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Some Good News for the New Year

Rep. Joyce Weston
Grafton 8, Hebron, Holderness, Plymouth

We have had a year of bad news, languishing, and depression. So let’s start the new year with some positive messages.

  • Better broadband is coming to New Hampshire. Congress passed a $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill that will get broadband to places that still don’t have it, like pockets of homes in our area. And, in addition, we’ll get a lot of bridges and roads repaired.
  • Wages in America are growing at about 4% a year (compared with less than 1% a year in the Eurozone), as worker shortages push wages up. This helps women workers in particular, in low-wage jobs in our tourist industry.
  • The Biden administration has created 4.1 million jobs — more than were created in the twelve years of the Trump and George W. Bush administrations combined.
  • Child poverty has been cut in half through the Democrats’ The American Rescue Plan—putting $66 billion into 36 million households. Think of all the kids who no longer go to bed hungry.
  • We are leading the world in economic growth. . . U.S. economic output has jumped more than 7% in the last three months of 2021. Overall growth for 2021 is around 6%, and economists predict growth of around 4% in 2022—the highest numbers the U.S. has seen in decades. China’s growth in the same period will be 4%, and the Eurozone will grow at 2%. "America’s economy improved more in Joe Biden’s first 12 months than any president during the past 50 years." — Matthew Winkler, Bloomberg
  • The Affordable Care Act has raised the total number of Americans who have healthcare coverage to a record 13.6 million. Of that number. 4.6 million were added by the ACA. Obamacare works!
  • And finally, it looks like the current spike of Omicron might be waning soon. We now have beautiful snow, and the ski areas are selling out! Tourism is back. . .

 
Lots to be thankful for in the New Year.

 

The White Mountain Boys

Radical libertarians in New Hampshire have pushed a popular Republican governor to the right. That might save the Democrats a Senate seat. The original post can be seen at https://washingtonmonthly.com/magazine/november-december-2021/the-white-mountain-boys/?fbclid=IwAR1h9RFZNX8XOn7rfIDfLIeO1Qfi_v8awJZKYz07rKFNj7qqwRhS1pkEUZ4#.YYmThyhe3jk.facebook

By Rob Wolfe

One muggy June day in the New Hampshire House of Representatives, Bill Marsh, a Republican from the picturesque lake town of Wolfeboro, rose to buck his party. The chamber, newly under Republican control thanks to an alliance between conservatives and libertarian activists, was considering an amendment that would ban mandatory vaccinations amid a global pandemic—all mandatory vaccinations, covering diseases from COVID-19 to mumps to hepatitis. Marsh, a retired ophthalmologist who has pushed fellow Republicans to take pandemic precautions more seriously, framed his objection as pro-business. He asked, “Why would we interfere with private businesses’ right to protect themselves, their employees, and their patrons?”

The amendment’s sponsor was Terry Roy, a veteran, devout Christian, and self-described constitutional conservative. He spoke next in defense of the measure, launching into a rambling diatribe that referenced child labor, slavery in the American South, “Chinese bats,” and the dangers of fluoridated tap water. “Does my body, my choice only apply to abortion?” he said, according to a House transcript. “What about new advances in science? What if we determine someone’s characteristics can be genetically altered in utero? Would we allow mandated gene therapy? After all, propensity for carrying certain diseases costs billions in health care. What about vaccines for the flu? Will employers mandate those next?”

Roy’s amendment narrowly failed, 193–182.

Retribution for the speech was swift and decisive—Marsh’s speech, that is. Within days, Marsh resigned from his committee, Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs, after party leadership informed him that he would be removed as vice chairman. Later that summer, Roy was appointed vice chairman of the influential Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee, replacing another wayward conservative who had disobeyed the party’s radical
new leadership.

