When kindness is against the law

[T]he fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such there is no law.- St. Paul In the face of domination of the world by the Roman Empire, the most energetic of the Christian apostles asserted that moral virtue was still lawful. Of course, Paul knew that virtues were not widely practiced or held in high regard. Are virtues any more safe to practice now than they were two millenia ago?

This question may strike some as perverse, for are we not living in a society, as Abraham Lincoln once said, "conducing more essentially to the ends of civil and religious liberty than any of which the history of former times tells us[?]" And are we not committed to caring for the less fortunate through vast government programs?

It is true that, while the tribulations of the human condition are not absent in our country, the daily practice of the virtues by millions of people–in families, at work and play, in government and the private sector–make self government not only possible but eminently desirable.

But no blessing can be taken for granted. Virtuous living, like any other great and good thing, requires practice and even habituation. Are there any threats here and now to the continuing beneficial effects of human virtue in our midst?

Let’s focus on the virtue of kindness. Some years back, genuine concern was expressed about the utter lack of kindness implicit in the random acts of violence too often committed in our inner cities, college campuses, places of business and governmental offices. The not entirely playful response by some was to urge everyone to engage in random acts of kindness instead.

No doubt the suggestion was well meant. But a moment’s reflection makes it clear that violence can be discouraged much more by habitual acts of kindness. In a well-governed political community such as ours, it is no accident that people tend to be kinder to each other than in tyrannical regimes in which the rulers treat their subjects as if they were a lower order of being.

Indeed, when slavery was legal in America, even the most benevolent slave master was free to indulge his whims. Thomas Jefferson, a slave master himself, wrote, "The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions, the most unremitting despotism on the one part, and degrading submissions on the other."

Classical philosophy and Christianity both teach that friendship is the cement that holds societies together. The Greek philosopher Aristotle observed that democratic societies, which are based on the principle of equality, are more conducive to friendship than any other. Jesus taught us where we can to make friends out of enemies.

Those of us living today, as Lincoln observed in 1838, "toiled not in the acquirement or establishment of [these fundamental blessings]." As in antebellum days, so in ours, we have the obligation to pass moral virtue on to our descendants.

The most fundamental threat to the lawfulness of the most gracious virtues lies in widespread rejection of what Jefferson called "the moral law.". Clearly, portrayal of gratuitous sex and violence in the popular arts does not teach kindness. For if other persons are merely the objects of one’s unbridled will, no kindness will be shown except by accident or cold calculation.

The rebel, the person with "an attitude," has been glorified in movies and television for years. More, the Constitution and laws of the country have been perverted by the special protections that have been carved out for anyone who does as he pleases with no regard for the rights of others. We are enjoined by elites to be kind to such obnoxious persons rather than expecting them to be kind to us.

The massive government programs that take the responsibility of caring for the needy from families, friends and neighborhoods and assign it to impersonal bureaucracies have made kindness almost unnecessary. Kindness depends on reciprocity as well as good intentions, for people more freely come to the aid of others when they know that, if circumstances were reversed, they could count on that aid. In fact, we are coerced into being compassionate by the law. Is that kind?

There is no law against kindness or the other virtues, but we are living on the edge, so to speak, pushing matters to such an extreme that, as Alfie was inclined to believe in the popular song of that name, "only fools are kind" and "it is wise to be cruel."

How Ritter got my vote

John's Denver Post column 7/19(Salida – Nov. 15, 2010) What a year it’s been. Who knew my fellow Republicans would be so unforgiving? Here I am, exiled from Denver’s red suburbs and hiding out in Ed Quillen’s attic, merely for having endorsed Gov. Bill Ritter in the recent election. Where’s the sin in that? It was an unusual move for unusual times. Since the fall of the economy and the rise of Obama, ours have been unusual indeed. Ritter “grew in office,” as they say, but he grew rightward and became that rarity, an irresistible Democrat. Smitten, I signed up. The family disowning me was harsh.

Our governor’s reinvention of himself began in late 2009. Democrats everywhere were getting panicky as the recession dragged on, prolonged by Obama’s clumsy mixture of taxes, regulations, bureaucracy, and bailouts. Republicans won the governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey. Ritter’s poll numbers and fundraising were anemic. He fled the state, ostensibly for some golf at Hilton Head.

Then came the confessional press conference. Boy Scout Bill wasn’t vacationing in South Carolina after all. He had followed his heart to Chile. Stolen hours at the mansion with an old college econ book had nerved him for the secret weekend in Santiago, tutoring with Chicago-trained free marketeers. “My soul mate is Milton Friedman,” he gushed. The YouTube video got a million hits in 48 hours.

Statehouse reaction was mixed. Adam Schrager of 9News said Ritter’s rift with the White House made him the new Ralph Carr, a profile in courage. GOP chairman Dick Wadhams voiced suspicion, but admitted he’d prefer a Ritter roaming right to a Schwarzenegger lurching left. Speaker Terrance Carroll, an ordained minister, offered the governor pastoral counseling.

