Note to Reader: This post is purely a personal political commentary on the US Political climate.
As a citizen interested in government and as a former legislator, I had long believed that too many governmental programs are botched because they are started in haste without adequate planning or establishment of goals. Too often they never really attack the targeted problems. -- Jimmy Carter, 2002
As a citizen interested in government and as a former legislator, I had long believed that too many governmental programs are botched because they are started in haste without adequate planning or establishment of goals. Too often they never really attack the targeted problems. -- Jimmy Carter, 2002
The
current state U.S. politics is a highly partisan, two party system that reveals
divisive flaws in national public opinions.
The race for the office of the President of the United States has become
less about electing the most capable chief executive of the nation but, rather,
electing an ideology which effectively discriminates against a substantial population
of the United States.
The
course of federal American politics in the 21st century circulates
between radical conservatism and radical liberalism. Federal politics also undermine federalism within the United States as
well. I suggest a few courses of action
that should drive national policy for our government. These are:
1) We must have term limits for all federal, elected officials; 2) We
must restore confidence in the sovereignty of the States; and 3) We must, as a
nation, be willing to have crucial conversations and productive dialogue about
social equity.
Term
limits for members of Congress should be limited to two terms. This is in line with the term limits for the
office of the President. Elected
positions should not appear to be imperialistic, monarchistic, or
aristocratic. Term limits also makes
public service more accessible. The
modern political theory of Congressional Stagnation suggests that once elected,
a person is unlikely to lose re-election in the House of Representatives. I don't believe any individual member assumes a particular identity. I just believe that Congressional diversity comes from turnover.
“Incumbency
and Short-Term Influences on Voters” is an article by John Petrocik and Scott
Desposato that appeared in Political Research Quarterly that is widely
cited for its statistic that, on average, 5-10 incumbents per election cycle will
lose re-election in House elections.
Logically, the paradox is that 11% of the people approve of the work
done by Congress and yet all but 2% of Congress people are re-elected.
It
has long been a personal belief of mine, that as a citizen of the United
States, that if a political ideology is so divisive that threatens our
democratic republic then it should not be a federal issue. When compromise fails on a politically
ideological situation, then the people and the government must courageously
accept the sovereignty of the individual state’s determination of what is best
for its residents.
Technology
has provided access to more information and data than ever before. I believe that this also presents a
complication. I believe that technology also
makes us less likely to compromise because our access to information leads us
to believe that we are right when we take a position.
One
of the many great privileges of being an American citizen is the freedom to
choose which values we will possess and live by. This ability to be an individual carries the
responsibility to respect the choices of others. This does not require a citizen to compromise
their own values but it can lead to open and constructive conversations where
understanding as opposed to dominance is prevailing purpose.
In
response to polarizing effect of major issues, I propose that America
courageously accept that all divisive issues that cannot be objectively
evaluated as right and wrong be returned to the States. Gun control and abortion are examples of two
ideological differences that demonstrate the subjectivity of policy.
The
gun control issue rests on an interpretation of the Constitution. Rather than impose a modern interpretation of
gun control, making gun control a states’ rights issue protects the
constitutional rights of the people, and the laws, of Chicago, Illinois and
Anchorage, Alaska without compromising the sovereignty of the local and state
governments.
From
my perspective, abortion debate has almost never been about abortion
itself. It has been about the
fundamental question of when life begins.
However, without science (or law) definitively speaking to the
universality the personhood of a human zygote as life then the abortion
decision cannot take place nationally. Liberal
court opinions have reframed the nature of the abortion discussion. What began as a question of human viability
for a fetus has evolved into a privacy issue.
Science and the law do not speak objectively and harmoniously to life in
this circumstance and, therefore, abortion should be a states’ rights
issue.
Social
equity is the greatest challenge to the American landscape. I believe viral issues, such as perceived
police bias, corporate oligarchy, and the “1%”, are not individual issues to be
resolved but are themselves symptoms to a greater problem in America. The problem itself is something that must be
rooted out through education, conversation, and judicious action.
Comprehensive
reform of America’s school should begin with defining what is a quality
education and then bridging the access gap to this education. America has a Gross Domestic Product of $17.95
Trillion, by far the largest economy in the world. We should also have the most wealth of any
nation. Therefore, American students
should not be allowed to make it through primary and secondary schooling
without literacy, math, and critical thinking skills.
Federal
student loans, scholarships and grants for post-secondary education should only
be need based. Federal educational
benefits should also have some sort of return to the government in the form of
civil service, military service, or select degree seeking programs. Forbes magazine noted that bachelor degrees
in fields like anthropology, film, photographic arts, and other “softer”
degrees should not put students into debt.
The probability of the student repaying the debt without incurring a
forbearance, deference, or income controlled payments is significantly less
likely than a STEM-field producing degree.
Critical
conversations begin and end with engaging with the intent to understand and not
to dominate. This must be a values
driven conversation to understand differences in prejudice and practical
methods to re-evaluate the community dynamic.
Racism exists. Prejudice
exists. Discrimination exists. In the course of dialogue, growth and
engagement, communities can push back against racism, reveal prejudices, and
eliminate unjust discrimination while recognizing the existence of just
differentiation.
At
the end of the day, the American people need to be willing to act courageously
and judiciously. The leaders of ideology
seem to be more interested in protecting special interests and statuses quo at
the expense and sacrifice of the dignity of the individual and the nation. America can restore her national pride. And each American must be a part of
reclaiming national dignity.
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