Congressional ignorance of law, history and reality

Everyone says stupid things
from time to time and most times the flubs can and should be forgiven. When
those gaffs come from those who presume to be leaders, one can either laugh at
them or get angry. Sometimes both reactions come out at the same time and are
equally appropriate.

Members of the US House of
Representatives made a big deal of reading the US Constitution when the 112th
Congress convened in January. We were critical later when many of them proved
they would not pay heed to constitutional principles when those members voted
to continue provisions of the unconstitutional Patriot Act.

Now members are showing more
ignorance that can be funny, sad and scary.

Consider first US Rep. Michele
Bachmann, R-Minn., far from a history scholar. While speaking before a group of
tea partiers in New Hampshire Saturday said, “You’re true lovers of liberty. You’re the
state where the shot was heard around the world in Lexington and Concord.”

New Hampshire? Really? Wrong. Lexington
and Concord are in Massachusetts.

When she was called on the error, Ms.
Bachmann admitted to the mistake but reportedly pointed the blame up
Pennsylvania Avenue: “That will be the last time I borrow President Obama’s teleprompter!”

Cute, but it was her foot in her mouth.
She needs to think before speaking…and read some history.

There is also the genius Harry Reid, the
Democratic Party senator from Nevada who, in the face of a $14.2 trillion
federal debt wants US taxpayers to continue funding a cowboy poetry festival.

Take away that funding, he said and “The
thousands of people who attend wouldn’t even exist.”

The senator should get a grip.

Then there was a comment from
US Rep. Danny K. Davis, D-Ill.: “As I've listened, I've heard the Constitution
being mentioned a number of times. And I thought of the preamble that simply
says that ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created
equal and endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, and that
among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.’”

Those lines are from the Declaration of
Independence, Rep. Davis. Please get your act together or you’ll have to attend
summer school with Rep. Bachmann.

What’s not funny, however, is the setting
in which Mr. Davis made the comment. It came during the hearing held by US Rep.
Peter T. King:"The Extent Of Radicalization In The American Muslim Community
And That Community's Response"

This is frightening in its
potential. Even local Republicans (who will not be named) believe that singling
out of one group of people such as Muslims represents a new wave of
McCarthyism.

It’s worse than that. By
singling one group of people, the specter of Japanese interment camps rears its
ugly head. It is racist, pure and simple, completely ignoring the Timothy
McVeighs and other homegrown terrorists who happen to be white and Christian.

Mr. King, a New York
Republican, would do well to heed the advice of fellow Republican Ron Paul, of
Texas, and look to American foreign policy as the root cause of terrorism that
targets the United States.

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading...

Comments

comments

Leave a Reply