But as the 2010 session began, legislators had their hands full with what Ritter called his “New Democratic agenda on old Democratic principles.” He called for a zero corporate tax to attract jobs, a rollback of the unpopular 2009 vehicle fees, and a drilling-friendly rewrite of oil and gas rules. Dems should take their cue from the frugal Grover Cleveland, the tax-cutting JFK, and the deregulating Jimmy Carter, the governor said.

The ex-president was furious, however, when Ritter remarked on “Meet the Press” that Carter’s warning about “inordinate fear of communism” was off base. “My party’s much bigger problem, including the current president,” asserted Ritter, “has been inordinate fear of capitalism. I’m out to change that.” The Coloradan’s popularity shot up when the Georgian angrily counter-attacked.

“Our QB calls his own plays,” boasted a Ritter campaign ad after he rescinded the executive order for labor unions in state government, redirected money from Planned Parenthood to crisis pregnancy centers, and urged voters to toss four activist justices off the state Supreme Court. New York Mayor Robert Wagner, who once ran for another term on a reform platform against his own previous term, had nothing on our Bill.

Is it any wonder some of us Republicans decided this fearless troublemaker was worth reelecting, if only to bedevil Obama, Huey Long-style? Ritter was on a roll. He put Bill Owens and Hank Brown on an economic recovery board with Charlie Ergen and Norm Brownstein. He named Lt. Gov. Barbara O’Brien his school voucher czar and replaced her on the ticket with GOP Rep. Amy Stephens, whom he called “Sarah Palin South.”

Politically written off not long ago, the Democratic incumbent led as election day approached, bucking a national trend of revulsion against his party that looked to rival 1994. At the end, though, Ritter’s better-funded and more credibly conservative Republican challenger surged past him, and Colorado went red again.

Tough luck for our gamecock Guv, but no great heartbreak for me. This was one election where good ideas couldn’t lose. Can I come home now, honey?

Fighting for the American dream

Slated on Backbone Radio, July 19 Listen every Sunday, 5-8pm on 710 KNUS, Denver... 1460 KZNT, Colorado Springs... and streaming live at 710knus.com.

One of the very few things I have in common with President Obama is that we've both met Samuel Wurzelbacher and found him an outspoken, common-sense guy. But it's safe to say I enjoyed the experience in June more than Barack did last October -- since this is the guy whom America knew within hours as Joe the Plumber, a huge headache to the Democratic candidate from then to election day. Did Samuel, or Joe, make Obama boast about "spreading the wealth around" with new taxes and giveaways? No, the candidate did that on his own, and since being inaugurated he's been true to form. So has Wurzelbacher, who spoke in Colorado last month and will talk with our listeners this Sunday.

** Joe the Plumber joins me on Backbone Radio to talk about his book, "Fighting for the American Dream," and his adventures since that fateful day on the ropeline in Ohio.

** Plus Scott McInnis, former congressman who is seen as the man to beat in next year's Republican primary for Governor of Colorado.

** Plus economist Paul Prentice of UCCS and the Centennial Institute, spelling out the moral case for capitalism over command & control economics.

** Plus Gary Marx on this week's battle over a Supreme Court seat in DC, along with Bill Banta and Matt Arnold on next year's battle over four of them in Colorado.

Funny thing about the American dream; it doesn't come by dreaming. It comes by working, preparing, sacrificing, daring -- and sometimes, yes, by fighting. That's where the backbone comes in. What a great time to be alive!

Yours for the plumbing that flushes liberalism, JOHN ANDREWS

Judicial Reform: Hear the Podcast

Learn about practical remedies for our often-unaccountable judiciary when you listen to "Under the Dome," my issue special for July, podcast on this site and airing 7/16 at 7pm on 710 KNUS and streaming live at 710knus.com. Click this link to hear the podcast.

Why do most Colorado judges routinely win another term from the voters, even though many people worry that our courts are out of control? What’s different about next year’s round of judicial retention elections from anything we’ve seen before? How can all of us do our part toward improving the state Supreme Court?

"Under the Dome: Judicial Reform 2010" looks at the answers. It's my conversation with attorney and constitutional scholar Bill Banta, a former member of the State Judicial Performance Commission and long active in the Colorado Bar Association, along with citizen activist Matt Arnold, campaign chairman for a group called Clear the Bench Colorado.

Kill the energy tax

"Obama’s job-killing energy tax must be defeated in the Senate," says John Andrews in the July round of Head On TV debates. But Susan Barnes-Gelt says Obama's cap and trade bill will create jobs and help save the planet. Who can be against that? John on the right, Susan on the left, also go at it this month over the Honduras, Sotomayor, Ritter, and Colorado's fiscal future. Head On has been a daily feature on Colorado Public Television since 1997. Here are all five scripts for July: 1. CAP & TRADE BILL MOVES TO SENATE

Susan: Obama's cap and trade bill, heads to the Senate after squeaking through the House in a close vote. Designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and thus mitigate global warming, the bill is an important step in insuring our planet is viable for our kids and their kids.

