Category Archives: Uncategorized

Information

These days we do not suffer a lack of quantity of information, but of quality.

I learned to read in 1964, before the Internet and personal computers. We lived in a small village of 400 that was augmented every academic year by about 1,500 college students. The village had a small library that I loved, (the University library was much bigger) but it suffered from lack of breadth and depth for adults, and also little kids as they were not its focus.

We had ABC, NBC and CBS and sometimes on UHF we had PBS and if the wind was right, we could get a Canadian broadcast channel. My parents invested in a set of Encyclopedia Brittanica, a godsend because I was able to look up historical events et al to enhance my schooling. Let’s say that I was always in search of additional information.

Move to college graduation and my first real job, working as a policy analyst in the areas of insurance, commerce, and governmental operations. I was wet behind the ears and thrown into the deep end at age 21 and I loved every minute. Analyzing and writing laws that affected millions of people. Wow!

We didn’t have the political silos then that we have today. Every day I purchased the local newspaper, plus the New York Times for global coverage and, on Wednesdays, the Village Voice for political information in New York City. I needed all three, plus numerous educational journals and industry publications. Plus scuttlebutt, of course, which usually was political in nature.

My job was to sift through it and find out the truth and act on those beliefs in a way that helped the people of New York State. One busy day I got in really early, laid the newspapers on the floor beside my chair and got to work. My boss came in, early, and asked what I was doing. “Work,” I replied. He told me something I’ve never forgotten to this day, that reading the news was a part of my job and if I did not do so I’d be ill-informed and make bad decisions. So, I read the newspapers then got to work. OK.

Today with all the choices we have, I read as much as I can, mainly online, from many available sources. On television, I watch mainly mainstream news but check out Fox News every day to see what’s going on in that political mind-set. When I walk the dog, I walk the dog. I’m not on my phone at all but sometimes carry it with me in case of emergency, especially if it’s dark out. I wouldn’t know how to access the deep web and do not hold stock in conspiracy theories.

When I hear that young people get all their news from TikTok or Facebook, I don’t understand it. I could never consider myself well-informed if I relied on just one source of information. The first questions I ask are who is promoting this story (who owns this franchise) and what do they get from telling me this. If you can answer that, you can still glean the information but consider other sources before making a decision.

Banning books in school and telling children what to think is not a good road to a stable democratic republic, which we still have. If we give children access to age-appropriate materials and teach them English, Math, History, Science and encourage them to also learn on their own, we may be pleasantly surprised at the well-rounded adults we have raised.

I had a boyfriend once who, when we went to Mass together, insisted on sitting on the right side (as one enters the church from the rear) so that the world would know he is conservative. My response? What if God is up front and thinks you’re sitting on the left? He didn’t like that much. He also told me if we married, it would be OK for me to work for “pin money.” I asked what he would do if I made more money than he. Out of the question!

Years later, after I broke it off, I was in his hometown for business and we went to dinner (he wanted to tell me of his engagement, a sweet thing to do). After dinner we stopped for a drink at my hotel and I took pleasure in introducing him to my assistant, a MAN! Boy, was he glad we didn’t marry! But I got information from all sources, and the end result is that any marriage to that particular gentleman would have been a disaster for both of us. It’s good to know he’s still married and has grown kids. And he’s probably, no definitely, in the Trump camp. What a world we live in. Cheers! Dee

Un Amuse Bouche

Like, a small, fun appetizer to whet your appetite for the meal, or repas en Français.

Luck o’ the Irish?

Perhaps not. Today, the new House Speaker vowed to slash Medicare and Social Security. Guess what today is? My 65th birthday, the very day that I am eligible to reap the benefits I’ve paid for so dearly. The Republican solution to any issue that involves helping people is to reduce or eliminate benefits because they won’t fix the problem with any other tax solution.

Conservative Tax Solutions

I can understand wanting to help rich people even more, as the new House Speaker wants to do. But why not a new tax break or enhancing a current one? First of all, attaching foreign emergency aid to domestic spending cuts is a no-no for a reason. Second, the savings are illusory, actually adding up to $28 billion to the deficit. Third and most important, he’s sending a message that it’s good for rich Americans to cheat on their taxes. Let the IRS keep getting $199 here and there from single moms working three jobs who make an error on their earned income tax credit. Yeah, that sounds fair.

