Tuesday, August 9, 2011

What Kind of House?

Dog Trot House

     The 'Dog Trot' house.  A common residence in the late 19th Century throughout the South.  In the hot summers, it was a cool place for the family to congregate.  It was quite common for folks to sleep on quilt pallets in the breezeway in the days before air conditioning or even electric fans. 
    
      Houses have been used as metaphors for families, communities and nations for thousands of years.  "A house divided against itself cannot stand."   'Build your house on a rock foundation, not on sand.'  These two come to mind immediately.  I'm sure there are others. 

       In today's political climate in our country, it would seem that our 'house' is divided as it has not been since the Civil War.  Friends and family members are sometimes literally 'at each other's throats' because of differing political views.  Our two main parties are attacking each other with the 'steely knives' of inflammatory rhetoric.  Some even going so far as to refer to the other side as 'traitors' and 'treasonous' because they are convinced beyond reason that the viewpoint that differs from their own is either 'stupid' or just plain wrong.  I'm reminded of the old saw, "A stopped clock is right twice a day."

        Conservatives insist that 'out of control spending' is the reason we're in the mess we're in today.  Progressives cite 'tax cuts for the rich' and unfunded wars as the main reasons.  As with most arguments, the truth is somewhere in the middle.  Actually, both sides are right; because it's an 'all of the above' choice as to why things are so bad.  The difference comes in as to the solution to the problem.

       Generally, when two of our children get into an argument, the only fair thing to do is to recognize that both have to 'win.'  In the current argument in Washington, curing the deficit and debt problem cannot be achieved in any reasonable way without a 'balanced approach.'  The 'Vast Middle' must be found.  Most economists agree that allowing the 'Bush Tax Cuts' to expire, thereby raising tax rates by just less than 4 %, would eliminate the bulk of the deficit within the 10 year time frame.  Ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would cut the current massive spending in the Defense budget.  Eliminating wasteful and unneeded military projects would add to the savings.

       So, just as the 'Dog Trot House' provided a cool and inviting place to escape the summer heat... maybe our elected leaders could 'cool off' and meet in the middle.


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