re actually on the wrong side of all of them. Even my most right-wing friends are cool with dudes marrying dudes, smoking green on the reg, and helping their one-night-stand with the cost of “taking care of it.”

Young people are your future. You can play to win, or you can play to keep winning. The Cavaliers traded Wiggins for Love. How did that work out for them? Well, Love got hurt, Wiggins balled out, LeBron’s only got probably three great years left, and then your organization’s gonna be shocked when you go back to being a sports punchline for giving up your team’s future in favor of ill-fated short-term success. And for what? Your best player to put everything he had on the court and fall short? Glad that worked out for you.

Another thing: Learn to talk. You’re a fucking politician, you placate people for a living, so I don’t understand how you have made it to your position in life, and still are able to say that women are not physically able to get pregnant from rape. I know high school dropouts who know human anatomy/physiology better than that. And that’s not an isolated incident. I’m convinced there is a pandemic of foot-in-mouth disease among Republican politicians these days, and if the only prescription is anything other than more cowbell, we might be fucked.

I have a lot more to say about this, so y’all can probably expect more from me about this subject in the future. I haven’t even talked about guns, the environment, campaign finance reform, privacy, or most importantly, foreign policy (because it requires a full column of its own). The point is, I’m an old-school conservative in most ways. Barry Goldwater and Grover Cleveland are my dudes. I just also happen to live in the 21st century, and I ask that the people I vote for act accordingly.

Image via Shutterstock

  1. Thetrashness

    Not sure why it’s such a negative to be affiliated with one party and not agree with everything that party days and does

    10 years ago at 10:33 am
  2. Frichael Frordan

    Credit to Aj Walkin: Please take a moment to admire the great LeBron for the special talent he is. It never gets old looking at the King’s history. So many accomplishments Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan will never achieve:
    1.Only player in nba history to quit because of air conditioner
    2.Quit on his team the year after he promises a championship
    3.Dunked on by a high school kid then confiscates the tape
    4.Bail on the dunk contest 9 times
    5.Only able to win a ring with 2 superstars
    6.Play on same team as his moms boyfriend
    7.Average 1.8 pts in the 4th quarter of NBA finals.
    8.Lose not 1, not 2, not 3, but 4 times in the Finals.
    9.Host a national televised TV show to leave his team
    10.Go 2 for 18 in an NBA playoff game.
    11.Get stuffed by a player under 6 feet (Nate Robinson)
    12.Flop every single game in the playoffs
    13.Choke 4 out of 5 finals games by dropping FG% by 18
    14.0 Rings if not for refs calling early fouls on Durant and Westbrook it threw them out of rhythm, made them play soft and sit for big parts of the game which changed the flow and momentum of the finals.
    15. Shoot a terrible percentage in an elimination game at 13-33 to match his finals record of all time.
    16. Calls himself the greatest in the world, only to lose the next game in his hometown.
    17. Insults the fans of the NBA and “their personal problems” because he lost in the NBA finals.
    18. Sits on the floor and whines after a non-call instead of getting back on defense.

    10 years ago at 10:38 am
  3. Nathaniellight

    The only part of this I’m going to address is the social agenda of the GOP that you pointed out. Gay marriage and marijuana legalization should not be a big deal as you said because they don’t affect others lives, however, you will never be able to convince me that abortion should be legal except in extreme cases. Republicans shouldn’t budge on the abortion topic except the ones that say you can’t get pregnant from rape

    10 years ago at 10:39 am
    1. Ted Striker

      The problem with the abortion issue is that roe v wade happened a long time ago and the liberals aint gonna let it change. Better idea would be accept it and move forward

      10 years ago at 11:31 am
  4. SigmaMan

    I think one of the worst problems in this country is the stranglehold that the two party system has on the government. What this ends up creating is the choice to only vote with the group you disagree with the least, the group that has a snowballs chance in hell of winning, or just not vote at all. Not to mention, where you live can completely negate your vote vis a vis the Electoral College. Republican in Massachusetts? Good luck in 2016. Democrat in Texas? Might as well take off work early instead of going to the voting booth. There’s even a position in Congress to specifically make sure that nobody flakes on their party in favor of what might be best for their constituents. No matter where you fall politically, the whole system is based on one of two ideologies. The Constitution is the most beautifully written piece of government literature in the wold, but it’s high time we got rid of an out dated system and elect leaders that actually serve our interests and not the party that funded them to win.

    10 years ago at 10:43 am
    1. maroonandgold

      The two-party system won’t change because all the money in the US is on the extremes of the political spectrum. Each side has adopted their party, and pumps more and more money into it each election. It is by far the biggest problem in American politics, but there is no end in sight.

      10 years ago at 10:50 am
    2. Fratasaurus

      Washington’s Farewell Address said that one of the greatest threats to our future is factionalism/party politics. Seems to be pretty schismatic in today’s age, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Union fell apart within the next 20-30 years.

      10 years ago at 10:56 am
    3. Bastiat

      Do we have a two party system? Or is there some truth in the saying that the Democrats and Republicans are merely two wings on the same bird of prey? After all, neither party is substantially different in terms of political philosophy. Both are for big military spending, the welfare state, economic regulation, and most importantly, central banking. Both parties are fundamentally statist – they see the state as the means to fix most issues in society.