Whenever Congress makes the tax code more complicated, really smart tax attorneys get to work, as they should, finding loopholes for their rich clients. It’s gotten to the point that the IRS doesn’t have the time or internal structure to spend years concentrating on billionaires who cheat the government. It was high time to anticipate turnover and bring in new talent, eliminate backlogs and phone wait times for simple questions. That funding was needed by the very entity that raises the funds for which Congress determines spending priorities and limits. And conservatives want to encourage cheating by the wealthiest Americans. My opinion is that if the poor gal down the street is filing her 1040-EZ by the rules, so should they.

Wintry Menus

The weather here is crazy, today it just got sunny at a little after eight in the morning and it’ll be sixty degrees this afternoon. That after a lot of rain and some cold weather. Tomato plants and herbs are in the living room sun right now, just starting to really produce.

There was a Fall party last Friday featuring chili so I made some cornbread to go-along. I had a package of Jif in the pantry so baked that in a 9″ skillet. Skillet was too big so it was a large hockey puck. Embarrassed, I made a basic cornbread recipe from scratch, substituting medium grain cornmeal for some bite and a corner taste. Now that I baked in an 8″ square Pyrex pan and it turned out moist and perfect. The little kids who weren’t partaking of the chili got squares of my cornbread instead and were happy. Sad to say there was no comparison, Jif. There’s just something about that 5 Tbsp. of melted butter…

Hope you like the snippets. I forgot some from over the weekend but will come up with some more, if you like. Cheers! Dee

The Right Side of History

What do we know? And what can we do about it. Since 2015 we’ve heard louder and louder voices, new names to us regular Americans, like Trump, Gaetz, Taylor-Greene and Boebert shouting hateful rhetoric from the rooftops and basically threatening anyone who’s not, well, them.

Now the House Republicans are getting smarter, and scarier, as they’ve just elected An Architect Of. In this instance, it happens to be a lawyer who architected a quasi-legal means to allow Congress to keep Donald Trump president even though he had lost the “most secure” election in history as stated by his top legal advisor (Bill Barr, Attorney General who quit) and top cybersecurity guy (Chris Krebs, who Trump immediately fired).

If you want to know the world view of our latest Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, “grab a bible.” Routine mass shootings? Don’t legislate, pray. Guns the problem? No, it’s people’s hearts. Social Security getting low on funds? Force women to have babies against their will to provide an economic safety net.

Speaker Mike Johnson is Jim Jordan with a brain, a suit jacket and spectacles. The game’s the same, and the ante’s been upped. Perhaps the Crazy Eight will toss him to the curb in a month, after he signs on to a clean CR to fund the government until 2024, simply because they can’t understand him.

I believe that the puritans who fled England to found the US of A came in part for religious freedom. I believe that the separation of Church and State was intended to keep the Church out of State business and to prohibit the State from demanding that all Americans be of the same Christian faith or denomination. Speaker Johnson believes that the Church is all-encompassing and rules our State.

Overall, it appears as if the House has signed on to an effort to install an autocratic presidency with a thin shiny veneer of faux Christian theocracy as the icing on the cake, or the cake itself according to Johnson.

“MAGA is ascending.” said Florida’s own Nostradamus, Matt Gaetz, last week. Dear Leader Trump may have sent his missive tanking non-election denier Emmer from the courtroom where he is trying to use his menacing presence to cow the judge into preserving his NYC real estate fiefdom. Three of Trump’s co-conspirators pleaded guilty of helping him overturn the presidential election, and will testify to that effect. And his head staffer, Mark Meadows has received immunity for his testimony, and he knows everything. Ascending? I beg to differ, Mr. Gaetz.

I’ll become a pensioner next week so I’ll pretend to be one now and say that if I were on a fixed income and sent numerous small checks to Trump’s Stop the Steal campaign that raised $250 million after the 2020 election, I’d be gathering up my AARP buddies right about now and filing a class action suit to get my money back, plus punitive damages for his thinking that I’m stupid and thus worth defrauding.

Some of these trials will be televised, and conservative news media can only mess with that so much (sorry, AI). Their viewers are going to find out that they were used, all this time, as rubes in the grand GOP grift scheme, the greatest Big Lie of all time.

The GOP no longer wants to govern. That’s our money at work, all so they can fund raise off of lies and see how many hits they get on social media. They’ve forgotten the oath they took to the Constitution, and their promise to represent us, the people.

Lies have consequences, and The Big Lie will have many. The wheels of justice turn slowly, but if they’re allowed to do what the Constitution planned, they do mete out justice in the end. Sadly, we’re all in the belly of the beast right now. Battle stations! I mean pen and paper, brains and wit, a show of strength to demonstrate that the middle will hold and we’ll still have a democracy after 2024. History will prove us, and our Constitutional democracy, right. Chin up, folks. Dee

Nudge Nudge, Wink Wink

Say no more… and I love Monty Python. That attitude is questionable, however.

Last year, I was astounded by the calmness and certitude of a young woman testifying before the January 6th Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. I noticed that she was so young to be in a position that entailed daily interactions with POTUS and her boss, his chief of staff. Quite a heady atmosphere for a young person. And her coolness under pressure, on national television, was remarkable.

Now, Cassidy Hutchinson has a book out and one story hit home for me. You see, I was her age and a policy analyst for the Speaker of the Assembly in a large state. Small fish, not the White House but an intense political atmosphere as well. Lots of work to be done by us young, underpaid college grads and lots of big political egos to deal with.

I was young, single and cute, and while I was not propositioned every day, it happened often during legislative session. Heard two of the worst lines ever in my life from those days. Should I tell you? Perhaps, as their granddaughters might now be reading this. My response depended on the person, but if I knew a bit about him, a standard one was a question about one of his kids. “Did your daughter get into the art program at Pratt?” With that, they were taken aback a bit, realizing that I was only a few years older than their kid and wouldn’t it be creepy if an old guy hit on her.

Let it be said that two generations ago, no-one had the temerity to touch me outright. I was shocked and very disturbed to hear Cassidy Hutchinson recall Rudy Giuliani groping her backstage on January 6 while POTUS spoke and John Eastman leered nearby. Gross!

When this happened to me in the early 1980’s more women were getting elected to office and there were more women joining the professional staffs. Young women, like me, who were smart and eager to learn, tackle difficult subject matter and work long hours with low pay. It breaks my heart to see that the sexism is not only still there, it’s gotten worse.

Political workplaces are especially charged, I believe, because of the incredible egos involved with elected officials, and the fact that they’re away from home a lot. There was a phrase they used back then (still?) that meant whatever happened in Vegas… you get it. I applaud Ms. Hutchinson for speaking up on this issue, that will hopefully open the doors for others to do so as well.

OK, you’ve read this far. Here goes. I was alone in the elevator with an assemblyman, a freshman. I was wearing a blouse and a beautiful knee-length Scottish kilt, pin and all. He intimated that if I were wearing knee socks instead of tights, he’d have me right then and there. Elevator doors opened and I got out, and that was that. Never happened again as he ended up on the committee I staffed, we saw each other at meetings and the other committee members respected me and my work.

Ah, the pièce de résistance. My assigned counsel, after haranguing me for months to go to dinner with him to get to know each other better, I acquiesced and made sure that my roommate and several other colleagues would be at the local eatery I chose. They weren’t. He drove me home and asked to come up. No, I said. He replied “You’re an attractive woman. I’m a man. We both have needs.” I was on my way to the front door laughing so hard under my breath I almost wet my pants.

The next morning I was in the Speaker’s offices for some reason. His counsel called me into his office and told me to shut the door. OMG what did I do? Am I in trouble? He said “tell me everything.” “What? What did I do?” Tell me everything that happened last night. Turns out he shared a house with the two lawyers who were at my apartment with my roommate waiting for me to get home, and I told them the story. The Speaker’s counsel nearly fell off his chair laughing. My counsel never hit on me again.

Was it worth reading now? Gals, know as much as you can about the guys you work with, especially if you’re in politics. Sometimes a well-timed remark can save you. Be careful out there! Dee

L’État, C’est Moi

Yes, you’ve heard it. It’s when the King thinks his country is all about him, instead of him being for his country. Our own president, JFK, said the reverse of that in 1960 when he reminded us to ask what we could do for our country. Not for him, per se, for our country.

It should be a big red flag when potential leaders demonstrate that they’re only running for the power and once they get it, they’ll restructure the country so they can stay and impose their will on all. That’s not how democracies work. But just look at Viktor Orban in Hungary, Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, Donald Trump right here at home. Orban has, and the other two are trying to take control of the military and justice systems, and the press, to wield power for its own sake.

For years I was a consultant to non-profit organizations. Sometimes they needed me for positive growth, mostly I was there because they had a problem. When that was the case I reached back to their organizational documents, their mission and, if they had one, their vision. Sometimes that required an all-out corporate retreat to determine the root cause of the problem.

I had already identified the problem, and sometimes a few staff and trustees could put their finger on it, but many didn’t know it or couldn’t face it. Getting it out in the open usually set things to right quickly. Why are we here? Are we fulfilling our mission? How can we grow, and do things better?

Sometimes the focus had shifted and they had to get back to their origins, or a certain faction had taken hold and it was distracting from the main purpose. Sometimes it was a personal matter between staff leadership. Sometimes it was wise to revisit the mission. During my tenure a mission was never changed, but visions were. For example, a theater company finds that it’s spending more time on youth activities or wants to focus on fostering new playwrights. Change the vision. As long as it gets majority support, that’s what their vision or portion thereof will be in the future and those who stay will be happy.

When it comes to politics in the good ol’ US of A, we’re in a predicament right now. I believe that the majority of Americans are in the middle and support our Constitution and the right to vote for our elected representatives. Americans have made their preferences clear on hot-button issues such as gun control, abortion and same-sex marriage, it’s just that some representatives aren’t representing us, they’re representing themselves. Some legislators think they’re not here to fix our kitchen table issues and would rather preen for TV news or hits on social media to garner small donations, than do the peoples’ work.

When George Washington was made President, it was said that we have a republic (not a kingdom), if we can keep it. It’s up to us to keep it. It’s time for us to read our well-weathered copy of the Constitution and discuss it at dinner with our kids. Then we have to do the right thing, even if it means leaving our comfortable political silos to do so.

The majority party of the House of Representatives knows what is the right to do, they just choose not to do it out of fear of their voters and of Donald Trump. If they do the right thing they could be heroes, and still may lose their seats in Congress. Small price to pay for our democracy. Plus, those powerful people always land on their feet at a law firm or think tank. They’ll make more money, too. Write a book about how ten (18, 27, whatever) Representatives saved America! Make it a coffee table book and it’ll make a great gift.

They could go out on the road. Years ago, 1984 in fact (after the book of the same name) a trio of us tried to protect the privacy of the people of one state in banking, insurance, cable tv (my area, where “interactive” was expected any day with the power to collect data) and healthcare. We were called The P-Team, for Privacy. All they need is a nifty name and they’ll be on the speaking circuit for years. Ka Ching!

I don’t want to go backwards to the 40’s and 50’s. I want to move forward using our originating documents as a source of strength and fluidity. We can do it if we all work together. Dee

Lies…and Chickens

I said in my last post that several things must change in order to save our democracy, because The Big Lie that caused a lot of other lies is unraveling.

The chickens are coming back to roost. Trump’s “trusted” advisors, dominoes now, are beginning to fall as the truth comes out and Sydney Powell and Kenneth Chesbrough are willing to tell all in court. More dominos will fall, as the Dear Leader forgot something in his long career in business and brief foray into politics: he doesn’t stand by his people. Loyalty is a one way street and, faced with prison, many of his faithful servants will consider their options carefully as meticulously crafted cases come to the fore.

That’s where we, the voters, come in. Watch the trials, learn everything you can. Know who did what, when. Know what members of congress and local legislators were involved with and voted on. Make your decisions on how to vote to protect our democracy.

