We all need good government. And we all know government is just as imperfect as people are, because government is made up of people. But ya'll are responsible for your problems when you trash your government instead of working to improve it and make it work better and more efficiently. The idea that the way to solve problems is to cut government to the bone, or worse yet, throw a monkey wrench into its midst, is nuts. Yes, it is as exciting and energizing as a bunch of hooligans at a soccer match, but its still nuts and a very dangerous thing to do.
And now, some of you, not referring to any one individual here, have got the idea that putting a criminal with a severe personality disorder at the top of our U.S. government is somehow going to improve things!!! The way complex problems get solved is via accurate information, careful analysis, informed decisions, and hard work. We have the exact opposite of that at the top of our U.S. government today; yet Government is not the problem.
You and I are the problem if we don't take the time to inform ourselves of facts rather than fiction before we vote. Now, because of the internet, on balance a wonderful thing for humanity, we have, for the first time in our lives, fiction almost level with fact. We had better get very good at distinguishing fact from fiction, and soon!
Some of us think a "wall" is a good idea because there has been a recent large increase in the number of persons seeking asylum in the U.S. In our minds, we have attached the idea of a "Wall" to the recent increase in asylum seekers and bought, subconsciously perhaps, into demagogic rhetoric of rapists and murderers "invading." We seem to have forgotten, however, the many-years-long practice of the U.S. failing to enforce immigration law and overlooking those who overstayed their visas, because U.S. employers wanted low wage illegal workers and were happy, and remain happy, to give them jobs.
I ask those of you who think a "wall" is a good idea to examine the source of this idea and ask yourselves if its an idea born of accurate information, careful analysis, informed decisions, and hard work. Or is it an idea born of spur of the moment demagogic, political rhetoric coming from a man of highly questionable mental acuity?
And now, some of you, not referring to any one individual here, have got the idea that putting a criminal with a severe personality disorder at the top of our U.S. government is somehow going to improve things!!! The way complex problems get solved is via accurate information, careful analysis, informed decisions, and hard work. We have the exact opposite of that at the top of our U.S. government today; yet Government is not the problem.
You and I are the problem if we don't take the time to inform ourselves of facts rather than fiction before we vote. Now, because of the internet, on balance a wonderful thing for humanity, we have, for the first time in our lives, fiction almost level with fact. We had better get very good at distinguishing fact from fiction, and soon!
Some of us think a "wall" is a good idea because there has been a recent large increase in the number of persons seeking asylum in the U.S. In our minds, we have attached the idea of a "Wall" to the recent increase in asylum seekers and bought, subconsciously perhaps, into demagogic rhetoric of rapists and murderers "invading." We seem to have forgotten, however, the many-years-long practice of the U.S. failing to enforce immigration law and overlooking those who overstayed their visas, because U.S. employers wanted low wage illegal workers and were happy, and remain happy, to give them jobs.
I ask those of you who think a "wall" is a good idea to examine the source of this idea and ask yourselves if its an idea born of accurate information, careful analysis, informed decisions, and hard work. Or is it an idea born of spur of the moment demagogic, political rhetoric coming from a man of highly questionable mental acuity?
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