A conversation about politics gets
most people uptight,
When you start talking about the
left and the right.
I remember the first time I discovered
the game,
And thinking it was more interesting
than a beautiful dame.
A lighthearted study can make it
seem fun,
I've always preferred thinking
to shooting a gun.
(I say the word "gun" softly when
liberals are near,
`Cause gun control is an issue
which to them is very dear).
A conservative is a man who is happy
with life,
As long as every other man has
some kids and a wife.
But the man who is different and
doesn't hold to his view
Is considered a radical who belongs
in a zoo.
It's exciting to watch political
opposites clash,
Within five minutes, the topic
turns to "who has the cash."
"Survival of the fittest" is the
right winger's creed,
Just hearing such talk makes the
liberal's heart bleed.
"Though I'm not a socialist," the
knee-jerk liberal will say,
"`Laissez-faire capitalism' is
not the best way.
"Karl Marx had the right idea when
he uttered his creed,
`From each according to his abilities,
to each according to his needs'."
This kind of conflict goes on for
awhile,
Until the charges and rhetoric
have created a pile.
But what some, looking on, fail
to understand,
This is the talk of a free people
in a free land.
Second to money, the subject which
generates the most heat
Is a three letter word progressives
want to do in the street.
Most everyone agrees sex is healthy
and fun:
The divisive question is "With
many or with one?"
Conservatives argue, "Only heterosexual
monogamous acts."
As usual, liberals don't agree
with the conservatives' Biblical facts.
The liberal cries out, "Do it with
one or with many"
And "It's my business if my partner's
name is Penny or Benny."
Old-fashioned traditionalists aren't
afraid to declare,
"Actions have consequences!" with
a self-righteous stare.
Libertines get angry when moral
types strut.
With control of the press, the
libs verbally kick butt.
Control of the press is a luxury
of the left,
Leaving those on the right forlorn
and bereft.
But ask mossback conservatives
why the media is not theirs,
And they look at you with the most
dumbfounded stares.
Oh, I think I know the answer to
that paradox,
Conservatives have to spend a lot
of money for locks --
Locks which safeguard their material
wealth
Which they have accumulated for
the interest of self.
I know liberals also love money...
don't think I'm a ding dong,
But they are more willing to spend
some "trying to right every wrong."
The bending of minds and reality
is their stock-in-trade;
Their utopian vision requires a
past which must fade.
If conservatives and liberals were
all that we had,
The political landscape would be
fairly well clad;
But at least two other factions
share the land,
Libertarian and populist are the
names on each brand.
"Total freedom from government,"
is the libertarian's cry.
This creed nearly makes him an
anarchistic guy.
Free markets without Big Brother
would satisfy him,
As long as we can also fulfill
our every sexual whim.
When a libertarian discusses economics,
conservatives smile,
But when our bodies are the issue,
he's a liberal for awhile.
He claims, "Pure anarchy is not
wanted by his kind,"
But reduction of government in
any area suits him just fine.
The populist, on the other hand,
is a simpler breed.
"The little guy is getting the
shaft", is the heart of his creed
"Too much wealth in the hands of
a few," is his constant plea,
The system has been fixed against
you and against me.
More government regulation of the
economy would solve many ills,
Redistribute the wealth, so we
can all pay our bills.
Bigger government can be the peoples'
best friend,
The liberals are political brothers
in achieving this end,
But populists and liberals fight
like cats and dogs,
With "traditional American values,"
the conversation bogs.
The populist would also use big
government to do
The regulating of the individual
behavior of me and of you.
This puts populists and conservatives
in the same boat:
With social and moral issues, they
both stay afloat.
But "morally sinking the country"
they both agree,
Are the liberals and libertarians,
at the bottom of the sea.
Now the last question which we've
failed to address
Is why Americans hate politics,
which may be anybody's guess.
But America has two parties, not
four or even three,
Trying to keep all these political
factions happy.
Conservatives and libertarians are
fighting to see
Which individualists will control
the Republican Party.
The collectivist Democrats' internal
struggle never passes.
Liberals and populists are always
battling for the party of the asses.
All of this political friction keeps
America healthy:
We'll always have the immoral as
well as the wealthy.
As long as we limit our politics
to parties of two,
It will seem a ball of confusion
to me and to you.
This political poem is not meant
to shame,
But rather to describe the players
in the game.
Politics is a compromise, it's
a game of give and take.
No one can say it is a simple piece
of cake.
Liberal, conservative, libertarian
and populist too,
One of them is me and another is
probably you.
"The political scales are balanced
-- if you're not sure, don't bother it;
If you don't know where you stand
by now, you're probably a moderate.
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