And while you’re at it, encourage the Supreme Court to be transparent and accountable, same with the House of Representatives. The Constitution gave us three branches of government for a reason. Representatives are supposed to reflect the voters from every part of the country. Unless the House has a huge majority it must look across the aisle to get the peoples’ business done. The “chaos caucus” just doesn’t cut it with a four-vote majority.

Think about it, and always remember to vote, Dee

Lies

Lies have consequences. And huge lies have consequences that can kill constitutional democracies. Here’s my abbreviated version of “the big lie” and what I believe needs to be done to fix our democracy.

In the wee hours of November 4, 2020, Donald Trump declared, upon his majesty and the unsober advice of at least one lawyer, declared himself re-elected and demanded that the vote count be stopped. That was the public beginning of The Big Lie.

The actual beginning was months before when he derided mail-in ballots and, perhaps even earlier, when in 2016 he said that unless he won the presidency, he wouldn’t accept the results. But in 2020 the machinations were put into place (legal challenges, and illegal means such as slowing down the U.S. Mail to mess with ballots, tampering with voting machines, installation of fake electors and shakedowns of legislatures and state voting officials) in order to keep Donald Trump in the White House. It didn’t matter that everyone else across the country who was on the ballot that same day lived with the results without crying foul. Funny that nobody asked them about that.

Why not believe him? He’s the President, after all. So Republican-led states bought into the lie for their own purposes and threw themselves behind “election integrity,” which is not what it seemed. They made it more difficult for Democrats, especially people of color, to vote. Plus, they got rid of ERIC, a pretty snazzy mechanism that allows states to share information to prevent interstate voter fraud. Now realizing they need this type of program, they’re creating a buggier version to meet their needs, mainly to prove voter fraud where there is none. The real reason to dump ERIC is that it would give someone like me who tends to be mobile, an easy way to register to vote when I move to another state. Yes, I sometimes vote for the Democrat, so they wouldn’t want me to register in a swing state under any circumstances.

So now the MAGA “crazy eight” toppled Kevin McCarthy in order to create the chaos they so love. Then they tanked Steve Scalise. Then some sane members of the party (institutionalists, appropriators, and those in “Biden” districts) tanked Jim Jordan yesterday. Interestingly, I heard this morning that eight of the ten new Speaker candidates are also election deniers. Hmmm. There’s a theme here, one that goes right to the 2024 election and what happens if Trump loses.

Here’s my recipe (hey, it started as just a cooking blog, years ago) for having a United States of America to celebrate on its upcoming 250th birthday.

First, The Supreme Court must adopt a code of ethics at least as stringent as that for Federal judges. I believe it should be monitored by the Judicial Conference. I believe they should have 15-year term limits and that the court should be increased to 15 members. My reasoning is that people don’t trust the Court these days because of their overt partisanship and selling out to the far right donor (yacht-owning) class. They need to be sane and sober and adhere to the real Constitution and not the Heritage Foundation’s version.

Second, The House of Representatives has to function. That means a power-sharing arrangement with Democrats that will allow them to put away the scissors they’ve been running amok with and concentrate on governing. It’s time to tell these congresspersons that there are more important things in the world, and facing our nation, than their egos. As for the Senate, it’s time to wake up and realize that we’re in a democracy living under the tyranny of the minority when the House can be taken over by eight members. Ditch the filibuster and legislate, already. Start with approving all those military appointments. I’ve got a great idea, Leader Schumer. Make them stay starting on Thanksgiving through the holidays, and go ’round the clock, one by one, until all 300 appointments are approved. They’ll fold quickly, as they love their weekends and holidays and Sen. Tommy Tuberville can be tied to his chair so he has to be in the Chamber for every single vote until he cries “uncle.”

Third, it should go without say that violence is not an option. Jim Jordan is learning that the hard way. Purported news organizations should not be actively involved in personnel issues of Congress (I’ve registered a complaint with the FCC about Fox) but unfortunately I don’t have a clue how to stop the Alex Jones’ of the world from spreading their vitriol in this lifetime, but do have suggestions as to where he’ll reside in the next.

