Yes, cooperation not competition is important in today’s political discourse. That’s because of the insidious nature that competition taints political discussions. Whether or not we view political debate as being one of cooperation vs. competition is particularly relevant to what our government sets as its priority in serving the American people. Right now the model has been one of competition ever since we had political parties. Unquestionably, it’s time for the paradigm to change. Instead of the destructive and unhelpful model of competition that our system of government revolves around today,
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Clearly, using political sequestration as a political maneuver to stimulate political compromise would definitely be contrary to what our Founding Fathers would have envisioned as to how political parties should try to resolve differences. That’s because doing that runs contrary to their concept of ‘public virtue’ which was one of the four Freedom Foundations that the writing of our Constitution was founded upon. Public virtue speaks to the need a democratic republic has for its members to voluntarily sacrifice personal benefit for something greater than themselves.
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President Washington recognized the deleterious effects of political parties, which he stated in his Farewell Address, warning that the creation of political parties encouraged the development of vengeful policies which would ultimately lead to tyranny and dictatorship. Despite such cautionary words, two of his closest advisors, Hamilton and Jefferson, not only contributed to the formation of political parties, but they also came to represent the divisions that shaped the early national political landscape which continues to influence Republican vs. Democratic political ideology,
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