August 12, 2005
View From Lodi, CA: Throw The Rascals Out! All
The Rascals!
By Joe Guzzardi
In my column last week,
"Beware the Looming Bush Guest Worker Haymaker,"
I did the impossible.
Based on the reader mail I
received, I realize that I underestimated the
contempt and rage that has built up in the average
citizen toward today’s elected officials.
A week ago I wrote that Congress,
under the
heavy-handed direction of the White House, passed two
pork-laden
energy and
transportation bills.
And I predicted that the worst is
yet to come when Congress returns in September. The
Senate, again with behind the scenes maneuvering by
President Bush, is poised to deliver a blow to the
working stiff by passing
guest worker/amnesty legislation.
The response my column generated
was the most intense of any I have ever received.
Reader M.M. wrote: "Bush seems
determined to make a substantial number of people (much
greater than his margin of victory) who voted for him
regret it."
And from J.C. in
Oklahoma:
"I have
written numerous letters of complaint to all of my
Representatives and Senators, and all I ever get in
return is a misleading, falsified, stereotypical,
uneducated canned speech!
"It is
unbelievable that our ‘elected’ officials do not know
American History, understand the Constitution, or
have the
spine to do their job! My friends and everyone in
our entire family, which is very large, feel the same as
I do even though some of us are Republicans and some are
Democrats. How can people who supposedly are ‘patriotic
Americans’, because of their elected position in
government, be so irresponsible, unresponsive, ,
brain-washed and so focused on their own political
career that they would sacrifice the entire nation?
"I am
so sick of their arrogant neglect (and I cam only
speaking for me right now, even though hundreds of my
family and friends feel the same) that I am literally
sick."
"We
need to
secure our borders. Our borders are ‘real’! We have
laws in place to deal with immigration! It is a crime
for office holders to ignore their jobs! Why hasn’t
someone filed lawsuits against these people? We need to
vote and replace each and every elected official who has
not pursued their job description as mandated by law."
A hat-tip to J.C. for striking the
note I want to emphasize today.
For all the carping that goes on,
invariably on Election Day the same old disappointing
candidates are re-elected.
So if you voted for an incumbent in
2004— in the San Joaquin Valley that would mean
Sen. Barbara Boxer, Rep. Richard Pombo and President
Bush—then you haven’t earned the right to complain.
Your choices won; you got what
you wanted.
When will we ever learn? Why sign
up, election cycle after election cycle, to take another
pounding from the same
political hacks?
Voters refuse to recognize the
strength they themselves wield when they
use their vote as a protest weapon.
But instead of getting behind the
challenger, the electorate invariably rationalizes its
support for the incumbent by saying that they can’t vote
for a Democrat (or Republican) or they don’t like the
challenger’s position on
guns,
education, abortion, the
death penalty,
gays, the
environment or immigration.
That’s foolish and
self-destructive.
As an example of what I mean, let’s
take a look at the
1992 presidential election where Texas
billionaire and Independent
Ross Perot, had he won, might have made a difference
to the U.S. in terms of jobs, education and immigration.
Perot was certainly a breath of
fresh air on the political scene. He unhesitatingly
criticized
affirmative action,
big business (specifically General Motors), the
first Iraq War and based on his personal experiences
in Texas,
public education.
Recall that Perot
argued against the North America Free Trade
Agreement insisting,
correctly as it turned out, that
NAFTA would result in fewer American jobs in the
manufacturing sector.
Perot also predicted, again
accurately, that NAFTA would encourage illegal
immigration. And, in fact, the numbers of illegal aliens
in the US nearly doubled since NAFTA was enacted ten
years ago.
[JOENOTE TO VDARE.COM
READERS: Perot’s
exact quote:
"It is a myth that NAFTA
will reduce illegal immigration. As manufacturing in
northern Mexico expands, hundreds of thousands of
Mexican workers will be drawn north. They will quickly
find that wages in the Mexican maquiladora plants cannot
compete with wages anywhere in the US. Out of economic
necessity, many of these mobile workers will consider
illegally immigrating into the US. In short, NAFTA has
the potential to increase illegal immigration, not
decrease it."]
Although Perot got 19 million votes
in the general election, he turned out to be his own
worst enemy by briefly dropping out of the race.
My position is cut and dried: I
have witnessed time and again the incumbent’s act. I
don’t like it. I’ll gamble on the unknown with the hope
that a viable and responsive third party will one day
soon evolve.
Election 2006 should be fertile
ground for challengers, especially frank talking
Perot-type candidates.
Don Goldwater, Barry’s nephew, has
announced that he will run for Arizona governor against
Janet Napolitano.
[Don Goldwater to Enter Governor’s Race,"
Robbie Sherwood, Arizona Republic, July 30, 2005]
And Westchester, New York District
Attorney Jeanine Pirro will be
taking on Hillary Clinton in New York.
[DA Out to Snatch Clinton’s Senate Seat," Gary
Younge, The Guardian, August 11 2005]
A man who should know,
Newt Gingrich, thinks that the Republicans are in
for a rough ride in 2006. Republicans, said Gingrich,
"need to do some very serious planning and not just
assume that everything is going to be automatically
okay."[Gingrich
Says Ohio Race Holds Lessons for GOP," Dan Balz
and Thomas Edsall, Washington Post, August 4
2005]
The misconception is that
challengers lose because incumbents have more money,
more endorsements and better name recognition. While
that is unquestionably true, the real reason challengers
lose is because you don’t vote for them.
Here’s my pledge; feel free to
adopt it as your own:
"If you
are holding office, I vow to do everything humanly
possible to oust you from office."
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.