My mother married an evangelical
Christian. And I was suddenly made aware
that our country was locked in a mortal battle for its very soul. At least it felt that way. And for the first time I had an opinion.
In my first presidential election I supported George Bush in his
re-election campaign. Which, of course,
he lost.
While in college I explored my political interests. First step was joining the Model UN debate team. Where we spent all year preparing for debates to be held at the UN in New York. I also went to a few Young Republican meetings and was eventually elected to the student government association. What I learned from these activities shaped my political outlook.
The Model UN taught me directly how much appearance has an effect on
success. We hear that all our lives but
I finally got to live that reality. It
also taught me how the sausage is made, which isn't pretty. The Young Republicans taught me that I just
wasn't like them in some fundamental way.
They were very judgmental of people who disagreed with them. There was a harshness to their views I didn't
share. I was much more interested in the
philosophy, the ideas, than some crusade.
Student government
taught me the most. Our elected body was
split between the Black Caucus (democrats) and the Young Republicans. A divide that never made sense to me. The body mostly debated national issues. I ended up in a small, quiet, moderate
minority. We'd sit together and roll our
eyes. The most often point I stood up to
make would be that our current discussion was wasting everyone's time. Very little of what we did helped our student
body.
I was also on the Ways
and Means committee. Which was really
the only committee that mattered. We
took the duly collected student fees and passed them out to the worthy. And I was there to represent the Model UN
debate team. I made this clear to
everyone early on. There was no quid pro quo with my professor, it was
just understood. As a member of a debate
team I was expected to win my debate.
I was moderately successful
for the Model UN. I kept our team from
being defunded but I didn't increase funding.
Having played my card, I was on the sidelines for much of the rest of the
budget fight. But it was all very
political. The two sides who fought in
public were quite happy to trade money behind closed doors. And worthy causes that didn't play the game
got nothing. Halfway through my term the
appropriations were finished. And I was
disgusted with the whole process, including my part. I tendered my resignation.
It was around this time
that I started having conversations with my brother about libertarianism. It really fit with how I
was felling. Having been on the inside just a
tiny bit, I couldn't identify with either major party. I started reading up on F. A. Hayek and taking
out copies of Reason magazine. And by the 1996 election I voted Libertarian for
the first time. Seeing no difference
between Bush and Gore I didn't even bother to vote in the 2000 election.
The lesson I've taken
from my experiences is that people basically fall within the 80/20 rule. The Democrats, the Republicans, share many of the same core
values. What they disagree on is largely aesthetics. And yet they all seem to hate
each other. Is it evolutionary to hate
the other? Or are we just that easily
manipulated? Or do we actually enjoy
hating other people? I don't have any
answers. I just don't want to be part of it.
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