[EL] Confounded by Breyer
Steve Hoersting
hoersting at gmail.com
Mon Apr 28 05:12:59 PDT 2014
To get an inkling of what I mean by "[Platonists in the Republican Party]
confusing the Right," see the latest confession from House Leadership
Member Cathy McMorris Rogers.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2014/apr/25/mcmorris-rodgers-says-aca-likely-to-stay/
Or this piece, of April 9, in the *WaPo.*
http://www.elkharttruth.com/discussions/columnists/2014/04/09/The-right-to-health-care.html
Thanks for allowing me to follow-up on what was originally an election-law
point,
Steve
On Sat, Apr 19, 2014 at 8:05 AM, Steve Hoersting <hoersting at gmail.com>wrote:
> I have been working on a novel, Partisan. Here it the first 40th:
>
>
> http://www.amazon.com/Partisan-Stephen-Hoersting-ebook/dp/B00H0PMC68/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1397907816&sr=8-1&keywords=hoersting+partisan
>
> One character is a Supreme Court Justice (to be debuted in a future
> section) of whom I expected readers to say "is too far fetched. No Justice
> believes that." Then J. Breyer issues his cry for "collective speech" and
> darn near scoops me.
>
> I should note that the term neoconservative, in the book's description,
> has nothing to do with Judaism. It has to do with Platonists in the
> Republican party too willing to conscript citizens for massive, collective
> undertakings -- international and domestic -- with little to no concern for
> individual cost.
>
> The book is structured, as an homage, around the rock song, Tom Sawyer.
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANiaZvdGO8U
>
>
> I believe the song's lyrics are an Aristotelian twist on the classic Mark
> Twain character and the characteristic that defines him: Tom Sawyer’s
> ability to get others to do what he thinks they should do. *Betcha can’t
> paint that fence....*
>
>
> The song is about a purposeful man of moral ambition out to change the
> world. He surrounds himself with the political vanguard and works inside
> the system to defeat the things they stand for, the things defeating the
> world: mysticism, statist myth, and cultural drift.
>
>
> He wages philosophic war (symbolized by the musical break in the middle of
> the song), employs wit, an individualistic spirit, and the spit of
> argumentation to create a *new* vanguard; one for freedom this time, for
> rationality, a defense of markets and the rule of law.
>
>
> When he feels he has accomplished his mission, he exits the battlefield.
> He knows no change is permanent; that future generations must also fight to
> retain their freedom. Still he returns to civil society: to trading goods
> in a free market; to the simple frictions of day-to-day living.
>
>
> The song’s line, “the world is the world,” is an expression of Aristotle’s
> statement of the law of identity, A is A.
>
> I hope you enjoy the book,
>
> --
> Stephen M. Hoersting
>
--
Stephen M. Hoersting
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