I do not usually get into discussions about politics as I believe everyone is entitled to their opinions; after all, we do live in a free country. Â With the upcoming election here in Canada, I worry that people have voted and will vote on candidates for the wrong reasons. Â It scares me that people are willing to lose everything we, even the unpopular Stephen Harper, have all worked hard for.
I was not raised with a silver spoon in my mouth. Â I was taught to work hard for my success, earn my living accordingly and save for my retirement. Â I was also taught not to live beyond my means. Â In other words, if I can’t afford something, I do without and certainly don’t use credit to buy it. Â If I do use credit, it is used sparingly and paid off each month so that no interest is accumulated. Â It scares me that people think that the 27 million dollars of taxpayers’ money paid daily for interest on the Ontario deficit is acceptable. Â It scares me that the Liberal and NDP candidates think a similar approach for Canada is acceptable and necessary to grow the economy.
It scares me that our once envied health care system is going down the tubes. Â The eHealth scandal created by the Liberal government has created massive job losses and salary cutbacks to our health professionals and funding cutbacks for the operation of our Ontario hospitals. Â These highly trained professionals will not have much choice but to take their expertise elsewhere. I worry that as I get older and need increased healthcare, it will not be available. Â This Liberal approach scares me. Their costly scandals will ruin the country as they are ruining Ontario. The promises made to ensure a win in this upcoming election are dangerous.Â
I was taught too that you should be able to afford to raise children if you choose to have them. I think Canadians should choose and pay for their own children’s daycare, sporting activities etc. I think welfare should be for those temporarily out of work through no fault of their own. Welfare was not meant to increase the number of children in a family, increase the social status of a family or stretch over several generations. It was developed to help people in a crisis situation, temporarily.
I was also taught that “good looks will get you the first 5 minutes, after that you are on your own” Â What this meant to me is that if you are qualified for a job and good at what you do, it should not matter what you look like. Â If your appearance or your last name gets you an interview (or party nomination) it’s what you do afterward that counts. Â Who really cares, or who should care that Harper buttons and unbuttons his suit coat over and over? Â Who cares, or who should care which politician has the nicest hair? Â Who really cares if Trudeau wins he will be one of the youngest to do so? Â Who wants the life of the party or a smooth-talking, pot-smoking, pretty boy running our country?
This upcoming election (or any election for that matter) is not a beauty or popularity contest. Â It should be about who can best run this great country we live in so that we continue to prosper. Â I want to enjoy my retirement without worrying that Canada is in trouble. Â I hope I have taught my children the above lessons I learned from my parents. Â I want them to work hard for their achievements, but I want them to have a fighting chance that their hard work will pay off for them.
I have voted for Stephen Harper in the past and will vote for him again. Â Is he perfect? Â Absolutely not. Â Does he come across as arrogant and smug? Â Sometimes. Â Do I always agree with or like his actions and decisions? No, not always. Â Does his resume say he has the necessary experience for the job? Â Yes, it does. Â Does he make tough decisions based on what is best for Canadians and Canada? Â I believe he does; that’s why he gets my vote.

Reblogged this on quirkywritingcorner and commented:
This is about Canada, but it says much the same for America, only the names are different. I have never voted for a Democratic president because of what I learned about the party in school. Who knows what they’re teaching now.