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Guest Column – Brian Almon: Who Are We?

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November 30, 2024

Who Are We?

Resist the dehumanizing technocracy

By: Brian Almon

Brian Almon

This week, while Americans were giving thanks for our blessings, the British Parliament legalized assisted suicide. Poetic, considering it comes near the end of a drawn out suicide of what was once the shining beacon of Western Civilization. This is the same Britain that recently let murderers and rapists out of prison to make room for thought criminals who post anti-migrant sentiments on social media, that has justified mass migration from third world countries in the name of propping up its socialized healthcare system.

Euthanasia has always been the inevitably end state of socialized medicine. Sarah Palin was roundly mocked, even on the right, for saying that Obamacare would result in government death panels. Yet she was absolutely right. What does it mean for society when the value of a human life is reduced to a simple cost/benefit analysis, leaving life or death decisions to a random bureaucrat — or worse, a computer algorithm?

I believe that the greatest question facing humanity for the remainder of the 21st century is one of identity. What does it mean to be human? What does it mean to be male or female? What does it mean to be American? What does it mean to be Idahoan?

The answers to these questions all have serious policy implications. The same technocratic motivation that enacts death panels to remove the elderly and the infirm from the rolls of socialized healthcare also demands we import millions of migrant workers rather than pay American citizens a living wage. If people are just numbers on a spreadsheet, then why not exchange a few variables to make the system as efficient as possible?

The road to dystopia always starts with good intentions. Why not get government involved in the healthcare system? After all, people face substandard care and high bills in the current system, so why not use the force of law to make things better? Look at Britain, look at Canada, look at any nation that has gone down that road and you’ll see the answer. In Canada, bureaucrats were caught recommending euthanasia for patients with depression. It’s darkly ironic that our northern neighbors now have two suicide hotlines — one to talk you out of it, and one to talk you into it. In socialism, you’re often worth more dead than alive.

Remember that as we begin the legislative session a month from now. Our lawmakers must resist the temptation to evaluate each issue in a vacuum. It’s not just about forcing insurance to cover more contraception, or using tax dollars to subsidize workforce training. Each such bill is one more little step on the road to a hellish dystopia.

The election results over the past six months have given us a renewed hope that we can save our state and our nation. It starts with remembering who we are. We’re not just numbers in a spreadsheet or gears in a machine that produces GDP. We are humans, made in the image of God, male and female. We are fathers and mothers, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters. We are Americans, we are Idahoans, and we deserve a future of dignity for ourselves and our posterity.

Editor’s note:  This article originally appeared in the Gem State Chronicle.  I encourage our readers to visit their website and consider subscribing.  Find this and other informative articles at the Gem State Chronicle, here: About – Gem State Chronicle

 

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