A key factor in the extremism, and the extraordinary conservative successes, of this New Hampshire legislature is a group of libertarian activists known as the Free State Project. Founded in 2001 in hopes of establishing a government-free utopia, the Free State Project encourages liberty-minded people to move to New Hampshire to help push its politics even further toward low taxes and minimal state intervention. As of 2021, there are more than 5,000 Free Staters in New Hampshire. Despite their small numbers, they have built a well-funded and organized political apparatus that has elected roughly 45 Republicans to the New Hampshire House of Representatives. The libertarians vote as a bloc that, with a slim majority, the party can’t do without.

With Free Staters at their back, Republicans this year have cut taxes in the already income-tax-less state, banned critical race theory and late-term abortions, and launched what’s likely the most sweeping education voucher program in the nation. Under House Majority Leader Jason Osborne, a Free State mover, anti-authority libertarians have joined with anti-elite populists to shoot down anything that smacks of expertise or specialized knowledge. Recently, a joint House-Senate committee tabled its acceptance of $6.3 million in federal funds for addiction counseling in the opioid-ravaged state, with members saying they needed to see proof that counseling even works.

Over the past two decades, Free Staters have walked a long path from obscurity and ridicule to undeniable power. And as popular Republican Governor Chris Sununu eyes a 2022 U.S. Senate run, he may remember that a Free Stater, Aaron Day, is often credited with spoiling the 2016 Senate race for Republican incumbent Kelly Ayotte. A year from now, the potentially vulnerable Democratic Senator Maggie Hassan may try to tie him to the libertarian extremism he has refused to reject, observers say. And if Sununu wins, he’ll enter the U.S. Capitol with a group of constituents he can’t afford to offend.

The founder of the Free State Project, Jason Sorens, is a mild-mannered college professor with a mop of brown hair, a boyish smile, and a knack for making even the most outlandish ideas sound like simple arithmetic. During the 2000 elections, Sorens, then a graduate student at Yale, watched with dismay as the Libertarian Party failed to earn more than 1 percent of the national presidential vote. If disaffection with the major parties wasn’t enough to swing elections, what was? Despair turned to anger over the course of the long New Haven winter, and then to determination. One day, Sorens sat down at his computer, queued up some heavy metal, and started a manifesto.

“Libertarian activists need to face a somber reality,” he wrote: “nothing’s working.” There are too few libertarians, spread too thinly across the United States, to make a difference through partisan politics, he argued. The only way to break free from oppressive government is to move together to one state, take over its political system, and use threats of secession to force the federal government to leave its residents alone. Uprooting one’s life would be inconvenient, yes. But, he wrote, “our forefathers bled and died—because of the Stamp Tax! The Free State Project requires nothing of that kind, and the stakes are so much higher. How much is liberty worth to you?”

In July 2001, Sorens sent the 2,000-word broadside, titled “Announcement: The Free State Project,” to an obscure libertarian publication—L. Neil Smith’s The Libertarian Enterprise—expecting little response. Then the emails started coming. And coming. People from all over the country wanted to sign up.

For its first few years, the Free State Project existed just as an idea, an internet forum where liberty-minded folk could fantasize about freedom from government overreach during the height of the war on terror. Far-flung libertarians signed a pledge to move together to one place and change its politics, often with the assumption that it would never actually happen. But in 2003, the movement took a significant step toward reality. In a nationwide vote, members chose their “Free State.” Would it be Texas, independent and suspicious of authority, but perhaps too populous for a small group of activists to influence? Wyoming, sparsely populated, but geographically expansive enough to make coordination difficult? In the end, it was New Hampshire. Population 1.2 million, with no income tax, the land of “Live Free or Die” was small enough, and libertarian enough, for a little band of determined freedom fighters to swing even further toward liberty.

