Rhea
This small part of your post is why i dont like the guys in DC. They the, liberal side, have tried to changed the meaning of words.
–
My post was not to say, because I do not think it, that the "guys in DC" should think this way. I think the people in DC and the state houses should handle the people's money with reverence, humility and the good stewardship that one would expect from a person handling one's gifts to others.
The fact that they do not do this is not something I support or that I fail to actively try to change. I do not support poor stewardship and I do try to actively change that poor stewardship.
MY quote about seeing it as a gift is from *ME*. That I see it as a gift to you when I voluntarily pay my taxes. You live in texas, so you live in a state that receives more in federal dollars than it pays. I live in a state that gives more in federal dollars than it receives. So literally, *my* voluntarily paid taxes go to *you* quite directly.
*I* view my tax obligation as a gift, in part. Part of it is for national upkeep and that is my "share" or "obligation" to pay for my parts of what I want my country to be able to provide (roads, military, power grid, etc); my share of the benefits that I and everyone receives. The rest of it is my *gift* to places like Texas that need more than they can afford. And to individuals who need food, shelter and health care.
I never said, and certainly never meant, that politicians should view my gift as a gift
to them. No, they should view it as they are stewards of my gifts to others, and that is a trust. I have always been active about getting that trust to be even better handled. It is far from perfect.
But your reply that you don't think of it as a gift because you haven't freely given it gets to the difference between us. Not a bad difference, just a difference. I do give freely to those in need. The government is a way to reach ALL those in need, not just the ones around the neighborhood. It reaches to the ones in need who have no good parents, who have no good role models, who do not live in areas wealthy enough to be charitable, who are not served by local programs. You feel that churches are very efficient. I don't see that evidence. I see the evidence that the government program, as inefficient as they are, are still better at reaching ALL of the needy than local programs alone.
So you don't think of your taxes as a gift (the portion beyond infrastructure), and I gather from your comments that it's because you think government is bad at it. I disagree, the data seems to show otherwise.
But I will argue that you're following a false logic if you say my statement above is what's wrong with DC politicians. Because my statement was not ABOUT DC politicians, it was about me and my outlook. It would be incorrect for you to assume I think DC politicans either should expect me to want to give OR that I think they do a perfect job and that I sit back and take it. My comment did not imply either meaning. DC politicans should indeed be (nearly infinitely) more humble with my money AND I will continue to be a constant activist to try to drive that home, so that my gift to my fellow Americans can be used in ways that promote the public good and not be wasted.