I Want To Be A Republican So Badly
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

The dumb part wasn’t to invade Iraq; it was to maintain a notable presence there for nearly a decade after we had captured Saddam Hussein. Dubya described our presence there as a way to infuse our culture and lifestyle into Iraq, but the problem is that Iraq has a lot of religious extremists in the country, who didn’t welcome the sudden change we were trying to create. As a result, resentment grew for us grew throughout the country, and little progress ended up being made while our country plunged into debt.
10 years ago at 1:05 pmWhat, precisely, is conservative about invading a country thousands of miles away, spending trillions of dollars, killing thousands and displacing millions in an effort to bring European Enlightenment era ideas to an artificial country with no background in those Western ideas? And, as Randolph Bourne said, “War is the health of the state.”
10 years ago at 2:49 pmFuck politics
10 years ago at 1:11 pmPolitical apathy that’s exactly what I like to see in today’s youth. Go stick your head in the oven.
10 years ago at 2:40 pmWhat do y’all think of Ben Carson?
10 years ago at 1:25 pmIn 2006 he said he didn’t believe in evolution. That fucker literally does brain surgery for a living and is considered a medical expert but discounts all of the scientific research that points to human evolution.
10 years ago at 3:45 pmHonestly the last two weeks haven’t been so terrible. The chive articles are slowing down and we had 2 intellectual articles about important things that go against the traditional image of the frat douche that was the idiot representation of this website for so long. Thank you sterling, an up vote isn’t enough. While the IGBOTDs have been weak, the columns have generally been maintaining my faith in this website as a reliable source of both entertainment and… dear god don’t make me say it… logical sense?
10 years ago at 2:05 pmRand Paul 2016
10 years ago at 2:14 pmThat might actually be the most intelligent statement made by anyone aligned with the GOP. Kudos.
10 years ago at 2:18 pmThe central question is the role of government in our lives. If you were a libertarian, perhaps you could revisit the non-aggression principle, which is the core of libertarianism. In other words, don’t initiate force to solve problems. Thinking through this principle would lead you to a radical minarchism (see Ron Paul, Ludwig Von Mises and the Jeffersonian Founders) or anarcho-capitalism (see Murray Rothbard and Hans Hoppe’s work). Ultimately, I see this post as a way to work out what you see as the role of government, which is good to see. I simply wanted to put forward the libertarian view.
10 years ago at 2:28 pmTRUMP 2016
10 years ago at 3:21 pmI’ve always considered myself a conservative on almost all issues and come election time I spend a fair to moderate amount of time outside stretching before heading inside the voting booth to proudly pull the hell out of the straight republican ticket. Having said that, I always believe there’s room to grow and adapt when dealing with anything,including ones party. Legalize the Devils lettuce and tax the absolute hell out of it. Abortion I can’t come off of. How can the majority of you consider bacteria on Mars as being sign of life but not a newly conceived fetus. Not trying to bible slap anyone but fuck you for that you sick bastards. I’m truly perplexed on all the gayness as I don’t in anyway agree with it, especially taking holy vowels from a book that clearly define the act of two men or two women laying together as wrong, even if they are two smoking hot chicks,(sorry dorn) a little too far gone on cheap alcohol and daddy issues. My firm belief in the constitution and the first amendment keeps me from being able to all together condem the act. I may disagree with it, but I’ll fight to death for your right to do it. I would also urge any advocates of slashing spending on military to take themselves and their principals to their closest warzone and stack themselves neatly around the closest unguarded foxhole.
10 years ago at 3:22 pmI can tell the majority of you have put in a fair amount of time into this by the facts and figures I see quoted, most of which it must have taken searching atleast 2 pages on the Google machine to find, but that is encouraging. The change in this country will begin not with a Kenyan senator from Illinois, it will begin with the youth of today. Now call the damn graduates names and let’s hit the bar
Parties don’t matter, because it’s split almost evenly between Democrats and Republicans, it’s the independents that matter. Thankfully with the policies, and the republican candidates in the last 6 years they keep pushing the independents left.
10 years ago at 4:28 pmIf that’s the case then why did the republicans win the last mid-term election? I know you are rooting for your side (the left) to win, but you can’t ignore the scoreboard.
10 years ago at 1:16 am