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A Party for Charlie Rangel? Political Class Not Even Pretending to Care Anymore

More evidence that the political class just doesn't factor you into their decision-making.

by
Tom Morgan

Bio

August 10, 2010 - 9:14 am
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This week we watched a congressman stake out powers for the federal government that the writers of our Constitution forgot to include. San Francisco Congressman Pete Stark, in a video taken at his recent townhall meeting with constituents, said “the federal government can do most anything in this country.”

He seemed surprised a woman in the audience thought the Constitution might somehow limit the lawmakers.

A  recent Rasmussen Report claimed two-thirds of what they call the political class feel the U.S. is sailing in the right direction. (See the report for how they define political class.) While 84% of mainstream Americans say it is not. That is a mighty fat gap. More of a chasm. The report claims 24% of mainstream voters place prime importance on fiscal issues like taxes and government spending. Only 2% of the political class voters do.

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Rasmussen suggests that 68% of voters believe those in the political class don’t care what most Americans think. “Is anybody there? Does anybody care? Does anybody see what I see?” Meanwhile, 59% are embarrassed by the behavior of the political class.

Hello out there!

Scott Rasmussen is no doubt promoting his book In Search of Self-Governance with his report. In it he suggests that many folks feel politicians care little about the concept of self-government. That would translate into “the will of the people.” They feel many of the political elite “ see self-governance as a problem to be overcome.” Consider how many controversial measures have been rammed through this Congress, controversial because most Americans oppose them. Most opposed ObamaCare. Most oppose the federal government suing the state of Arizona over its new law concerning illegals.

A group of 20th century Italian thinkers argued that democracy was not all it was cracked up to be — they believed it merely masked the reality that an elite always got its hands on the money and power. These days that mask is slipping. As it does, we are reminded that some animals are more equal than others.

Does the political class care about matters that concern the majority of us? Please. These days, they don’t even bother to fake it.

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Tom Morgan is a money commentator and creator of the radio program "Tom Morgan's Moneytalk."

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34 Comments, 17 Threads, 2 Trackbacks

  1. The American political class believes it has mastered a sufficient range of weapons to make it and its machinations unassailable. If we can’t bring it to heel in the upcoming elections, armed revolution will be the only remaining recourse.

    • Rusty Bill

      You assume that the “political class” will honor election results that they do not agree with. Think back to Florida 2000, or the “election” of Al Fanken in Minnesota in 2008. Add in the documented election fraud perpetrated by ACORN/Project Vote, the refusal of Democrat Secretaries of State to purge voter lists of ineligible voters (as required by Federal law), and the continuing efforts to disenfranchise deployed military voters (who generally favor Conservatives).

      • No, I make no assumptions about the integrity of the upcoming elections. You could well be right, Bill. But whether they fail us because they’re corrupted or because we’ve lost them “honestly,” the sole remaining corrective will be armed revolt. Although that might be a bit clearer to most if the corruption is really blatant.

      • Anonymous

        Although I think all need to go…I seriously doubt it will happen. Dems are going to preach about what they have jut passed etc and the left will lap it up and ask no questions…

        I sound so discouraged, and I suppose I am. I see what was just passed by Pelosi and the kids, and I wonder where we are going to end up, we can’t live on what we do not have…

        • gorgo

          It’s a fact that the Right has long had an appeal to the “better angels” of human nature on its side, but it’s never been and never will be enough. The Left’s ace in the hole has always been its appeal to the multitude of baser elements of our nature. Just look at all of human history; which side of humanity tends to prevail?

          That’s why I’m a pessimist. The Left promises state-approved iniquity, and delivers. On a national scale there has never been any competition with that.

    • CGW

      Francis:

      And there is only one way to bring it to heel; vote and vote against every encumbent, no exceptions. The dying body needs fresh blood.

      The ruling class will never simply fade away. Leaf, twig branch and root, all that’s rotten must be replaced and renewed.

    • darth vader

      Keep your weapons handy-Comrade Dumbama and His poodle Piglosi wont like losing, commies never do. The october surprise might be martial law, with these scum you never know. Im keeping the Ruger blackhawk close by.