The revolution had begun. It looked—well, a bit clownish. The pledge to move to New Hampshire did not technically take effect until 20,000 people, the number Sorens calculated would sway state politics, had signed. Until then, it was the most zealous, with the fewest connections to society, who chose to make the move. In 2004, as chronicled by the journalist Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling in his book A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town (and Some Bears), New Hampshire got an early look at its colonizers-cum-liberators in the form of a grizzled, gun-toting posse of men who settled in the woods of Grafton, a town of some 1,100 with low taxes and no zoning regulations. Calling themselves the “Free Town Project,” the early movers took aim at local government, savaging the budget and constraining the town librarian’s bathroom breaks to a portable toilet. Bears, lured by the trash left outside the freedom fighters’ woodland shanties, made increasingly bold incursions into human settlements, which the Free Towners and another, separate commune of anarchists drove back with firecrackers, pistols, and nail-studded booby traps. (And, in one case, a llama named Hurricane.) Human society, meanwhile, nearly broke down. At annual town meetings, the Free Towners demanded that Grafton eliminate its police department and secede from the United Nations, which, they feared, might one day levy taxes or even invade. At one of these meetings, which regularly ran past eight hours, Free Towners reduced the moderator to tears.

Antics like these soon expanded beyond Grafton, dominating headlines about the Free State Project for its first decade. In Keene, New Hampshire, a group of “Robin-Hooders” declared war on the city’s parking officers starting in 2009, following them with video cameras and popping quarters into meters to foil local government’s ticket-hungry schemes. Every summer in the White Mountains, Free Staters gathered for the libertarian version of Burning Man: PorcFest, a cryptocurrency and substance-fueled celebration with few rules, many assault rifles, and a giant wooden porcupine that the Free Staters (known as prickly, independent “Porcs”) set ablaze at the festival’s end.

It wasn’t until 2016 that the Free State Project reached 20,000 signers, the magic number that “triggered the move” to New Hampshire. After a triumphant press conference in Manchester, the state’s largest city, Jason Sorens and other Free State VIPs retired to an after-party at a local speakeasy bar. (The password: “TRIGGERED.”) “It’s happening!” Sorens said giddily, imitating the popular meme of an arm-waving, celebrating Ron Paul. But Sorens, by this time the respectable face of the movement, with scholarly publications and an appointment at Dartmouth, had doubts, too. He no longer believed in secession, and he feared that the extremists in Grafton had cast a bearded, AK-47-wielding shadow on his brainchild. If all government should be eliminated, he mused, should we just let the roads fall apart? A sheepish grin stole across his face. “I don’t know—maybe that makes me a bad libertarian.”

Sorens wasn’t alone. For years, mainstream Democrats and Republicans alike viewed the Free Staters with suspicion. That included former Speaker Shawn Jasper, who, as recently as 2017, warned fellow Republicans that they must “distance themselves” from the Free State Project. Sununu, however, has understood the importance of courting the liberty faction since his first run for governor, in 2016. The Free Staters’ preferred candidate, Frank Edelblut, came within 1,000 votes of defeating him in the Republican primary. After winning the general election, Sununu offered Edelblut, a financier and homeschooler with no public school experience, control of the state department of education. It was a preview for a dance—neutralizing a rival, while recruiting from his base—that Sununu would do for years to come.

All the while, the Free State Project’s numbers and influence have been growing. Five years ago, the group claimed 2,000 movers and 17 legislators. Though only about 3,000 more people have arrived since then, far from the hoped-for 18,000, the movement’s legislative numbers have nearly tripled in that time—a function of outside investment and the peculiar structure of the New Hampshire legislature.

The New Hampshire House of Representatives has 400 total members, an enormous number of citizen legislators who receive nominal salaries and often run with little to no opposition. In recent years, political organizations such as the Koch-funded Americans for Prosperity appear to have recognized that these seats offer good value for their money. In the 2020 cycle alone, the group’s New Hampshire chapter spent nearly $847,000 on statehouse races and other statewide elections, often in support of Free State candidates, according to state filings. Meanwhile, as the Republican Party nationally has taken a populist, anti-elite turn, libertarians and conservatives are ever more united—in what they’re against.

