I am an urban person. I like mass transit systems. I like street maintenance. I like an efficient police system and government agencies, which help the needy. I like the things that citizen groups can do together. Government is the most fundamental and one of the most powerful of all citizen groups. I admire the national health care systems of most European nations and wish we had something comparable. I am sad that our cities and states are not really committed to providing an equal level of security and education to all our citizens, regardless of social-economic background. As an urban person, I have no interest in fleeing my city to escape from a population of uneducated hoodlums.
I am, however, very aware that other Americans do not share all of these outlooks. Indeed, I was not born in an urban environment. I now live in Cleveland, Ohio. But I was born in a state: Nebraska, and a country: the United States, which has had significant difficulty in identifying with the urban experience. To Americans, cities are often felt as a necessary evil. So when I go to western Nebraska, I am left a bit perplexed as to what political perspective to argue for. My ideal government is not their ideal government.
But this is the essence of democracy. We don't have to agree on what the ideal government is. But we do need to be able to sit together like a good family, and pragmatically discuss how to spend our money.
I am very pragmatic. My political orientation is not determined by what I believe. It is determined by where I am located. I am located in Cleveland, Ohio. But I am also located in the United States of America.
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