      • Oh, that’s quite clear, Darth. I doubt that we’d be allowed to take even one seat from Democrat incumbents without a horde of poll watchers, each of them with a videocamera and the police on speed dial, deployed at every polling station in America. Even that might not suffice.

        Be ready, friends. This could be the “big one.”

        • Ruebacca

          Civil disobedience in the form of a tax revolt will be the way to go. No Taxes no big fat bloated left. Civil disobedience before violence.

        • gorgo

          I tend to agree that armed revolt may be the only option left to us to restore the Republic. I’m unconvinced, however, that there are nearly enough people willing to fight, much less who see the need for it. And the Left acts as if it knows it, too, and is counting on it. Hence the unprecedented undisguised ARROGANCE we’ve seen from them of late. They’re acting exactly like people who know something the rest of us do not.

          Once upon a time, within the last 100 years, might revolt have happened? Did we still have the stock to do it? Yes. Today? I just don’t see it. Wish I did.

          • M

            Re: Whether there’s “enough people”.

            Kind of makes you wonder if that’s why BO has not brought a significant number of soldiers home. He know’s they’re not simpatico with his agenda by and large, they’re also extremely “proficient” at this stage in the game and the have proven their willingness to fight for freedom. BO’s far better off with them over there and relying on police forces against a revolt.

            Of course, if he brought any soldiers home it would only exacerbate the bad job numbers as the national guard guys went back into the work force. So that’s a good reason too. Where are the “No Blood for Good Economic Numbers” protestors?

            I guess the point is… Its MHO that unless…

            - the Dems get knocked back to the point that they reconsider their whole political philosophy,
            - AND the Political Class culture gets shattered,
            - AND some kind of extremely constitutional fundamentalist (libertarian) leader comes on the scene that can lead the effort to restore the Fed to is proper size and shape,…
            then some sort of violent revolt is coming and coming fast.

      • Gary Ogletree

        They have long been promoting the smear that violent Tea Party racists threaten public security. They may instigate some violence and blame the Tea Party, then declare a national emergency with elections cancelled or corrupted by government poll controllers. This is as close as the progressives will ever get to establishing their Marxist dictatorship. Why would they not go all out?

  2. 2. darth vader

    There will be another song playing Nov 3rd-Does anyone really know what tim e it is? The dimwits will know. I beleive the Marvel comics character the Thing said it best-ITS CLOBBERIN TIME………………………………..

  3. 3. kismet

    I think the way they have all been acting is just evidence that they all have proof and know that the aliens are coming and the world really is going to end in December 2012. They are all partying like it’s the end of the world as we know it.

    • Dianna

      Well, at least that’s more amusing than persistent speculation about declarations of martial law. Which were annoying when I heard them about Clinton and Bush. Just who, please, do you think would enforce said idiotic declaration of martial law?

  4. 4. Tulsa Jack

    There’s yet time and hope for a Constitutional solution to these lying, thieving traitors through the ballot box. Abraham Lincoln thought so in October 1859 when word reached him of John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry; but eighteen months later the Civil War had begun. At the time of the Boston Tea Party Edmund Burke warned the British Parliament, “Free people will not be argued into slavery;” but Parliament ignored Burke and responded with the “Coercive Acts.” About a year later, on 19 April 1775, Patriot Captain Parker’s command to his 120 homespun Minutemen facing 800 Red Coat bayonets on Lexington Green still rings down the centuries: “Don’t fire unless fired upon; but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here!”

  5. 5. Delia

    A giant can of good ol’ fashioned American whoop-@ss may be our only recourse if we can’t save our Republic in a legitimate way. I’m with Francis on this. Why? Because the corruption, ineptitude and lyin’-no-good-for-nothin’ thievery is so far gone and toxically systemic in our politics that we may be ruefully reduced to civil disobedience in order to make known “WHO IS THE BOSS”. Will enough of us STAND? I don’t know.

