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DON'T SLAM D.C. FOR THE SHUTDOWN, AMERICA. YOU SENT THOSE WACKOS HERE

Started by libby, October 08, 2013, 09:52:02 AM

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libby

The following is from the Local section of today's Washington Post.

It is about politicians and politics, but is not political in nature, so hope admin will allow it to stay here in this section, which is open to more people.

DON'T SLAM D.C. FOR THE SHUTDOWN, AMERICA: YOU SENT THESE WACKOS HERE

By Petula Dvorak, Published: October 7, 2013

America really loathes Washington right now, and that's preposterous: Our Town has done nothing wrong.

Washington is a place where hundreds of children couldn't play soccer this past weekend; where cafeteria workers, janitors and secretaries aren't getting paid for who knows how long; where Metro trains and buses run empty; where shoeshine guys sit idle; and where Girl Scout troops had to cancel annual camping trips.

The people of Washington didn't want this and aren't to blame for it, either. All the crazy that led to this absurd impasse that prompted the Senate's chaplain to pray last week, "Save us from the madness"? That's been imported here from the rest of the country.

America, you sent these guys here. They represent plenty of you, none of us. That imported brand of cuckoo is what's causing this government shutdown.

Consider that the next time you find yourself slamming Washington as a political cesspool. Or as the New York Daily News put it in its memorable "House of Turds" front page last week, "D.C. cess-pols shut down government."

The problem with that funny headline: These pols aren't from D.C.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower nailed it when he said: "There are a number of things wrong with Washington. One of them is that everyone is too far from home."

They come from afar and forget to act decently. They strong-arm and manipulate and broker and wink and then fly home for pancake breakfasts and down-home photo ops.

You, America, send us people such as Rep. Steve Stockman(R-Tex.), a former homeless man with a drug charge under his belt who had campaign bumper stickers urging the arming of fetuses: "If Babies Had Guns, They Wouldn't Be Aborted!"

And Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), who argued when she was running for president that the HPV vaccine causes mental retardation.

And former congressman Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.), who'd still be elbowing people out of the way at news conferences to get in front of the cameras if he hadn't accidentally tweeted crotch shots to women who weren't his wife on the way to the mike. (Glass House of Turds, New York. Thanks for him.)

Let me introduce you to the real Washington, a place that bears little resemblance to a cesspool or to the rarefied schmoozing, revolving-door incestuousness and million-dollar backslapping described in Mark Leibovich's best-selling book about Washington, "This Town." Leibovich is describing political Washington, not Our Town.

Our Town is a land full of people who were born and raised here, or who moved here decades ago to work and raise families: the beloved barber, the Redskins fan who painted his house burgundy and gold, the schoolteacher who stays late every day to conference with working parents.

The great irony is that the people of Our Town proper — D.C. residents — don't actually have a vote in the Capitol of Crazy.

But suddenly our parks, streets and playgrounds have been closed by lawmakers who arrive here on Monday afternoon and fly out on Thursday so they don't have to spend any more time in the political yuckpit they've created.

Our Town extends to the sprawling suburbs of Virginia and Maryland, where hundreds of thousands of analysts, architects, accountants, waitresses, doctors and construction workers live and work. They are, for the most part, moderate, reasonable people who send moderate and reasonable representatives to Congress, not kooks.

Many of them are hurting right now because they've been furloughed by this unnecessary shutdown, which is nothing more than a giant chess game for the folks who aren't from here. Our Town is the sandwich shops, dry cleaners, taxi drivers and food trucks getting skunked in this political game.

When Miriam Carey was gunned down by police after her wild car chase through Our Town on Thursday, lawmakers gave a standing ovation to the U.S. Capitol Police, who were working to keep these folks safe even though they weren't getting their paychecks.

The very next day, a man saluted the Capitol, doused himself with gasoline and set himself on fire. He died Friday night, and investigators still don't know who he was or what his motive might have been. All we know for sure is that he had some kind of message, and it wasn't good.
Meanwhile, This Town went on with its life, continuing the fundraising dinners, the power lunches. It doesn't really care what it's done to Our Town.

Here's how brazen and hypocritical people are. Last week, Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R-Tex.) berated a U.S. Park Service ranger who'd been told that she couldn't allow veterans to visit the closed World War II memorial. This from one of the guys who helped orchestrate the shutdown.

"The Park Service should be ashamed of themselves," Neugebauer said in a video captured by NBC News.

"I'm not ashamed," said the ranger, a citizen of Our Town.

"Well, you should be," Neugebauer said.

No, congressman. You and your colleagues should be ashamed of what you've done to Our Town.

To read previous columns, go to washingtonpost.com/dvorak.
© The Washington Post Company

Libby (as Palehorse might say, Amen, Sistah!)
All of life is a process of testing and initiation, always preparing for a higher level of consciousness -- and illumination. -- John Horn

Locutus

People often harp about term limits.  Yet they fail to realize that the power of term limits has always been at ballot box.   :wink:
One of the gravest dangers to the survival of our republic is an ignorant electorate routinely feeding at the trough of propaganda.   -- Locutus

"We are all connected; To each other, biologically. To the earth, chemically. To the rest of the universe atomically."  -- Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson