Logically, the basis for selecting politicians should be
focused on their positions on relevant issues. Voters should be looking at the
candidate’s “world view” and knowledge of how the economy actually works and
what laws are necessary and unnecessary or harmful. Most political campaigns
stay away from real issues.
Voters hire who they like. It helps if a candidate is good
looking and pleasant and makes no controversial remarks. However, Trump won by
making controversial remarks the voters agreed with.
Candidates should have broad knowledge about the economy,
the rule of law, the intelligent, judicious use of resources and good
judgment. But political campaigns are
often clouded with emotional content designed to throw voters off track.
We’ve seen many political campaigns where opponents have
use the “politics of personal destruction” formerly known as liable, slander
and malice, This usually involves cooking up a scandal the opponent will be
forced into defending. This is called a
“hit job”.
It is reminiscent of the accusations leveled at Clarence
Thomas by Anita Hill in his Supreme Court Nomination hearing in 1991. The
accuser was a Liberal Democrat activist, the accused was a Conservative Republican
and the accuser’s story was hard to believe and impossible to verify.
Currently the media is obsessing about hit jobs concerning
personal behavior with no regard for measurable accomplishments. Accusations
need to be proven. If they are false, then liable suits need to be filed
against the false accusers. If they are
true, the guilty parties need to fess up and try to recover or take the
consequences.
When John Kennedy was elected President at the beginning of
the “sexual revolution”, his serial adultery was kept secret. The media didn’t
want to jeopardize the start of the sexual revolution with a series of scandals
and they were all Democrats. On balance,
Kennedy was a good President, not perfect, but good. He started with tax cuts
to expand the US economy, handled the Cuban missile crisis, ended the Mafia’s
grip on the unions and supported the end of job discrimination for Blacks. His
mistakes included the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion to free Cuba and his
failure to cure his sex addiction.
A similar complete assessment needs to be made for all who
are accused of misbehavior, so that their strengths and weaknesses can be used
to show the entire story.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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