David Ratowitz For Congress

David Ratowitz For Congress
Tags >> chicago
Aug 25
2010

RATOWITZ MARKS THE FIVE YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF HURRICANE KATRINA

Posted by kuehltha in chicago

Chicago, IL, June 24, 2010– Long time transparency and pro-liberty advocate Candidate for U.S. Congress from Illinois’ 5th Congressional District, David Ratowitz marks the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina with a series of articles based on his personal experience with the disaster and recovery process.

“Hurricane Katrina destroyed my home and business and scattered my family across the country.  It took a year and a half just to clean up the mess, and nearly four years to complete claims with private insurers.  My claims with government run insurance were never satisfied and five years later, I am one more faceless name in a class action lawsuit,” said Ratowitz today from his Chicago office.

Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Mississippi on August 29th, 2005 as a category 4 hurricane.  Katrina devastated the Mississippi and Louisiana coast and damaged the levies protecting New Orleans, resulting in massive flooding of the city.  Hurricane Katrina remains the most expensive storm in U. S. history.

“For several months after the storm, I would hear of massive sums of government money spent on ‘recovery’ without ever seeing tangible signs of that spending,” said Ratowitz.

“After Hurricane Katrina I was too involved in putting my own life back in order to pay attention to the government’s role in the recovery.  Years later, when I had the time to consider such things, I was shocked by the waste and lack of attention to it,” claimed Ratowitz.  “It’s important to tell this story because so many people incorrectly believe that massive government programs will save them; they will not.”

Jul 12
2010

Chicago Young Republicans host Brady and Ratowitz

Posted by kuehltha in chicago

May 25
2010

Of Liberty and Race

Posted by kuehltha in chicago

Once again the advocates of public corruption have cloaked their dishonesty with a veneer of "justice" by ignoring the well reasoned and principled views of Rand Paul and John Stossel in order to shift attention away from big government failures and their own dishonesty with specious accusations of racism. In this debate, I stand for Liberty: boldly and without equivocation.

 

The claim that advocating Liberty is somehow racist is not merely nonsense, it is just as ridiculous as it sounds. Liberty is the antidote for racism. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 made great strides in combating government enforced racial segregation, but the infringements on personal liberty and private property contained in the Act have been much less effective than the simple removal of a compulsion to discriminate.

 

Racial segregation throughout history - in the United States and elsewhere, has always depended upon government sanction. There is not a single example in all of human history of systematic segregation or large scale racial discrimination absent government coercion. Not a single one.

 

In American history government mandated racial segregation, first by upholding slavery, then by enforcing Jim Crow segregation laws. Since passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the end of government imposed racial segregation, Americans have reverted to our natural instinct to work together. Liberated from government coercion to segregate, private businesses have almost universally opened their cash registers to customers and clients of all races. America today is far more integrated as a result of voluntary association.


To be sure, many aspects of Twenty-First Century America remain segregated along racial lines, but like Nineteenth and Twentieth Century America, racial segregation is government mandated. In Twenty-First Century America, government prohibition against parental choice of schools denies many children access to education. Those children denied education and therefore effectively barred, by government, from the fruits of a modern information age economy are disproportionately African-American. Predictably, those children denied education by their government are far more likely to spend their lives in poverty and become either perpetrators or victims (or both) of crime.

 

Defenders of Liberty have long sought to redress injustice by removing government coercion to discriminate based on race. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 played a critical role in ending government oppression, which has led to a more integrated society based on voluntary association. The imposition on personal freedom and private property inherent in a portion of the Act has born meager fruit at best, and Liberty advocates are right to point out the dangers of government coercion wherever it is applied.


A government empowered to strip away liberty to enforce "justice" is a government empowered to strip away liberty to enforce "injustice" as well.

Mar 13
2010

Congressional Candidate David Ratowitz on Freedom Watch with Judge Napolitano!

Posted by kuehltha in chicago

Liberty Slate

Ratowitz For Congress
5th District Map
10th Amendment Pledge

Get Email Updates

e-mail address:


Request A Sign
smallratowitzsign

Facebook Facebook Group YouTube
-->