So the United States has resumed its wild, impetuous stab at having a functioning government. After this latest farce, internet sites are alive with comments along the lines of the following:
“We need to kick out every member of Congress and start fresh.”
I know we live in a country where nearly half the citizens people can’t name the vice president, but I find it hard to believe anybody is so ignorant of the political process that he or she thinks voting out all 535 members of Congress is a realistic option.
We’ll start with the fact that elections are staggered (hence the term “midterm election”). As such, I doubt anybody’s rage is going to last another five years or so, which is how long it would take to excise all the offending congressmen and women. And we’ll add on the stat that while most people hate Congress, they tend to like their own reps, so we will likely see most of these supposedly toxic incumbents return.
This idea is even less practical and more insane than the delusional belief, which I’ve written about before, that we can easily deport 11 million undocumented immigrants.
In the interest of saving time, here are some other political ideas I’ve heard recently that appear just as likely to happen.
“We need to separate into two different countries. Red states and blue states.” (I’m pretty sure we fought a war about this, and the outcome was rather conclusive. We appear to be stuck with one another for the foreseeable future.)
“We need a task force of really smart leaders who will come up with bipartisan solutions to our problems.” (That’s what Congress is supposed to be.)
“We need to mandate IQ tests to make sure people are smart enough to vote.” (Anyone who thinks an IQ test accurately measures political acumen probably doesn’t have a very high IQ.)
“We need to confiscate every gun in America that’s not in the hands of the police or military.” (It amazes me how liberals think that Second Amendment advocates—many of whom are paranoid and all of whom are armed—will somehow go along with this idea.)
“We need to use Jurassic Park-type technology to reanimate the Founding Fathers so they can tell us their original intent regarding the Constitution.” (OK, I made this one up, but wouldn’t that be cool?)
October 22nd, 2017 on 5:58 pm
An interesting perspective here, which I can comment upon dynamically, and will.
hfanatic wrote:
“I know we live in a country where nearly half the citizens people can’t name the vice president, but I find it hard to believe anybody is so ignorant of the political process that he or she thinks voting out all 535 members of Congress is a realistic option.”
So true, the political process will not allow that because democracy depends on opinion and opinion depends on information and information depends on media. Democracy is controlled by those that control media.
However, those people have the basic right idea, congress needs purification. And, in that process, there might be no member pure enough to the intents of the constitution to qualify for a seat in congress.
There is a way to do this, but it requires 51% unity in 38 states upon a right not enumerated, but retained and not to be denied or disparaged. Do you recognize the 9th Amendment there? How about Article 5?
Politics as usual is broken, bad. Media will not share truths, and in fact they outright misrepresent. The people are uninformed.
The ideals of the constitution cannot be relinquished and retain rights and freedoms, therefore we only have each other as state Citizens that we can depend on to enforce the constitution and our rights.
But, the ignorance you mention is real and controls that dependency. An old maxim, “There are none more deceived than those that think they know the truth”. Each and every wooley eyed couch potato thinks they know the truth because someone on TV, or a slick website told them, “you know the truth now”.
It comes down to positive law. Actively using our rights in agreement, unity, because we understand them and the laws that protect them. Consider, would tyrants in control of government teach the people in the government schools HOW to use the law of the constitution to overthrow them because they violate the constitution?
No.
Before I go further, I’d like to get your reaction to what I’ve written here.