What's more ironic is while people rant about this, we've broken from the couple things the founders actually *did* want us to do : Legislative Supremacy, Senate elected by legislature, etc. Now, not all of these breaks are bad, but why doesn't anyone bring them up when we're ranting about what the founders would have wanted?
Not to mention that George Washington warned specifically against a two party system, which in itself could be viewed as 'breaking' as well.
(1) George Washington's farewell address warning was against "political parties", not a two-party system.
(2) At the time, Washington's concern was that political parties would be based on geography, rather than political issues. As much as we like to break the nation down into "red states" and "blue states," the truth is that in Presidential elections, candidates rarely capture more than 70% of the popular vote in any given state, meaning that even in the "safe red" and "safe blue" states, there is a spectrum of political ideologies. No one party represents every New Englander or every Southerner, so the nation is very unlikely to actually fracture along party lines.
(3) Technically, we don't have a two-party system, but very rarely are enough people convinced of the viability of third-party candidates to vote for them. I will point out, though, that the Senate has an independent member from Connecticut and a Democratic Socialist from Vermont, both of whom are lumped in with the Democratic caucus.
Planned cuts for Planned Parenthood - $300 million
Cost of two F-22 Raptors - $300 million
While I agree wtih your sentiment, I want to play devil's advocate for a moment: Cut two Raptors to continue subsidising Planned Parenthood. Cut two Raptors to save NPR. Cut two Raptors to save a few farm subsidies. Cut two Raptors to build a bridge to another abandoned island in Alaska. Eventually, you have no Raptors left, and the Russian Federation leverages its oil revenues to field a more advanced air force than the United States.
I'll agree that defense spending is completely bonkers in the United States, but the Raptor is a scapegoat, and using it as the sole scapegoat is dangerous.
I'll also point out that V-22 Ospreys are $110 million a piece, and they're just glorified helicopters that Marines jump out of, as if we didn't have a dozen different varieties of those already anyway.
