The concurrent legislative tussles in Wisconsin and in Washington D.C. both this past week and undoubtedly in this upcoming week should be of grave concern to the citizens who have elected the individuals responsible for the current state of the nation, from both the state and federal perspectives.
First, a specific line from a speech given by Edmund Burke, a contemporary and political influence of the founders, to the electors of Bristol on November 3rd, 1774 should give the electorate pause with respect to their representatives, as it is as relevant today as it was when originally delivered:
“Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.”
We are not a true democracy but a democratic republic, and as such, we elect representatives to engage in the business of government on our behalf. The populace at large need not concern themselves with the minutiae involved in such an enterprise: the social contract between the government and the governed is implicit in its foundation that the elected officials will do no harm to the country. There are of course many methods and manners to accomplish certain national goals, and therein should lay the debate.
This nation is now facing truly historic financial distress. Wisconsin has become the microcosm and prism through which these issues are viewed. The nation looks for calm, reasoned approaches to resolve this overriding issue of national security. The Congress has the detailed information necessary to do this; the nation as a whole does not. The Congress has the authority to course correct the ship of state as needed. These individuals have been entrusted with the safety and security of this great nation, for ourselves and out posterity.
It is becoming evident that said trust may have been seriously misplaced.
The political rancor from Washington D.C. & Wisconsin this past week and for the week ahead has been nothing but diatribes eyed towards gaining political advantage and talk of a governmental shut down.
In both cases, however, the elected officials in question have opted to shun their responsibilities and flee, demonstrating nothing short of cowardice when leadership is mandated. The Congress will not be able to tend to these immediate financial concerns as this is the week they are closed for Presidents Day.
The irony of that particular reality is not lost on the American people.
Concurrently, certain state senators in Wisconsin have fled the state, assuring the absence of a quorum, with the intent of forcing that the business of the state government be driven down to its knees: they have collectively taken their ball and gone missing.
Neither set of elected officials are demonstrating nothing but that they are charlatans to the offices they hold.
The second point is a simple one for the electorate to weigh as they ponder the wisdom of electing those individuals currently in office: with minor variations, elected officials take the following oath:
‘I do solemnly swear {or affirm} that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God’.
Given their conscious decisions to forgo their sworn obligations and responsibilities, can it be fairly argued that they are fulfilling their oath of office?
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