Jason Osborne moved to New Hampshire from Defiance, Ohio, in October 2010. He had signed the Free State pledge years earlier, during graduate school, and mostly forgotten about it. But as he looked for a place to raise his four-year-old daughter, he was drawn by the prospect of a like-minded community in New Hampshire. A few months before his move, he took the stage at PorcFest 2010 to belt a karaoke rendition of “Minority,” by the left-leaning punk band Green Day. He sang, with equal doses of irony and prophecy,

I want to be the minority

I don’t need your authority

Down with the moral majority

’Cause I want to be the minority.

Once in New Hampshire, Osborne, who manages his family’s student debt collection firm, Credit Adjustments, Inc., gave generously to libertarian causes and built a profile in the community. He won his first election in 2014, and was elected majority leader this year. His financial profile—he donated $50,000 to a PAC financing
liberty-oriented statehouse candidates this cycle—and ability to deliver a growing libertarian base made him a strong choice for the leadership role. In an interview this fall, he said he hasn’t attended Free State Project events such as PorcFest since 2013, though he remains part of the legislature’s “liberty” faction, which includes sympathetic native New Hampshire-ites.

Osborne portrays himself as a “bottom-up” consensus builder, but under his leadership, the party has been strict in enforcing unity, and not just in the case of Bill Marsh. In summer 2021, nine-term state Representative Lynne Ober intentionally called a premature vote that threatened Republicans’ plans to kill Sununu’s paid family leave proposal and limit the governor’s emergency powers amid the pandemic. As punishment, leadership stripped Ober of her regular-session committee role. She and her husband, Representative Russell Ober, resigned from the legislature.

Punishments for speaking out haven’t been confined to Republicans. After the January 6 insurrection, Rosemarie Rung, a Democrat from Merrimack, was stripped of her committee assignments by the Republican speaker for tweeting a condemnation of a New Hampshire police chief who had attended the rally before the Capitol riot.

If there is irony in libertarians embracing a party controlled by a distant plutocrat who tried, and failed, to institute authoritarian rule, the Free Staters do not accept it. Sorens and other libertarians said they didn’t believe Donald Trump had the same sway over the Republican Party in New Hampshire. But Sorens, now director of the Center for Ethics and Society at St. Anselm College, still has his doubts. He worries especially that libertarians will become more conservative as they’re embraced by Republicans. But, he noted, libertarians can still find things to appreciate about the party of Trump; for instance, the former president’s noninterventionist policy abroad.

And take the ban on critical race theory, an infringement on free speech from which liberty-minded people theoretically should recoil. Yet it was a Free Stater and friend of Sorens’s, Keith Ammon, who brought forward that bill in the House. Here, Sorens hesitated. He thought college students and professors should be able to debate whatever ideas they wished in the classroom. But, he added, “I also don’t think I want teachers shaming five-year-olds because of their whiteness.”

Whatever their methods and allegiances, the Republican majority has achieved results. This June, the legislature passed a $13.5 billion budget for the next two years, cutting nearly $300 million from Sununu’s original proposal. Onto the budget they tacked a ban on abortions beyond 24 weeks (unless to save the mother’s life); the aforementioned ban on “divisive” race education in schools; a program creating “education freedom accounts” (essentially vouchers) that redirect public school money to private schools and homeschooling; and a raft of tax cuts.

Though familiar in Congress, the tactic of loading the budget with measures unlikely to pass on their own is new to New Hampshire, says House Minority Leader Renny Cushing. Cushing, an eight-term Democrat from the liberal seacoast region, offered grudging respect for Osborne’s abilities—“He knows how to count votes”—but says he feared this would become standard practice in the New Hampshire legislature, giving minority constit-
uencies such as libertarians and evangelicals a vehicle to push through policies the state as a whole doesn’t want. And despite libertarians’ assurances that they’re willing to ally with Democrats to protect civil liberties and other shared priorities, Cushing says he hasn’t found that cooperation to be forthcoming. “I think the allure of the appearance of power quickly trumps any principled origins they may have had that caused them to migrate to New Hampshire,” he told me.

