Notable Quote - Heinlen vs Frank! - Granite Grok

Notable Quote – Heinlen vs Frank!

OK, a bit of a different one here for a Notable Quote (H/T: NRO) – how could a refuse a Robert Heinlein quote when I get smacked in the face with it?

First, that uber-Liberal congressman Barney Frank (you know, one of the Dems that forced Fannie and Freddie and whose ex-lover was partially responsible for Fannie’s sub-prime products)?

This morning’s WSJ editorial on "Obamanomics" starts with this quote from Barney Frank (and as you read it, note how confident the Left is:  One of the main culprits of the credit crisis, saying this sort of stuff already, just before we vote and before they are even fully in power):

I think at this point there needs to be a focus on an immediate increase in spending and I think this is a time when deficit fear has to take a second seat . . . I believe later on there should be tax increases. Speaking personally, I think there are a lot of very rich people out there whom we can tax at a point down the road and recover some of the money.

And then the truth of the matter from the ‘Grok’s favorite science fiction author, Robert Heinlein:

It reminded me of this passage a reader sent me a few days ago, from the late, great science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein’s To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987):

The America of my time line is a laboratory example of what can happen to democracies, what has eventually happened to all perfect democracies throughout all histories. A perfect democracy, a "warm body" democracy in which every adult may vote and all votes count equally, has no internal feedback for self-correction…. [O]nce a state extends the franchise to every warm body, be he producer or parasite, that day marks the beginning of the end of the state. For when the plebs discover that they can vote themselves bread and circuses without limit and that the productive members of the body politic cannot stop them, they will do so, until the state bleeds to death, or in its weakened condition the state succumbs to an invader — the barbarians enter Rome.

Yes folks, very similar to this.

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