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Home Page › Issues & News › Political News
 

Voice of the People?or a Whimper?

 

Author: Susan Scharfman

For a long period of time I had a nagging feeling Id lost something very dear to me. Id wake up in the morning thinking Id dreamed it. But the feeling haunted me throughout the day, day after day. After a lot of thinking out loud I came to the conclusion that that sense of loss was my own personal freedoms.

At the beginning of the American Revolutionary War Thomas Paine was an activist writer in support of independence from the British. His articles were not only an inspiration to other Founding Fathers, but more importantly to the common butcher, baker and farmer. Today Paine is probably remembered most for his famous words, These are the times that try mens souls.

Two hundred thirty years and numerous bloody wars later, we are witness to the once stalwart moral fiber of the country, the American middle class, morphing into something yet to be defined, but certainly something less than it was. These too are trying times, and maybe what our souls need is a revolution of a different kinda constitutional amendment banning the right to vote to any American citizen who does not vote. Whew!

Would we allow our congressional representatives to get away with that sort of claptrap? I doubt it. Yet we watch like glassy-eyed cattle our taken-for-granted freedoms evaporate. Each day the list gets frighteningly longer.

Victims of our own genius, sophisticated technology makes our most private information public. Aided by mega telephone companies, the Internet, satellites and spy stuff we are not even privy to, our homes are no longer our castles. Think about it. Personal medical records, financial information, social security numbers, phone calls, books we read, how much we pay for our houses, our brand of toothpaste and bra-size are available to any peeping Tom who cares enough to have the very best. Thats the short list.

Can you jog in your neighborhood park day or night? Can your kids walk home from school alone? These everyday choices seem to have quietly slipped away from us when we werent looking. Have you noticed more scams than ever in the history of the world? Do you know what your teenagers are doing on their computers? Have you heard yourself say, You cant trust anybody anymore? Then ask yourself what you can do for your countryand your own self-interest. Its a no- brainer.

On Election Day, no matter what your political ideologydo not walk run to your poling station and Vote. Its the single most powerful tool citizens have. People who throw away this freedom of choice like it was garbage are usually the ones who do the most whining about what is wrong with the country.

Its easier than ever to find out who the candidates are, how they vote and what they stand for. Your personal servant, the Internet, is at your fingertips 24/7. I came of age hearing my parents talk about Franklin Roosevelt, a flawed yet dynamic personality who, like Ronald Reagan, was a great communicator. FDRs Four Freedoms, painted on canvas by illustrator Norman Rockwell for the Saturday Evening Post, are not just high-minded ideals; they are the concrete material principles that Thomas Paine and his band of brothers would have applauded:

1. Freedom of speech and expression

2. Freedom of every person to worship God in his own way

3. Freedom from wantindividual economic security

4. Freedom from fearworld disarmament to the point that wars of aggression are impossible.

FDR emphasized that his was no vision of a distant millennium, but rather a world attainable now, in our time. Granted today our time is global, more dangerous and complex. But serious illness of a physical, economic and political nature often requires bitter medicine to exact a cure. Vision plus guts are the cures, the kind of leadership we must send to Washington to represent us at home, before the voice of the people is nothing but a whimper from a distant past.

Simplicity-Courage-Humor-Soul

Author Bio:

Susan Scharfman

A writer since childhood, Susan Scharfman's working life began with several years at CBS News before entering the Foreign Service of the United States. As a Foreign Service officer she served at embassies and USAID missions within Europe, Asia and Africa, as well as in the agency's Washington, D.C. press office. Now a private citizen and novelist, she is researching her next book, and is a writer/editor.

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