If there was to be a breaking point between the legislature’s liberty faction and Sununu, the law they passed limiting the governor’s emergency powers seemed to have potential. Free Staters and their allies resented Sununu’s mask mandate and limits on public gatherings, and even sent rifle-wielding protesters to picket his house, forcing him to cancel his outdoor inauguration earlier this year. But he has since repealed the precautions—laxer than those of surrounding states to begin with—and has largely stayed silent as this legislature does its work.

Looming ahead is 2022. Heir to a political dynasty that has sent members to both the U.S. Senate and the governor’s mansion, Sununu has both the establishment pedigree and broad appeal—including to libertarians—that could make him a strong challenger to Hassan, especially during midterm elections in a purple state. Virtually everyone surveyed this fall agreed that he would have to keep the libertarian wing in mind, though opinions varied over the degree. Some libertarians, including Sorens, were skeptical of Sununu’s dependability, but Osborne had fewer doubts. In 2016, Hassan defeated incumbent Republican Kelly Ayotte by a margin of 1,017 votes. Aaron Day, a Free Stater running as an independent, received 17,742.

“He cannot afford to lose us,” Osborne said.

Despite some recent successes, Sununu’s embrace of the libertarian faction has put him in a double-edged position that could turn against him in a matchup with Hassan, who can link him to the extremism of the Free State Project. Cushing, for his part, says he thought that the anti-abortion legislation passed this year, both in New Hampshire and places like Texas, would hurt Sununu in a race with Hassan. This September in the town of Bedford, Catherine Rombeau narrowly won a special election for state representative, giving Democrats two of seven seats in the conservative stronghold—for the first time ever. The backlash may already have begun.

By this fall, Bill Marsh, the physician chastised for his speech against an anti-vaccine bill, appeared to have learned his lesson. If he wanted to remain a Republican under New Hampshire’s new political order, it was best to be silent.

In a brief, cautious conversation in early September, Marsh referred a reporter to the House’s daily journal, which memorialized, as he put it, “the speech that ticked everyone off.” Otherwise, he said, “I don’t want to say anything that could jeopardize what I need to do going forward.”

About a week later, the state Republican Party hosted a large rally in opposition to President Biden’s nationwide vaccine mandate. For Marsh, this was the final straw. In December 2020, then Speaker Dick Hinch had died of COVID-19 after attending two unmasked, undistanced rallies of House Republicans. Marsh, who respected Hinch, publicly denounced Republicans’ role in the speaker’s death. For months afterward, he worked tirelessly to promote anti-COVID regulations that could survive libertarian backlash—work that was now being undone. On September 14, Marsh, a Republican since campaigning for Ronald Reagan in 1976, changed his affiliation to “Democrat.”

“I still do see myself as a conservative,” Marsh said in an interview afterward. “I just don’t think that Republicans are holding to the principles they once avowed. I can’t call this conservatism. It’s more like—libertarianism.”

 

Op-Ed: ‘Think it’s about Freedom? Follow the Money’

(Originally published October 25, 2021 on InDepthNH.org). The original post can be seen at http://indepthnh.org/2021/10/25/op-ed-think-its-about-freedom-follow-the-money/

By Rep. Anita Burroughs, D-Glen

Most people want freedom, less regulation, and less government interference with their lives. What may come as a surprise to many is that anti-masking, anti-vaccine school protests across the state and the country are not as spontaneous as they seem.

The Washington Post has reported that the Koch political machine, "Americans for Prosperity" along with other conservative-leaning organizations are fueling and funding these protests in the deeper goal of creating an effective smokescreen for what the Free State and Liberty Republicans are really all about.

In New Hampshire, these organizations are pouring money into NH legislative races with remarkable effectiveness and success. Two political action committees (PACs) Make Liberty Win and Americans for Prosperity —together dumped $1.4 million into legislative races in New Hampshire in 2020 alone.

In 2020, Make Liberty Win endorsed 79 NH House candidates. The organization distributed between $4,933 and $10,403 to 30 candidates. The list of these candidates matches those promoted by the NH Liberty Alliance, which promotes the election of state legislators who want to shrink the authority of government at all levels while enhancing individual freedom. They are closely aligned with the Free State Project, which recruits out-of-state individuals from the far right of the political spectrum and now boasts 45 members of the NH legislature./span>

New Hampshire voters need to wake up to the fact that the leadership of the NH legislature and the traditionally moderate Republican Party as a whole is firmly in the control of extremists who want government and its democratic balances of power to be systematically dismantled. Do you believe this is an exaggeration? Jason Osborne, the House Majority leader is a Free Stater (or Liberty Republicans as they are also called) calls the shots in the statehouse. Four out of the six Republicans that make up the House leadership team identify as Liberty Republicans; 10 out of 22 committee chairs also affiliate with this group. The media reports that as many as 53 NH state legislators identify as Liberty Republicans.

All Republicans (whether moderate or right-wing) are told to vote for bills that disrupt public school funding, diminish women's rights, and defund public health measures designed to protect the public to name a few. Even Governor Chris Sununu asserted that the Libertarians are not Republicans stating, "they are their own party".

Republican House members who do not 'tow the line' are threatened with the loss of their committee chairmanships and seats and losing their seats altogether in the 2022 elections.

Public education funding is in jeopardy from programs such as the "Education Freedom Accounts" which enables homeschooling with little accountability for parents who choose to teach their children at home. The Granite State may soon be labeled as Little Texas for its restrictive reproductive rights legislation. And as we recently saw, the Executive Council decided to forgo $27 million in funding to help our state to bring down the alarming pockets of COVID. Governor Chris Sununu stated that "this action was a total disservice to the constituents we serve." I'm starting to think that the governor now wishes he had an Executive Council led by moderates of both parties.

Make no mistake, the new 'Liberty Republicans' and 'Free Staters' are not on your side.

They are funded by powerful corporations such as Koch Industries whose sole goal is to redistribute wealth back from the middle class and poor to the ultrarich.

The freedom rhetoric on the surface is but a smokescreen for the real motive to deregulate American industries in order to finally put to an end any semblance of a level playing field.

Next time you are drawn to the attractive rhetoric of no mandates and less government, play the game of 'follow the money' and see whose piper the former President Trump and the Liberty Republicans/Free States really dance to. Then talk with moderate Democrats and Republicans who are truly the ones fighting to preserve democratic institutions and the balance of powers that protect your freedoms.

In the next election, don't determine who to vote for based upon whether they are a Democrat or Republican. Vote for moderates from both sides of the aisle so that you can stop this malignant growth within our state and protect our way of life.

This is not my dad’s GOP

Rep. Joyce Weston
Plymouth
Published in the Record Enterprise, October 21, 2021

This is not my dad's GOP

My dad was a Republican. My granddad was a Republican. My uncle, too. They all lived in New Hampshire, attended public school, served in the war, got college degrees, and lived solid respectable lives. Even though my views, as I grew up, moved me toward the opposite party, I had huge respect for those folks served their families and communities.

That generation is all gone in my family. But I can’t help but wonder what they would think of the Grand Old Party now. Would they recognize it?

The GOP was the party of "family values", but now NH women are denied access to basic health care and even small accommodations during pregnancy and the time of breast feeding at the work place. Where are those family values now — when life is protected only until birth, but not a day thereafter?

They were the party of the "balanced budget", but both Bush2 and Trump added trillions of dollars to the national debt while expanding expenditures and reducing revenue. Where was fiscal responsibility during their terms? My dad always paid cash — he hated debt. He would be appalled.

Where is our attention to the common health? Should the Republicans not want our state to beat this virus and get back to work? One would think, YES. But here, in the midst of a national pandemic, our state is being run by conspiracy-theory nuts who don't believe in science, four of them on Executive Council. Sununu campaigned energetically to elect this Council, so he is directly responsible. They have just rejected $27 million of help (which is completely your own tax dollars, BTW) to expand vaccinations in the state. We are the ONLY state in the country to reject the money.

