Comments about ‘George F. Will: Can GOP make voters confront contradictions?’
What You May Have Missed
Most Popular
Across Site
In Opinion
- White House press corps has been turned into...
- George F. Will: Obama takes a page from...
- Facts about the Boy Scouts of America
- My view: MMR vaccine caused my son's autism
- In our opinion: Sharing ideas across schools...
- Letters: Bennett is right
- My view: Fighting the ignoble reign of money
- Letters: No welfare, ever
Most Commented
Across Site
In Opinion
- Letters: No welfare, ever
81 - Letters: Move to the center
37 - Tolerance and the same-sex marriage debate
34 - My view: Why moderates lost the caucus...
33 - Dan Liljenquist: IRS scandal is an...
32 - Richard Davis: Abortion laws should...
29 - Letters: Dismantle IRS
25 - Robert J. Samuelson: Can Americans stem...
21



Well said Mr. Will.
"With the exception of the tea party, there is no real faction out there making the Jacksonian case for an end to special privilege."
But the tea party is as guilty as everyone else. It wants to preserve the privilege of the already dominant corporate class and to further tilt an already skewed system that funnels more and more wealth into the hands of the most wealthy. If the tea party gets its way, we may as well rename this country the Disunited States of Costa Rica. Their program is a recipe for disaster.
I actually think it will make them rethink WHY there is a contradiction.
Looking at the official party platform, It is not exactly friendly to hispanics, many who have close ties to immigrants.
And as far as women. Party Platform states NO ABORTIONS. No exceptions. At least Mitt is smart enough to break from the party on this one.
But, who knows about next time.
And Hispanic and Woman are certainly significant voting blocks.
DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments