Wall Street Journal: Washington is ‘terrifying us’
As congressmen and senators return to their districts and states to open a dialogue with their constituents, they are certainly getting an earful. Some of these protests have turned ugly which is a shame as no one wins a shouting match. Reasoned debate will accomplish much more and stands a better chance of making Washington D.C. understand our frustrations.
Will it do any good either way? I doubt it. No matter what the public thinks, our representatives in D.C. are determined to ram-rod Obamacare down our throats whether we like it or not. They of course have forgotten that they represent us and they serve at our pleasure. Something bizarre seems to happen to men and women when they go to D.C. – rather than carrying forward the will of the people they push their own agendas, their constituents be damned.
Today in the Wall Street Journal, Peggy Noonan wrote a great piece about why frustrations are so high. In part it says:
We have entered uncharted territory in the fight over national health care. There’s a new tone in the debate, and it’s ugly. At the moment the Democrats are looking like something they haven’t looked like in years, and that is: desperate.
…
The passions of the protesters, on the other hand, are not a surprise. They hired a man to represent them in Washington. They give him a big office, a huge staff and the power to tell people what to do. They give him a car and a driver, sometimes a security detail, and a special pin showing he’s a congressman. And all they ask in return is that he see to their interests and not terrify them too much. Really, that’s all people ask. Expectations are very low. What the protesters are saying is, “You are terrifying us.”
….
People are not automatons. They show up only if they care.
What the town-hall meetings represent is a feeling of rebellion, an uprising against change they do not believe in. And the Democratic response has been stunningly crude and aggressive. It has been to attack. Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the United States House of Representatives, accused the people at the meetings of “carrying swastikas and symbols like that.” (Apparently one protester held a hand-lettered sign with a “no” slash over a swastika.) But they are not Nazis, they’re Americans. Some of them looked like they’d actually spent some time fighting Nazis.
Then came the Democratic Party charge that the people at the meetings were suspiciously well-dressed, in jackets and ties from Brooks Brothers. They must be Republican rent-a-mobs. Sen. Barbara Boxer said on MSNBC’s “Hardball” that people are “storming these town hall meetings,” that they were “well dressed”, that “this is all organized,” “all planned,” to “hurt our president.” Here she was projecting. For normal people, it’s not all about Barack Obama.
The Democratic National Committee chimed in with an incendiary Web video whose script reads, “The right wing extremist Republican base is back.” DNC communications director Brad Woodhouse issued a statement that said the Republicans “are inciting angry mobs of . . . right wing extremists” who are “not reflective of where the American people are.”
But most damagingly to political civility, and even our political tradition, was the new White House email address to which citizens are asked to report instances of “disinformation” in the health-care debate: If you receive an email or see something on the Web about health-care reform that seems “fishy,” you can send it to flag@whitehouse.gov. The White House said it was merely trying to fight “intentionally misleading” information.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas on Wednesday wrote to the president saying he feared that citizens’ engagement could be “chilled” by the effort. He’s right, it could. He also accused the White House of compiling an “enemies list.” If so, they’re being awfully public about it, but as Byron York at the Washington Examiner pointed, the emails collected could become a “dissident database.”
All of this is unnecessarily and unhelpfully divisive and provocative. They are mocking and menacing concerned citizens. This only makes a hot situation hotter. Is this what the president wants? It couldn’t be. But then in an odd way he sometimes seems not to have fully absorbed the awesome stature of his office. You really, if you’re president, can’t call an individual American stupid, if for no other reason than that you’re too big. You cannot allow your allies to call people protesting a health-care plan “extremists” and “right wing,” or bought, or Nazi-like, either. They’re citizens. They’re concerned. They deserve respect.
Be sure to read the full editorial here.
Related – Let Congressman Jared Polis know what you think:
Congressman Jared Polis of Colorado’s 2nd Congressional District is will hold six events while he is back home in Colorado (click here for schedule). The most convenient of those for Thornton residents to attend is being held on Saturday, September 5th from 1:00pm to 3:00pm at the Welby New Technology High School (1200 East 78th Avenue #105 Thornton, CO 80229).
Tony,
Both Perlmutter (7th CD) and Polis (2nd CD) will be at the Thornton Rec center August 22nd at 8AM.
http://perlmutter.house.gov/events.aspx
Luis, thanks for the info. I don’t expect it will matter but it doesn’t hurt to TRY to get them to listen.
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