subject: Vote For State Sovereignty; Vote For Brian Greene, Utah House District 57 [print this page] State Sovereignty and Brian Greene Utah House District 57
The Constitution has outlined a system that depends on state sovereignty. Brian Greene, Utah House District 57, would like to see Utah stand for more of the rights granted to it by state sovereignty. The Constitution has also provided for limited government. With a large central government overstepping the bounds outlined in the Constitution's ideal for limited government, Utah's state sovereignty is threatened. The central government is taking away the decisions and rights that belong to Utah. Sometimes, the government is taking away individual decisions and threatening individual responsibility.
State Sovereignty Allows State Economic Liberty
If Utah had the state sovereignty allowed it by the Constitution, Utah would be able to exercise its own fiscal responsibility and make wise economic decisions that would grow Utah's economy. When Utah has the fiscal responsibility necessary to make its own economic decisions, Utah would be able to retain more of Utah's money to benefit Utah's electorate and start to create economic liberty. Utah would be free to reject unconstitutional regulation from a central government that is refusing the limited government model outlined in the constitution.
State Sovereignty Means Less Regulation
While he has been a Utah House District Representative, Brian Greene has consistently submitted bills to support economic liberty in Utah by forcing Utah's government back into its limited government role and accepting fiscal responsibility. He believes that with a limited government the unnecessary government regulation that Utah is passing would stop, and this would help Utah's business and economic liberty. Brian Greene believes that people should be free to start businesses if they want, and Utah's government regulation is hindering this process and stopping both their economic liberty and individual responsibility in this area.
State Sovereignty Is Supported by Offering Educational Choice
As a Utah attorney, Brian Greene knows that if Utah's future electorate is going to preserve and enhance Utah's state sovereignty in the future, they need to understand the Constitution's model for limited government on the federal level. Our future electorate, the children, need the best schools in order to understand issues surrounding state sovereignty. As a Utah House District Representative, Brian Greene believes that competition would be an important element to introduce into Utah's education system. Introducing competition would bring in alternate choices, giving people an educational choice in the areas of teaching, schools and curricula.
State Sovereignty Requires Individual Responsibility
State Sovereignty requires great individual responsibility. The electorate must have understand the issues and vote accordingly because, with state sovereignty, more of the issues are decided on a local level. State sovereignty also requires a limited government on the federal level, leaving the decisions to the state and therefore the state's electorate.
Vote for State Sovereignty and Limited Government
Search for more information about Brian Greene, Utah House District 57. A vote for Brian Greene is a vote for state sovereignty, limited government, fiscal responsibility, economic liberty, educational choice and individual responsibility. Vote for Brian Greene, Utah House District 57 in 2012.