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NosuchRedditor5 karma

He outlines much of this in his books, which are all very good reads BTW.

For example, the many government agencies that make regulations with the force of law need to be curtailed. The only body intended by the Constitution to create law is the congress, and they are forbidden from delegating this responsibility, specifically because the people have recourse if elected officials don't represent them well, but no recourse with unelected officials at the EPA, or OSHA, etc. Based on this view, any regulations created by this unelected organizations are unconstitutional.

Lawmakers need to be answerable to the people for our constitution to work, and that is currently broken.

NosuchRedditor4 karma

They are all available as podcasts within about 24 hours.

NosuchRedditor1 karma

Give a quick transparency score on a scale of one to ten of the past four U.S.presidents and their administrations.

NosuchRedditor1 karma

Because we all know what a bastion of free and open ideas the college campus is today, with 'safe spaces' and 'trigger words'. Clearly, there are some ideas your child will not be exposed to unless you expose them to it.

It's a parent's job to mold and influence their children's beliefs. It's the disconnect from this idea that has brought our nation to where it is today.

NosuchRedditor1 karma

Several problems with your comment from a conservative perspective.

You mention that Congress 'drags its feet'. This is a feature, not a bug. Jefferson originally suggested that all new laws being considered by the Congress be allowed to sit, unchanged for a year, before being put to a vote. We don't want Congress to move any faster.

Second, the problem is almost self solving from a conservative standpoint. Restore the ability to create laws only to Congress, and hundreds, if not thousands of bureaucrats would not have jobs. Again, that's a feature, not a bug.