*****

We had a couple over for a first dinner recently and when we raised our glasses for a toast, I added one for Dianne Feinstein, who had died that day. They stayed for dinner, so it must have been OK. But who knows what could have happened? I’d like to go to an event or have nice folks over without coming to fisticuffs.

It’s time for the middle to take back our nation. We certainly have the numbers. Now, do we have the guts to do what needs to be done? Let’s hope so. Dee

“Dee-isms”

Several years ago while recovering from a traumatic head injury, one of my rehab efforts involved word games, lots of word games. The therapists and fellow patients came to know my unique word knowledge (thanks to an ever-present dictionary in my English teacher aunt’s “loo”) as Dee-isms. Every single word from epêe to gewgaw, checked out but was still questioned.

Why not extend that to my cooking as well. My husband likes chicken pot pie and became somewhat a connoisseur of the frozen kind. I never made it because even though I’m a good cook, I’m notoriously bad at pastry and generally don’t cook desserts. Trifle doesn’t really qualify as cooking, save for assembly and whipping cream. I have what’s called in the restaurant biz “hot hands.” Nothing to do with overall body temp, it’s just that some folks are great with pastry, and when I touch anything with cold butter in it, it melts. My “hot hands” techniques are better used getting an aspic out of a mold.

So I decided to make chicken pot pie. I had some small boiled red potatoes, a large roasted chicken breast and frozen peas and carrots on hand. Also some caramelized onions in the frog, and some milk and chicken broth. I decided to make a full recipe of basic baking powder (lots of butter) biscuits, baking half of them while I prepped the pot pie and rolling and cutting the rest to put on top to bake later. For the sauce I used a roux mounted with 2:1 milk and chicken broth. Some fresh sage and thyme and the pot pie went into a 2 qt. Pyrex baking dish for 45 minutes to cook the raw dough and heat the filling and, voilà, a one-dish wonder. He loved it, and I was able to control the fat and salt content. A true Dee-ism.

Here’s another: one-pot macaroni and cheese. Cook a pound of shells, and make a béchamel with 3T butter, 3T seasoned flour and 2C milk. Add cheese of your choice, I add a melty Colby-Jack. Add fully cooked, sliced (slices quartered) of cooked sausage like Kielbasa or I like a new Tuscan sausage found at Whole Foods by Gilbert’s and use two of those, cubed. Then I buzz up a big handful of fresh spinach, mix noodles, sauce and add-ins in a 2 quart bowl and bake at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes. Yum, and yes, my husband will eat spinach if it’s baked in this.

Now that summer is over, I learned a couple of things cooking-related. Some years are good for tomatoes, some not. I had three plants outside on a balcony that faces northeast, a Roma, beefsteak and cherry tomato. We had very few tomatoes over the summer, the Roma got a fungus and was a goner. The beefsteak and cherry plants started growing fruit in September (they were started after the last frost in early May) and I had to move them inside last weekend. Now I’m getting tomatoes! Another few weeks and they’ll go outside to die.

This was my first year with flowering climbing plants, Manzanilla. Yellow and orange, two small plants. I bought a small (1′ wide by 3′ high) for them to share. Live and learn. I should’ve splurged on the trellis. Instead, they used their tendrils to hurt themselves and practically did in my pansies and impatiens. Live and learn! Cheers! Dee

Of Strong-Arming and “Strongmen”

OK, I have to say it. Jim Jordan has no business being Speaker of the House of Representatives. Yes, he is a “legislative terrorist,” in the words of a former Republican Speaker. A flame-thrower who delights in taking down people, policies and institutions.

He is no leader of men, but a puppet of Donald J Trump who cares nothing about the Constitution he swore an oath to defend and protect. To have him a heartbeat from the presidency poses a real threat that our democracy will no longer be around to celebrate its 250th birthday in three years.

Harry Truman always said that the buck stopped with him. Jim Jordan says no, he has no idea that his flunkies are sending out anonymous emails threatening the jobs and even lives of his Republican colleagues unless they vote for him for Speaker. They’re threatening congressional spouses. What has this world come to?