NH is NOT doing well financially. We are losing on a number of fronts. Our Governor ducks and hides and talks out of both sides of his mouth — a well-oiled Sununu tactic — but look closely, and you will see the truth./span>

My dad was too smart for this kind of stuff. I wonder if he would have changed his party affiliation. I suspect he might have.

 

Op-Ed: Careful. You Might be a Socialist.

(Originally published October 15, 2021 on InDepthNH.org). The original post can be seen at http://indepthnh.org/2021/10/15/op-ed-careful-you-might-be-a-socialist/

By Rep. DAVID MEUSE, D-Portsmouth

For sheer political mayhem, few sights have matched the debacle of the Executive Council’s 4-1 decision to reject $27 million in federal vaccination funding. But a side drama worth noting was the spectacle of a Republican governor accusing a Republican executive councilor of “supporting socialism” and then adding, in an evident attempt to raise the ghost of Joe McCarthy, “That’s not even socialism. That is pure communism!”

While it’s been apparent for a while that calling someone a “socialist” has devolved into more of a playground insult than a statement of a person’s actual political philosophy, it’s surprising how many people in both parties can be now be framed as socialists under Gov. Sununu’s newly framed definition.

So what exactly is a socialist? In the academic world, a socialist is defined as a person who advocates or practices a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that all or part of the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.

But in Sununu-world, a socialist is now apparently anyone inside or outside of government who tries to tell a business what to do. That includes imposing vaccine mandates on businesses as well as imposing sanctions on businesses that impose their own mandates.

In GOP circles, the “S”-word is just about the worst thing you can call another human being. It has broadened to a point where it now includes any type of government action that might put what’s good for the community as a whole over what’s good for an individual. In other words, whenever the government functions in the public interest as the framers intended, “that’s socialism.”

Also fanning the flames is the relatively new notion that corporations should have the same rights as individuals, including “natural rights” against “government intrusion”. As a result of a series of legal rulings, corporations increasingly share many of the same legal rights and protections once granted exclusively to Iiving, breathing people.

All of this has combined to put people who hate the idea of socialism but love their communities in a tough spot.

— Want to stop companies from putting toxic PFAS in your drinking water? Surprise! You’re probably a socialist.
— Think out-of-state businesses should take some of NH’s tax burden off local property taxpayers? Good news! Your Socialist Party card is in the mail.
— Support public education, fair pay for teachers, and subsidies for child care? Uh-oh. Forget socialism. Call the FBI and turn yourself in. You may be a communist!

Placing value on the things that make our communities stronger isn’t socialism. It’s good citizenship. Most business owners will be the first to tell you they can be very innovative when it comes to finding ways to make money, but they can’t turn bad schools into good ones or create affordable housing where none exists. These things, which are critical to helping businesses attract and retain good employees, are up to the community as a whole and to the people we elect to represent us.

What’s really going on here in New Hampshire’s isn’t a good-faith debate about the perils of socialism. Instead, what we’re seeing is a concerted effort to use old-style political demonizing and ad hominem mudslinging to shift the focus away from solving longstanding problems that continue to hold our state back.

— Want to end a complex policy debate quickly in a way that gets (at least some) people on your side? Call your opponent a “socialist”.
— Want to shift attention away from your own culpability for allowing a longstanding problem to fester on your watch? Shift the blame to others you label as “socialists”.
— Want to kick a problem down the road to future governors and legislators? Frame all possible efforts to deal with it as socialism.

See how easy it is?

What’s far more difficult is making the tough leadership calls that will increase New Hampshire’s vaccination rates, alleviate our housing and public education crises, and create transportation infrastructure worthy of the 21st century.

Find yourself nodding in agreement?

Careful! Someone out there may be getting ready to call you a socialist.

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