Quote from piezoe:
This is one of those captivating articles --written some time ago, but nothing has really changed -- that makes a lot of sense on the surface and makes things pretty simple. All of the problems are because our legislative, executive and judicial branches of government profess one thing but do another. The problem is, this is way too simple.
In fact, most of these folks believe in what they profess, and much of the time, probably the majority of the time, are true to their word. If the article had started with that premise, which is the correct one, and then explained how, in spite of good intentions to balance the budget, prevent inflation, reduce taxes, and I might add, simplify the tax code, they screw up anyway, this could have been a ground breaking article, because it would have then addressed the root causes of our disfunctional government. And, certainly, the root cause is not that these people are mostly fuck-ups and people with bad intentions. They are not.
It makes sense to place blame for the country's failure to solve its problems squarely on the shoulders of these 545 (a few more now, isn't there?) individuals. That I can agree with completely. But they are not scoundrels. Nor are they, as individuals, incompetent or irresponsible, not many of them anyway, yet collectively they seem to be. (One has to acknowledge that occasionally a Phil Gramm or a Tom DeLay will come along, but they are the exceptions.) So why in spite of good intentions, can nothing get done. To me, that is the proper question to be asking.