Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Pandering by any other name ...

-->


It’s perfectly acceptable to have differences of opinion. Having a free and honest discourse on important issues creates a healthy environment for intellectual growth.

Why then do some politicians insist on working to build a hostile political environment by attacking every single item presented by members of the opposing party? They do it to endear themselves to interests with deep pockets and a core constituency that can deliver votes. It’s a matter of staying in office, not necessarily following the path of what is right for America.

The simple term for such behavior is “pandering.” The technical definition for that term is “pimp,” or be more precise, “a person who furnishes clients for a prostitute; procurer.”

A majority of elected public serpents (not misspelled) are pimps for special interests and their rhetoric on vital issues and votes are indicators of that status. If you sell you soul for votes or money, if you deliver a vote simply to ensure your re-election, you are a political panderer.

For example, with more than 85 percent of Americans on record as being in favor of background checks on gun purchases, there is absolutely no excuse for those Republicans and Democrats who voted against that measure. Well, there are excuses for that behavior: They were bought and paid for by the National Rifle Association, desperately wanted Tea Party support or just don’t give a rat’s backside about doing whatever is possible to keep guns out of the hands of criminals or the mentally ill.

I know what you’re thinking: They are just following the wishes of their constituents. Fine. Good argument. But – and this “but” is bigger than the Wyoming sky – it is also the duty of elected federal officials to consider the national implications of proposed laws.

The next big issue on the national political agenda is immigration reform. Some Republican who were against any form of reform prior to last November’s election, have had a change of heart and now support the concept. Why? They want to hold onto power at the congressional level and gain ground on administration front. With a fast-growing Hispanic population, which certainly was a factor in the 2012 presidential election, “pandering” for Hispanic votes is, all of a sudden, good politics.

Nothing is going to change the art of political pandering except, well, you, the voter. First, do whatever is possible to change the political landscape by pushing good, common-sense, logical people to run for federal office. Next, start working on local, district and statewide levels to demand term limits for the Senate and House of Representatives; without term limits, there is no reason for politicians to vote their conscience rather than filling their election bank accounts with special interest money.

We must start holding elected officials accountable for their actions and votes. We are the ones who put them on pontificating pulpits and we are the only ones to hold them accountable.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

The lies and the liars who tell them


Gun reform.

It’s really a no-brainer but the discussion is being controlled by people with no brains and no compunction against lying to get what they want.

Under present law, you go into a gun store and have to pass a background check to get a gun; you can go to gun show and purchase assault weapons from private owners, no questions asked; guns are bought and sold on the internet every day with no checks.

A majority of Americans, including a vast majority of members of the National Rifle Association (NRA), are in favor of universal background checks. It’s just common sense: If law-abiding, gun-owning citizens are in favor of background checks, why wouldn’t their elected officials follow their lead?

One word: Fear. A majority of our elected senators and representatives are so afraid of being ousted from office by a well-heeling lobbying group for a perceived “anti-gun” vote, that they will bow down to lobby groups like the NRA in order to stay in power.

It makes no difference what is right or wrong; it’s what is politically expedient.

It is a fact that the NRA is an organization of liars, headed by liars who perpetuate lies in order to scare gun owners. The NRA is on record as stating that the newest attempt to ensure background checks of persons buying weapons in all venues is an attempt to “register and confiscate” weapons.

That’s a lie. The law that Congress is/was considering would make it a major federal crime for any public official to attempt to use background checks to “register” gun purchases.

It is a fact of our political system that lobbyists exist to spread information – as well as disinformation – to sway public and political opinion to the argument being presented by their employers. It is a fact that lobbyists lie in order to do their job.

As long as there are no term limits, and politicians have to face re-election on a regular basis, lobbyists and their money and ability to marshal forces for or against a particular candidate will run our government on the two-pronged platform of money and fear.

Gun reform. Immigration. Finance reform. Abortion. Gay rights. All these controversial topics, among others, attract money to support various views and lobbyists do whatever it takes to push their clients’ agenda.

The lack of term limits for elected officials and the influence of lobbyists on the political system minimalize the opinion of every voting American on some level.
Dispensing information so that all sides of an issue is explored is good business and a symptom of good government. Lying to get what you want and using scare tactics and threats is abominable.

We should all be ashamed for allowing it to proliferate in our society.