This week's Springfield News-Leader Column
Professional politicians face united American 'rabble'
One accusation consistently directed at those who hold traditional American values and revere the lessons of history -- actual history, not history of the revisionist variety, which spews forth from the murky brains of Marxist professors -- is that we are "divisive." What they really mean when they extol the virtues of compromise and "reaching across the aisle" is that we should roll over and accede to every half-baked "progressive" social-engineering scheme that springs forth from their brilliant minds.
Not all that long ago, I had the high honor of being called "divisive" by the Kansas City Star ... even now I relish the moment I read it ...
I looked up "divisive" in a dictionary and found the following: di·vi·sive; forming or expressing division or distribution; creating dissension or discord.
Does anyone have a problem with that?
It should be recalled that President Bush stated in his first run for the presidency that he was "a uniter, not a divider." It was certainly a nice try, and he did compromise, unfortunately in my opinion, on "No Child Left Behind" and other pieces of legislation. Ultimately, he found that there was no way to stand on principle and please those with opposing worldviews simultaneously. Bob Woodward, in his book "The War Within," wrote that George W. Bush was "the nation's most divisive figure." When the book was released last year, I think that he was undoubtedly correct, but things "change."
What a difference a year makes! Is the country now united in lock step for the "change we can believe in"?
Hardly.
The country is in a "malaise" that would warm the cockles of Jimmy Carter's heart. In the midst of double-digit unemployment, record home foreclosures, record bank seizures and a record number of bankruptcy filings, our leadership is pursuing health insurance reform (formerly health care reform, if you hadn't noticed that little change), a cap and trade bill that will increase all taxes (yes, even those who earn less than $250,000 annually, remember that promise?) and up next, the proposed amnesty of millions of folks who have no intention of assimilating into our culture (but will gratefully vote Democrat, at least that's the plan).
Amazingly, the politicians have finally gotten the people's attention, and neither the people nor the politicians are pleased about it. The people are uniting ... against professional politicians. Just as a "rabble" of farmers and merchants united in 1776 against an oppressive monarchy.
As I write this, Scott Brown has won the Massachusetts special election for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by the deceased Ted Kennedy. The Kennedy brothers, John and Ted, had owned the seat (both literally and figuratively --or was Joseph Sr. the owner?) since 1952. It would seem that Democrats have definitely not found their own tenets of "hope" and "change" to be uniting factors.
I hope that all the people we send to Washington next year get the message: Our country hopes for real change; not just a change of party majority without results.
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