While there are some measures that government entities can take to help slow the spread of a pandemic, there is a limit to what they can do. At some point, personal responsibility becomes the order of the day.
As coronavirus cases rise, red-state governors resist measures to slow the spread, preach “personal responsibility” https://t.co/wyxuoYFT2U
â The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) October 18, 2020
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum says itâs ânot a job for governmentâ:
To weather it, he said at a news conference last week, people would need to keep their distance, wear masks and avoid gatherings. But the one thing North Dakota did not need were legal limits on reckless behavior.
Whether the Left likes it or not, personal responsibility is ultimately where society begins and ends. There is (thankfully) no government that can do everything.
“Yet even as health authorities in small cities and rural towns plead for help in tamping down deadly outbreaks, many Republican governors are resisting new measures to stop the spread. Some are even loosening rules already on the books.” https://t.co/eYUTUOn55r
â Democratic Governors (@DemGovs) October 18, 2020
âWe the peopleâ canât really work unless there is some level of trust.
Instead, they preach the mantra of âpersonal responsibility,â insisting that government interventions such as mask mandates or business restrictions are either unnecessary or harmful, and that people should be trusted to make their own decisions about how to keep themselves â and each other â healthy.
Please take care of yourself and those around youâ¤
Thanks! https://t.co/B2iAhseyg7â E.A.Alizadeh (@Ejazalizadeh1) October 18, 2020
Democrats have long championed the idea of collectivism when approaching issues. Whatâs more collective than having people take responsibility for themselves and others? It stands in sharp contrast to a few bureaucrats attempting to solve problems through more rules and regulations.
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