Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Dysfunctional Government

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Dysfunctional Government

    A DYSFUNCTIONAL GOVERNMENT
    by J. F. Kelly

    The One Republic, CA
    http://www.theonerepublic.com/archives/Columns/Ke llyJ/20071026KellyDysfunctional.html
    Oct 26 2007

    The most recent Reuters/Zogby poll on the subject revealed that
    Americans continued to lose confidence in their federal government
    and in the competence of their elected leaders. Fully two-thirds
    of respondents believe that their country is on the wrong track,
    a remarkable expression of pessimism regarding the future.

    Support for President George W. Bush continues to plummet, sinking
    to 24% from 29%. But even at that lowly level, it remains more than
    twice as high as the 11% approval rating that Congress received.

    Democrats assumed control of Congress with a promise to change things
    in Washington. Things have changed all right but mostly for the
    worse. We are well into the new fiscal year and, as of this writing,
    none of the dozen annual spending bills has been passed. Judicial and
    other nominations have been stalled. Medicare and social security
    funding problems remain unaddressed. Illegal immigration remains
    out of control while liberal, activist judges and local politicians
    obstruct enforcement measures. The Alternate Minimum Tax, a creature
    of our bizarre tax system, threatens to engulf the entire middle
    class while Democrats try to find new taxes that could compensate
    for it. J.F. Kelly, Jr. is a retired Navy Captain and bank executive
    who writes on current events and military subjects. He is a resident
    of Coronado, California. This Congress, at its current pace, could
    set a new record for incompetence. It devotes most of its effort
    to posturing, jousting with the Executive Branch, criticizing the
    war, holding hearings of interest to relatively few Americans and
    little related to their most pressing problems, pandering to special
    interests, travel boondoggles, campaigning for reelection and crafting
    meaningless, symbolic resolutions. An example of the latter and an
    illustration of another clumsy intrusion into foreign policy was the
    resolution drafted by the House Foreign Affairs Committee regarding
    genocide perpetrated by the Ottomans against the Armenians nearly a
    century ago. This resolution serves no purpose today except to pander
    to some of the million and a half or so Armenian Americans.

    But it greatly angered Turkey, an important ally and a rare Islamic
    democracy whose cooperation is critical to most American military
    operations in the Middle East and especially in Iraq. This is not a
    trivial matter, whatever one's views on the war in Iraq, because it
    impacts directly upon the safety and support of American troops.

    Turkish leaders, who bear no more responsibility for sins committed a
    century ago than our own current leaders bear for the sins of slavery,
    reacted with predictable anger. President Bush had asked that Congress
    not take this provocative, unnecessary action. That, of course, was
    reason enough for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other prominent
    Democrats to proclaim support for this counterproductive piece of
    mischief. It is another in a long list of examples of putting hatred
    of George W. Bush ahead of the country's well-being and its military
    operations in time of war. It is disgraceful and irresponsible conduct
    on the part of representatives who were not elected to conduct foreign
    policy. Meanwhile, Mr. Bush joined members of Congress in another
    symbolic act, that of bestowing the Congressional Gold Medal on the
    Dalai Lama. Some may be tempted to liken this to the resolution on the
    Armenian genocide because it greatly angered the Chinese who regard
    the Dalai Lama as a separatist seeking Tibetan independence from China
    (which invaded that tiny Himalayan nation in 1951). But the comparison
    is not valid. There is a difference between ancient history and current
    events and, while Turkey is now a democratic ally, China is still a
    repressive Communist dictatorship which still attempts to impose its
    will by threats and by force. The values that we share with China
    are mainly economic. The Executive and Legislative branches of our
    federal government have become mired in a state of dysfunction and
    government is simply not serving the best interests of the republic or
    its people. There is, to be sure, nothing wrong with healthy political
    rivalry and debate, but the current state of relations between these
    branches of government goes well beyond that and it harms our national
    image. The nation is losing any semblance of consensus or compromise
    on most important issues and conditions seem to be getting worse. If
    unchecked, this political and ideological polarization will continue
    to feed on itself and hasten our decline as a great power as other
    growing nations with more unity of purpose and national consensus
    emerge. Americans desperately need transformational leadership which
    will help heal the divisions and bring Americans closer together for
    the good of the nation. Who among the current field of candidates
    will provide it? Voters need to be challenging each of them to tell
    us how they propose to do it. The answers need to contain more
    than platitudes.

    CRO copyright 2007 J. F. Kelly, Jr. J.F. Kelly, Jr. is a retired Navy
    Captain and bank executive who writes on current events and military
    subjects. He is a resident of Coronado, California.
Working...
X