A less-than-honorable “news” outlet is using its on-air talent Sean Hannity and his staff to threaten lawmakers. Jordan’s de facto representatives prefer to forget that he was all-in planning and executing the overthrow of our government on January 6, and that the wrestling team he coached sexually abused nearly 200 students, effectively putting the Catholic Church to shame.

Please, institutionalists who revere the House and our democracy, step in NOW. Likewise moderate and at-risk representatives. And Democrats. The times demand immediate change or this won’t be a republic anymore.

Vote no on Jim Jordan today, tomorrow, however long it takes for Matt Gaetz and his unruly band of thieves to get the message that tyranny is not what we voters signed up for. None of these hare-brained Republican schemes (think tyranny of the judiciary) are well thought-out, which is why they shouldn’t work. Grow a backbone, Republicans, and stand up for your country and your constituents. Dee

Representative

It’s an important-sounding word. Sounds like it includes responsibilities, and for some it requires an oath, to an overriding organizational document such as a Constitution, no less.

The word “representative” can mean standing or acting for another, especially through delegated authority (Merriam-Webster Thesaurus). As a noun, it means one that represents another as agent, deputy, substitute or delegate usually being invested with the authority of the principal. (Merriam-Webster Dictionary)

Being an elected member of the United States House of Representatives means that one represents 700,000 Americans, under the U.S. Constitution to which a solemn oath is taken.

This week, approximately ten elected members of the House tried to force their will on 331.9 million Americans by holding Congress and the American people hostage to their unreasonable demands. They declared that it was their way or the highway and that no other representative or their constituency mattered because they would not negotiate with anyone.

Why did they do this? Well, some say that Matt Gaetz of Florida wants to be governor of that state so thought this was a good way to get his name out there as a responsible candidate for the CEO of Florida who really cares about all the people who live there. Not my first choice as an approach to being a candidate for anything but he tried and, in the end, failed.

Leading the pack looking to cause a government shutdown (stopping payments to our military, air traffic controllers, food for hungry kids, etc.) is none other than ringleader, presidential candidate Donald J Trump. Why would he want a shutdown? He thought it might stop the Special Prosecutor in the Justice Department from continuing two federal cases against him (it wouldn’t). Another hare-brained campaign idea that, at the last moment, did not come to fruition.

What do these men have in common? An agenda against the government, the people of the United States, their voters, and the Constitution to which they swore an oath to protect and defend.

Gerrymandered politicians have no reason to listen to or serve the constituents who elected them. That is why it is in voters best interest to make sure they are given good choices of candidates for office, any office, but especially our Congressional representatives who are elected based on state-drawn district maps.

We had a dinner party last night at which a guest said that fewer than half of Americans know that we have three branches of government or what these branches do. So let’s start with civics education. Only then can we have a well-informed citizenry.

Then we have to make it easy to register to vote, and to change one’s voting registration when a voter relocates. Pennsylvania just tied voter registration to State ID, drivers’ license or other ID if a citizen does not drive. And we have to have a requisite number of places to vote by population. You can’t have a precinct in every small town and only one voting location in a city of a million people.

Votes must be counted and reported correctly. Get rid of rules that say no votes can be counted before Election Day. That’s only so one party can get on the news election night (see Donald Trump 2020) and say a candidate won and to stop counting, only to have mail ballots that had piled up because of COVID being counted for days afterward.

For those of you who represent us in Washington, D.C., go home now that the government will be functioning for the next 45 days and talk to your constituents, not just the ones who elected you but those who chose the other candidate, who you represent as well. Marjory Taylor Green said yesterday that Americans won’t care about a government shutdown. We do. We also care that ten U.S. Representatives tried to hold us hostage, and for what? Their egos? To say they “own the libs?” To be interviewed by Hannity? Please.

If you leave the D.C. bubble every once in a while, you might find out that all of us voters out there are not stupid, and contrary to your belief, we don’t spend our days thinking about you. We spend it thinking about our lives and what is important to us, the things you represent us to do something about. Get involved, folks. Write your representative, just look it up by address/zip code online and send a message. Someone will read it, and when they get enough mail, they may start to listen. And VOTE!!! Dee