Intro

It's time for a reality check ...

Maybe we’ve reached the point of diminishing astonishment.

But I suspect that much of what we’re hammered with every day really doesn’t make much of an impact on most of us anymore. We’ve heard the same stories too often. We’ve been exposed to the same issues for so long without any meaningful resolution. We recognize that reality is rapidly becoming malleable, primarily in the hands of whoever has the biggest microphone. How else can we explain a society where myth asserts itself as reality, based entirely how many hits it gets online?

We know that many of the “issues” as defined are pure crapola, hyped by politicians on both sides pandering to “the will of the people,” which is still more crapola. Inevitably, it’s not the will of all the people they reflect, but the will of relatively small groups of people with disproportionate political influence.

Nobody wants to face up to the realities of the issues. Nobody wants to say what’s right or wrong – even when it’s obvious and there are numbers to back it up. Most of us are afraid to bring up the realities for fear of being accused of being insensitive or downright mean.

So we say nothing. Until now.

It’s time for a reality check on the fundamentals – much of which is common knowledge to many of us, already. But it might be comforting to know you are not alone …

Monday, March 26, 2012



Most politicians at the Federal level are shameless whores  
Honest whores only sell what is theirs to sell.  Politicians sell what is not theirs to sell, and they do it in return for a pittance – they will support legislation wasting millions in taxpayer dollars in exchange for a $5,000 campaign contribution. 

That makes them not only shameless whores, selling any vestige of dignity and self-respect  for money, but also shameless whores with no business sense – a deadly combination in whose hands to place the running of our government.  

Republicans and Democrats both pander to special interest groups for the money they need to wage their campaigns.  The same groups then get to help shape their respective platforms and policies in return. 

While the needs of the special interests are served – often at great expense to the taxpayers – the resulting platforms and policies leave most Americans cold. 

That’s why self-described Republicans are only about 29% of the voting public; self-described Democrats are only about 31%. 

People unaffiliated with either party – independents – decide elections. 

So even after Republicans and Democrats have sliced and diced the electorate along party, racial, ethnic, gender, gender preference, economic, age and religious lines for maximum advantage, they still need to appeal to independents to win anything. 

And therein lies the problem: 

Like most Americans, independents want some of this and some of that and none of the extreme stuff; neither party is willing to change what they promised their special interests, much less turn off their more extremist wings who dominate the selection of candidates.

The result is that most modern elections are now decided by people choosing between the least offensive candidates representing each party, rather than choosing someone they really feel will actually represent their interests and the best interests of the nation. 

We settle for mediocrity, and the system remains unchanged. 

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