John: Cap and trade is the biggest energy tax we’ve ever seen. It will destroy jobs, hurt the poor, expand government, and have no impact on global warming or cooling or whatever Chicken Little calls it this week. House Democrat John Salazar voted no. Senate Democrats Bennet and Udall should too.

Susan: Cap & Trade will diminish emissions gradually, allowing time to convert to renewable, non-polluting production. The initiative will promote growth and create jobs. There's no future for industries emitting massive amounts of carbon into our air. We're way past the tipping point.

John: The depth of a brutal recession is no time to burden the economy with higher prices for electricity and gasoline as a result of cap and trade. This hands a huge advantage to China, India, and other world competitors. Obama’s job-killing energy tax must be defeated in the Senate.

2. COUP IN HONDURAS

Susan: President Obama showed good judgment by not meddling in the internal affairs of Honduras. When President Manuel Zelaya refused to leave office, due to term limits, leftist leader Roberto Micheletti took control of the government. The political infighting must be resolved among the parties - without American interference.

John: Obama has wimped out on his second big foreign policy test of the summer. His third test, if you count his weak-willed meeting with the Russians. In Iran, our pathetic president failed to condemn the tyrant Khameini. In Honduras, he failed to condemn the would-be tyrant Zelaya. Bad show, for shame.

Susan: I wish I had your clarity about the good guys and the bad - whether Honduras, Russia or Iran. Obama is restoring US credibility throughout Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa. His temperament, civility, intelligence and compassion acquit him - and us - well.

John: Moral clarity in US foreign policy has indeed gone missing, and it’s a sad thing to see. Under Obama, the world can no longer be confident of America as a firm friend to liberty and democracy. The President making nice with Putin, Medvedev, Chavez and the Castro brothers is disgusting.

3. SOTOMAYOR HEARINGS

Susan: Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor have begun. This experienced jurist will be confirmed and Republican naysayers run the risk of further alienating the country's fastest growing voting block by opposing her. Her record reflects moderation, extreme competence and judicial restraint. What more is there?

John: Susan, please, give Hispanic people credit for knowing the difference between an ethnic slur and a policy disagreement. Really. Millions of Americans of all colors and parties didn’t want Judge Sotomayor promoted because she doesn’t seem to share our belief in limited constitutional government. That’s huge.

Susan: Sotomayor is the most experienced jurist to be appointed to the Supremes - ever. Aside from the petty, borderline racist posturing of Senators like Alabama's Jeff Sessions. Republican Lindsay Graham got it right when he pointed out that elections have consequences. R's need a rhetoric redo!

John: By the time you see this, Sonia Sotomayor will probably be confirmed. Congratulations to her on a remarkable achievement from humble beginnings. The first Hispanic justice might have been Miguel Estrada, years ago, if Democrats hadn’t blocked him. American self-government is a rough game, but glorious even so.

4. FISCAL STABILITY COMMISSION

John: The Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights has saved Colorado’s fiscal fanny again and again. TABOR is like a stern mom who makes the careless kids think twice. Naturally the juvenile party, Democrats, can’t stand that. Their so-called Fiscal Stability Commission is a ruse to remove taxpayer protections. Don’t be fooled.

Susan: That's the kind of partisan myopia that will doom the Commission's recommendations. Truth is more than ¾'s of our budget is consumed by prisons, education and healthcare. It will grow to more than 90-percent by 2014. Revenue restrictions and budget mandates are strangling Colorado.

John: You want to see strangling? Look at California, where they repealed the taxpayer protections, goosed the deficit, drove away business and population to places like this, and are now paying their bills with IOU’s. The spending lobby will put Colorado’s neck in the same noose if we give up TABOR.

Susan: Colorado's issue is more complex than TABOR. Conflicting statutory mandates have turned the budget into a Giordian knot - impossible to untangle. It's going to take an independent economist - not the partisan commission - and civic leadership to set a course. It's the Governor's biggest challenge.

5. GOVERNOR’S RACE

John: The economy is not improving. The state budget is worsening. Gasoline prices are rising. Nothing personal against nice guy Bill Ritter -- but his leadership as governor the past three years has been underwhelming. Republicans think they can do much better, and even Democrats are lukewarm. Let the campaign begin.

Susan: Ritter's policies didn't get us into this mess and a change in partisan leadership won't get us out. The R's will have a food fight of a primary. The base will split. Independents will stick with Ritter. Bennet would be easier to defeat - if only the R's had a viable bench.

John: Did I mention Democrats are lukewarm on Bill Ritter? Susan’s an example. History will marvel at this governor’s clueless response to the recession and the budget deficit. Republican challengers Scott McInnis and Josh Penry offer decisive leadership by contrast. Businessman Dan Maes is also running. Advantage GOP.

Susan: Ritter has learned a good deal in the past 3 years about navigating the political waters at the Capitol. The R's will have a tough time pulling it together after a bruising 3-way primary. Ritter will prevail and his second term will be better than his first.