Politics Is a Game
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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During the
recent meeting of the Democratic Party's rules committee, television
showed a woman blubbering uncontrollably, tears pouring down her
face, as she moaned about the Florida-Michigan delegate settlement
that caused her to lose her vote.
I was struck
by a fantasy. Wouldn't it be good if we had a few men dressed in
SS uniforms who could burst into the room, grab this lady and heave
her into a military truck?
The shock
of this little charade, I thought to myself, might help her get
her priorities in order. Politics is a game like baseball and basketball.
The prizes are offices and patronage. There is no reason to cry
ever.
No one is
being executed or tortured, no one is drowning in a flood, and no
one is being gassed, shot or burned alive. Nothing of any real importance
is occurring. It's just a roomful of like-minded people quarreling
over counting delegates. You get counted or you don't get counted.
It doesn't matter in the long run.
I suppose
it is OK that some people get emotional about elections and choose
their champions based on feelings and illusions. If people made
a cold, logical decision, "none of the above" would likely
win by a landslide.
Despite all
that, Americans should approach a political contest intellectually
and analytically. They should carefully consider evidence of intelligence
and honesty. They should carefully evaluate the candidates' proposals.
In short,
they should act like serious citizens instead of like a mob of Hannah
Montana fans. I don't see anything lovable about any of the candidates.
They are all flawed. Underneath their public congeniality, they
all have a hard edge and a ruthless ambition that has nothing to
do with the public welfare or the good of the country. They want
to win. Right now, that's their obsession.
It isn't necessary
to fall in love with a candidate. It isn't necessary to imagine
that he or she is your friend. All people have to do is make a calculated
decision that this particular candidate is more likely to make a
better president than the others.
Then, having
cast your vote, you go about your business, because the American
people have virtually no control of their government once Election
Day passes. Our republican form of government gives complete power
to the officeholders for their full terms. Unless you contributed
big, big bucks, you aren't likely to receive any personal attention
from any of them except on his or her terms.
Another point
to keep in mind is that all of the problems the candidates are now
afield promising to solve are problems they themselves created.
Who
failed to seal our borders? Congress. Who voted for ruinous deficits,
now totaling $9 trillion? Congress. Who voted to forbid the government
from negotiating lower prices for the Medicare drugs? Congress.
Who authorized a war on false pretenses? Congress. Who set Medicare
and Social Security on the road to bankruptcy? Congress. Who votes
to give billions of your tax dollars away to foreign governments?
Congress. Who voted for free-trade agreements that have virtually
destroyed America's manufacturing base? Congress.
I have an
extremely low opinion of politicians because they took a once grand
country full of good people and have run it into the ground to the
point that it requires a lot of optimism to see even a bleak future.
I would like
to see all incumbents except Virginia Sen. James Webb defeated.
Actually, what I'd really like to see happen to them is probably
against the law to say. At any rate, tar and feathers would be hard
to find in most communities.
June
16, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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