    If votes magically show up in a hatch-back or votes “get disappeared” altogether (fostered by Acorn type criminals), we are going to be gagged and bound by the thugs running the show (and that goes for the idiots who sit on their hands under the ‘R’ too).

    Nobody wants a fight? HAH! Nobody would join the damned military if we were all cowards and I firmly believe we are NOT a nation of cowards.

    The gloves need to come off and the truth needs to be outed over and over.

  6. 6. zzz

    Let’s stipulate that the more corrupt a politician you are, the more likely you are to generate scandal. This strongly suggests that Rangel, having been outed as corrupt, and given how slack the anti-corruption safeguards are, is a center of political corruption, having made lots of shady deals with lots of politicians who still look OK. Rangel’s old and any significant jail time is effectively for life, so there’s always the implicit threat of his revealing corruption the authorities don’t yet know about, getting seemingly clean politicians into trouble. Thus what Rangel wants from his secret cronies, Rangel gets. Being professionals, these secret cronies know the score and realize that it’s very much safer to attend Rangel’s fund-raising parties than to stay away. Since we the voters are non-professionals, we have to reason our way to the conclusion that Rangel has something on every famous member of the US elite who attends his fund-raisers, having in effect blackmailed them to his expensive celebratory gatherings. With all this in mind, look around at his guest lists and ask yourself if you’re really surprised at who’s attending and who’s not. Vote accordingly.

  7. 7. W. J. J. Hoge

    Palpa! Palpa! Conive! Conive!
    (A rough Latin translation)

  8. 8. Ruebacca

    It’s democratic voters. As long as the pork, welfare, student loans and government paychecks keep coming they could care less who sends it.

    The next Republican house needs to starve the Democratic entitlement machine. Tax payer pay for the whole infrastructure of the left. We need cut off all the money. From Acorn to Columbia University no more Federal dollars. Nada zip zero.

    • William

      absolutely ruebacca. you have the answer. now if we can only get enough sane Americans to help us,

    • Anonymous

      “It’s democratic voters. As long as the pork, welfare, student loans and government paychecks keep coming they could care less who sends it.”

      Yep, and that’s why I think the Left knows it has a permanent lock on this country and the Republic has been beyond resurrection for some time. More and more people are either choosing to go gladly over to their side (see the U.K. for a current example) or are so discouraged and powerless they feel they have no choice but to quietly go along. Either way, once they cross that line there’s almost no chance getting them back.

      I’ll still vote and act and – if need be – fight as if we can change it, though.

  9. 9. don

    Yeah, well, since the political class seems fine with a ground zero mosque, maybe some enterprising souls could start a Muslim gay bath house next door to the Mosque? Set up a canine day care center for fifi and fido while the boys are having fun. You know, full service bar and deli, serve some ribs and soul food, and call it Mohammed”s Pigs And Poop. Tolerance is a two way street.

    • insomniac64

      That’s an excellent idea. I LOVE it! And why not add adult “toy stores,” a Victoria’s Secret and as many veterinary clinics as possible.

  10. 10. icetrout

    Dat Damn Kingfisher done gots cought wiff his hand in da cokkie-jarz agains :O

  11. 11. Eric E. Coe

    They say “Let them eat cake”… but remember, the cake is a lie.

  12. 12. Jones

    I despise all politicians with the burning white hot intensity of a thousand suns.

    • William

      SO DO I JONES. I TRY VERY HARD TO NOT HATE PEOPLE. BUT I CAN’T HELP IT I DO HATE POLITICIANS. AND WE HAVEN’T HAD A STATESMAN SINCE JESSE HELMES DIED. FOR A SHORT FEW MOMENTS I THOUGHT WE MIGHT HAVE ONE IN JOE LIEBEMAN. BUT HE SHOUWED HIS TRUE COLLERS WHEN HE SIDED WITH THE PARTY OF CORRUPTION AFTER THEY DUMPED HIM,

  13. 13. Jack Olson

    Morgan says to look at the Rasmussen report to find their definition of “political class.” I looked at the report and not only didn’t find a definition of that class but a note that in the survey they did NOT define it. They let each respondent make up his own definition of what he meant by “political class”. They did not ask respondents to identify themselves as part of that class or not. They classified each respondent according to his answers, and voila! They found that people they classified according to their answers, gave different answers. They would have produced more meaningful results had they classified them by occupation, whether they work in the private sector or in government or tax-free organizations.

  14. 14. Mike G

    I have seen estimates that up to 45% of GDP is direct government or government driven. That would be like a private company spending 45% on overhead, i.e. those supporting the people who are actually doing the productive work. Most business models I have seen assume that this should be somewhere around 10%.

    The problem is that competition in the private sector keeps companies honest and they cannot do such foolish things without threatening their own existence. But absent this affect, overhead rises uncontrollably. After all, they are the ones with the power and the ones who make all the decisions.

    The democratic process that is supposed to function as a check on government growth, waste and fraud has been severely gamed by the political class as pointed out in many comments above. So my conclusion is that only civil disobedience will work. How about a grass roots declaration of a flat and limited tax, and where the declared rate would be lowered if the Fed borrowed too much or printed more money in response. And a grass roots declaration of a regulatory holiday where a list of the dumbest and most harmful (to our standard of living) regulations would be ignored until further notice.

  15. 15. Gary Ogletree

    The progressives will push us to the limit. Civil Disobedience is quite a weapon if used right. We will know what to do when the time comes. We have the numbers.

  16. 16. pgillenw

    As the comments show we have lot’s to be concerned about.

    The political class feels perfectly justified in “they know best” attitude.

    This patronizing stance can be found in all non-free nations governed by the Theocracy and Despots.

    We the people have voted for Despots. Now that we recognize them for what they are an up-rising is in order.

    We need to upset their apple cart least we become more the apple they eat.

  17. 17. The Root "83

    Dear Darth Vader,

    No, in the current business climate we find ourselves, I would NOT recommend keeping the Ruger Blackhawk 1.0 system close by. It is too slow to “reboot”, and its unique “memory” requirements will make it rather difficult to meet “just in time production needs” when utilizing the “excess inventory” of those whom we have recently taken “market share” from.

    Keep in mind, stockpiles of “random access memory sticks” , buried at various locales for just such a “market downturn” as we find ourselves today, are often quite a distance away from where the actual “business” will take place, and therefore might as well be on Mars when we are required to “crunch data” on the fly.

    It is better, I believe, to choose a system that is more “portable” and, as much as possible; “interchangeable” with the “operating systems” we expect “the competition” to use, at least on the individual PC level.

    In the days when the “primary mainframe” for “the competition” was the “Wheel-Gun 38.0″ , I preferred to keep our “field reps” supplied with the unobtrusive lever action Winchester, chambered in .357 mag, for most of the above reasons.

    Today however, there are many high quality aftermarket “systems” that mimic our competitors full size hardware, yet offer unique “subgroups” with which to “interchange data”.

    I am describing a shoulder mounted “Desktop M.16.15.” that will “receive data” from the various and commonly available M.9 or M.4.0. “hand held” modules we can expect THEIR Field Reps to have on hand in sufficient quantity to supply our customers.

    Yes, the range of this device is not as great as the full-on desktops models we expect their “upper management” to employ once “the sale” begins. But it does, via superior ergonomics (and longer barrel), provide much greater “customer focus” than the purely hand held module their Field Reps typically carry….and it can use THEIR data sticks, thus relieving us of expense and logistics of carrying “excess inventory”.

    This will be of primary importance during the initial “point of sale” interface /customer frenzy that is expected to occur in the typical bankruptcy/liquidation event our sales models have predicted.

    Yes, we will eventually need a complete business plan, and full scale mainframe hardware capacity to restore long term profitability. But the market is currently volatile, and having the right tools in the right place means we can capitalize on day to day turnovers, and slowly build market share.

    The Ruger 1.0 is a great operating system, I would take it anywhere….but its not about ME, its about THE FUTURE OF THE COMPANY, and I want to see flexible, better integrated systems in place now, for the long haul.

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