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- LETTERS, Page 4IS GOVERNMENT DEAD?
-
- "We deserve, and we will get, exactly what we vote for."
-
- Jim Daniel Gualala, Calif.
-
- Your report on "The Can't Do Government" was a breath of
- fresh air (NATION, Oct. 23). When Reagan came into office,
- Americans closed the door on the pain of the '60s and '70s and
- covered their heads with a baby blanket in a massive denial of
- reality and responsibility. Politicians just reflect the voting
- majority.
-
- William B. Dittmer Portland, Me.
-
- It has been said a conservative is a liberal who got
- mugged. In the 1990s a liberal may be someone who asked for help
- and found government didn't care.
-
- Robert Murphy Providence
-
- You point to the "fundamentally flawed" approach of the
- Reagan and Bush Administrations toward government as the root
- of the problem. You might have noted, among other things, that
- the Johnson Administration's guns-and-butter promises created
- a belief that certain goods and services are a matter of
- birthright and that putting the costs of those escalating
- programs on the backs of succeeding generations is justified.
-
- Clifford J. Harvison Potomac, Md.
-
- A White House official says hardly anyone "in the real
- world . . . believes that the budget deficit matters." At last
- look I was still a member of the real world, and to me the
- deficit does matter. In the real world, when we bite off more
- than we can chew, we have our spending privileges curtailed or,
- ultimately, withdrawn. Most of us are neither able nor inclined
- to pass on our fiscal irresponsibilities to others, let alone
- our children.
-
- Laura R. Ference Rockford, Ill.
-
- You assert that "the problem . . . is that the country (is)
- being governed badly." The American electorate punishes those
- who try to govern well. The real problem is a spiritual one:
- the American spirit now says take instead of give.
-
- Larry W. Cracraft Spencer, Ind.
-
- In your one-sided article, you state that government exists
- "to act in ways that improve the lives of its citizens and
- their security in the world." Socialist governments have always
- espoused this philosophy. We continue to see its results
- throughout Eastern Europe. A conservative viewpoint is that
- government should do for its citizens only what they cannot do
- for themselves -- period!
-
- William E. Atwater Carmel, N.Y.
-
- TIME's cover brought up a poignant memory. The day Nixon
- resigned, a group of tourists stood on the main-view terrace at
- Mount Rushmore in early morning. Suddenly, just below
- Washington's eye, a shaft of sunlight reflected from a piece of
- mica in the rock. A murmur went up from the crowd. The ranger's
- voice said over the loudspeaker: "Washington weeps for his
- country." The crowd dispersed in silence.
-
- Lillian Weimer Treasure Island, Fla.
-