I just got an E mail about the legislative progress made recently by Congress. Hmm. True. And I am so glad for what they have done. Finally. But I thought they were supposed to be passing things all year. (Apologies ... that was sarcasm.)
It's easy, getting jaded; so let me try and attempt to be more earnest. I want to see accountability. Not just personal accountability, either, but public accountability. Either of them precede trust, of course; and for the 8 years we survived under Mr. Cheney with Rove and Bush, Jr., there wasn't much of it to be found. Maybe that's why so many people, now, are supportive of (even enthusiastic about) Wikileaks. Here is an individual, in Mr. Assange, who says, if you don't want to do the right or admirable thing, then at least be transparent; and I will be making sure your actions are transparent." Public accountability. More sentimentally, I fondly remember my grade school teachers and realize any number of them could advocate more ferociously for public accountability than can our current Justice Department & CIA officials, or Supreme Court judges. No disrespect to my teachers, who were awesome, but that should be an embarrassing comparison for the administration. The personal quality of their interventions is unfortunately not a characteristic of politics, as much as might be healthy. If it were, then moral arguments and appeals to one's higher nature (like compromise) would be effective. I personally am not seeing two Congressional sides who want to respect the governing process enough to be moved by appeals to higher nature .... Had that been the case, we wouldn't have seen months of obstructionism. So, I understand the old sentiment: there's business, and there's pleasure; and never the twain shall meet. Given that difference between governmental politics and 'playground' personal policies, I want someone with much more determination to 'hold feet to the fire', and do the tough questioning, as I am seeing from journalists and movie makers. Olbermann, Maddow, Moore and Assange. The ability to ask tough questions has and will always be necessary to a functioning society. (Remember Dan Ellsberg?) I am so grateful for these probing questioners. More power to them. |
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