      10 years ago at 2:45 pm
      1. Fratasaurus

        Both parties lie to get votes. It’s as simple as that. Nobody, besides a few individuals, has the nation’s best interests at heart so that we can remain #1 on the world stage. The ship of state can’t be steered by politicians, only by true legislators and statesmen (which are currently shunned right now)

        10 years ago at 3:10 pm
    4. JohnDalyShow

      If you’re actually curious as to why we have a two party system, look up Duverger’s law. It’s due to how our elections work, not because of money.

      10 years ago at 8:25 pm
  5. jayou15

    If you honestly think we can just slash our military spending any further with no repercussion you’re out of your damn mind. First off, the military is already at its smallest size since the post WWII drawdown. Not to mention the threats. ISIS is rampaging across the Middle East, setting up a kingdom of terror that would like nothing more than to see us destroyed. China is expanding aggressively in the Pacific, threatening our allies and also cyber-attacking us 24/7. Russia has engaged in illegal warfare in Ukraine and regularly threatens our NATO allies and flies bombers near our airspace. To think that we don’t need to continue keeping our military at number 1 in the world is lunacy and incredibly naive. Maybe you are a liberal after all.

    10 years ago at 10:44 am
    1. BubbaWatson687

      Military is at its smallest because the Cold War is over. ISIS does not imply the same level of threat that Nazi Germany or the soviets did

      10 years ago at 12:05 pm
    2. BlackballThemAll

      I feel bad for people like you who have been spoon-fed this irrational paranoia. People with minds like yours keep the military-industrial complex running strong and our military over-inflated for capitalism’s sake, not safety’s.

      10 years ago at 12:21 pm
      1. jayou15

        It’s not paranoia. If you had a spine and were actually in the military you might realize that instead of regurgitating liberal bullshit

        10 years ago at 12:25 pm
      2. BlackballThemAll

        Oh so joining the military automatically makes you an expert on international affairs and diplomacy? There’s a lot more to international politics than good guys vs. bad guys. We currently live in the most peaceful period of all human history, and its certainly not because of the trillions of dollars we spend on fighter jets that haven’t even left the airfield. You need to dig a little deeper and turn off Fox News.

        10 years ago at 3:39 pm
      3. JohnDalyShow

        Actually, that spending is exactly why we have relative peace. Have you ever heard of deterrence? Also, exaggerated military spending under Reagan is the main reason the USSR no longer exists.

        10 years ago at 8:28 pm
      4. Ticklemyfrock

        Nuclear powers don’t invade eachother. And the Soviet Union fell apart because of economic warfare, not actual warfare.

        10 years ago at 7:22 pm
    3. USArmy

      You are very narrow minded to believe what you just wrote. There’s ways to reduce military spending without impacting our defense efforts. #1 on my list are government contracts. We are spending a fuck-load of money on contractors when we have trained service members in the same field. However, they aren’t allowed to do their job because of contracts. If you don’t believe me, look at the IT for the military. Thousands of trained NCO’s are stuck doing administrative jobs while civilian counterparts are paid twice as much to do the same job. Let people do the job they were trained to do.

      10 years ago at 10:21 am
  6. Dewey Cox

    What a Quasi-logical-look-at-me Liberal with a blame America, Millennial concept of reality.

    10 years ago at 10:46 am
    1. InHocSignoDrinkes

      If you seriously think that people who criticize how America is run from top to bottom are “blaming America,” you’re wrong. It’s a bullshit and lazy talking point that discredits the fact that you can’t always make improvements to continue on the path to being the best country in the world. The New York Yankees haven’t trotted out the ’27 lineup for the last 90 years, so why shouldn’t we look to always make ourselves better?

      Fuck you and your dispassionate attitude toward our country.

      10 years ago at 10:59 am
  7. Hogarth Huges

    If you want to save money then don’t let gays get married. Not only is it wrong but then they’ll get tax breaks too.

    10 years ago at 10:52 am
    1. Manziels Left Nut

      You are genuinely the most simple minded person I have ever seen, and not in a good way.

      10 years ago at 2:34 am
  8. Fratobilly

    Sterling, you sound like a liberal. But you want to keep the Republican name to save face. You basically want to mix the two parties together. A true Republican would be behind everything the party stands for. Stand for something or you will fall for everything. Fuck you

    10 years ago at 10:54 am
  9. Saber and Key

    Agreed. Especially with single payer healthcare-every other developed country is doing it and most of them have much higher life expectancies than us (minus the Brits, who still smoke like they live in a goddamn chimney). And no, ACA is not single payer healthcare, it’s a shitty halfway step to universal health care that disproportionally fucks over people who have money to pay for healthcare.

    10 years ago at 10:56 am
  10. General_Magnolia124

    As a staffer in for a GOP member of the house, I would argue that the generational point is 100% on point. GOP candidates want so badly to bring in a younger generation of voter, there is only one problem…historically & statistically, (granted, this also depends on the layout of the district a member represents) young people don’t vote. Of the barley 33% of registered voters that actually vote, less than 14% of those voters are between the ages of 18-29. If we want to help the GOP, we have to actually go vote

    10 years ago at 10:56 am
    1. Loess Hills Panther

      I see your celebrity monarch and raise you this:

      “President Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho, porn star and five-time ultimate smackdown wrestling champion! A great man, a great american.”

      10 years ago at 12:45 pm