Open Email to House Speaker Boehner:
Dear Speaker
Boehner,
I recently sent you an article concerning "Who Shutdown the
Government" by columnist Thomas Sowell. I later found another article by Mr.
Sowell, which I believe is especially pertinent. It is as follows:
"If the continued existence of mathematics depended on the ability of the
Republicans to defend the proposition that two plus two equals four, that would
probably mean the end of mathematics and of all the things that require
mathematics.
Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives, John
Boehner, epitomized what has been wrong with the Republicans for decades when he
emerged from a White House meeting last Wednesday, went over to the assembled
microphones, briefly expressed his disgust with the Democrats' intransigence and
walked on away.
We are in the midst of a national crisis, immediately
affecting millions of Americans and potentially affecting the kind of country
this will become if ObamaCare goes into effect -- and yet, with multiple
television network cameras focused on Speaker Boehner as he emerged from the
White House, he couldn't be bothered to prepare a statement that would help
clarify a confused situation, full of fallacies and lies.
Boehner was not
unique in having a blind spot when it comes to recognizing the importance of
articulation and the need to put some serious time and effort into presenting
your case in a way that people outside the Beltway would understand. On the
contrary, he has been all too typical of Republican leaders in recent
decades.
When the government was shut down during the Clinton
administration, Republican leaders who went on television to tell their side of
the story talked about "OMB numbers" versus "CBO numbers" -- as if most people
beyond the Beltway knew what these abbreviations meant or why the statistics in
question were relevant to the shutdown. Why talk to them in
Beltway-speak?
When Speaker Boehner today goes around talking about the
"CR," that is just more of the same thinking -- or lack of thinking. Policy
wonks inside the Beltway know that he is talking about the "continuing
resolution" that authorizes the existing level of government spending to
continue, pending a new budget agreement.
But, believe it or not, there
are lots of citizens and voters outside the Beltway. And what is believed by
those people whom too many Republicans are talking past can decide not only the
outcome of this crisis but the fate of the nation for generations to
come.
You might think that the stakes are high enough for Republicans to
put in some serious time trying to clarify their message. As the great economist
Alfred Marshall once said, facts do not speak for themselves. If we are waiting
for the Republicans to do the speaking, the country is in big
trouble."
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