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Common Sense

Another Piece of Paper?

When our elected officials take office they pledge to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. We all revere the Constitution, or do we?

According to a recent poll by Rasmussen Research, if the Constitution were put to vote today, it would not pass. Only 49 percent would vote in favor.

What’s going on here?

The problem is that if elected officials don’t obey it, our Constitution becomes just another piece of paper. The old Soviet Union had a constitution that guaranteed various rights, but nobody paid attention to it.

Only 1 in 3 Americans believe the government operates under the Constitution, and fully half believe it definitely does not. And true enough the federal government can do virtually anything without constitutional restraint.

For decades, Congress has passed legislation that mocks the limits of the Constitution, yet the Supreme Court barely ever rules an act of Congress unconstitutional. Yet, when it comes to term limits on which the document is silent the court declares the actions of 23 states unconstitutional.

Why? Because the careerists know that term limits would limit their power, just as the Constitution itself does. The Constitution frees the people by placing limits on the federal government. The American people will support the Constitution, provided our elected officials abide by it. And we must fight to prevent politicians from turning our Constitution into just another piece of paper.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

We’re All in This Together

“We’re all in this together.”

That’s what Robert DeNiro kept saying as he risked his life to help people against an oppressive government in the futuristic movie “Brazil.”

A new poll says DeNiro is right, or at least most Americans agree that “we’re all in this together.” Specifically, 67 percent want their representative to look past the narrow interests of their district or region and work for what’s best for the country as a whole.

It’s an old political trick to play on divisions between states, regions, races, nationalities, and religions. The idea is to distract voters. Instead of worrying about what we get from Washington for the tax dollars we spend, they want us to look at what we get compared to some other group.

The politicians want you to think they bring home the bacon. But what they don’t want you to consider is that even in the fattest pork district in the country, the average taxpayer pays a lot more in taxes than they get back.

Career politicians beat their chests about returning a few pennies on the dollars you fork over. They conveniently fail to mention that they voted for wasteful spending in every other district in order to get their pet pork project passed. We all end up poorer, not richer. And the only ones fighting this “rob Peter to pay Paul” mentality are the representatives who limit their time in Congress.

Americans understand that their district won’t truly benefit from policies that hurt the entire country. The career politicians are always trying to separate us, but the American people know we’re all in this together.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Is Anyone Listening?

If one more condescending elitist in Washington says the public is “fat, dumb and happy” I’m going to scream.

Professor Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia put the conventional wisdom a little more delicately: “These are good times. They’re not that crazy about Congress, but they really don’t care.”

It’s true, of course that the American people are happier when the economy is strong. Why shouldn’t we be? Our hard work and smarts made it happen.

But we’re not so happy with our government. The Center on Policy Attitudes reported that: “the majority of Americans is quite dissatisfied with the American government. Given that the US economy is booming … one might expect Americans to show higher levels of satisfaction. Nonetheless, fewer than a third of Americans say that they ‘trust the government in Washington to do what is right’ most of the time.” The study also found that 83 percent of us believe special interests have more influence than voters, 67 percent say government doesn’t understand what they think, 89 percent say gridlock in Congress is caused more by partisan posturing than honest disagreement.

The bottom-​line is that this is our government and it should listen to us, but it doesn’t. The career politicians would like us to be “fat, dumb and happy” so that we’ll shut up, pay our taxes and leave the decisions to them.

But until our representatives stop putting their own careers ahead of the public interest, the American people will not be happy. Even in good economic times, we want a government that works for us.

Is anyone in Washington listening?

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Honesty is the Best Policy

As children we learned that honesty was the best policy. When we get older some people forget this lesson. They’re called politicians.

Mark Twain once humorously called Congress “America’s only native criminal class.” We laugh, but when politicians campaign saying one thing and then do the opposite it assaults the very foundation of our representative democracy.

How can the people control their government if they are lied to by those who go to Washington to decide policy? How can they know what they’re voting for?

Pundits are quick to blame the voters for the country’s problems. After all, they say, we elected the bums.

But hold on.

Jimmy Carter promised to balance the budget, but never submitted a balanced budget to Congress. Four years later he was defeated by Ronald Reagan, who likewise promised a balanced budget and never submitted one. Then George Bush promised he would not raise taxes. He did. Bill Clinton defeated him promising a middle-​class tax cut that he soon abandoned.

A number of Congressmen have pledged to limit their time in office knowing that’s what the voters want. The good news is that most of those who made the term limits pledge are keeping it. Those few who aren’t keeping their word have denied citizens an honest choice in elections.

We cannot allow politicians to break their word in the belief that they’re all dishonest. They aren’t all dishonest, and we must hold them accountable for their words and deeds. Honesty is not only the best policy; it’s the only way that we as citizens can have a say in our government.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Something Special

We hear a little too often that we in the United States should change some policy simply because other countries do things another way. The implication is somehow that if most countries do things differently we in the U.S. must be behind the times.

I’m reminded of my Mother’s oft-​repeated admonition, “If everybody else jumps off a cliff, are you going to?”

Let’s remember that there is something special about America, something unique. We have freedom not because a king granted it to us, but because it is ours by birthright. In America, we created the government, and therefore we, the people, are the sovereigns.

The Declaration of Independence established our country as the first nation ever created on the principles of self-​government. It reads: “We hold these Truths to be self-​evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed … ”

We’re in charge. In no other nation are the people held to be the sovereigns. Talk to people in other countries, even the democracies of Western Europe, and you can see their attitude toward government is shaped differently than is ours.

It’s not that we can’t learn from other countries, we can. But it would be like jumping off that cliff my mother warned me about not to cherish our unique American heritage.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Can’t Run or Hide

Term limits are taking effect all over the country and the results have been more competitive elections with new people getting involved in the process.

That’s a very good thing, unless of course you’re a career politician who hopes to stay in office forever.

Let’s face it, the people and the politicians just disagree on term limits. The politicians want to hide from the term limits voters enacted and keep on running. In Florida, incumbents have so monopolized the field that in most races no one even runs against them, and thus, voters have no choice at all about who represents them in the state legislature.

Yet, this lack of competition didn’t stop the politicians from launching a desperate lawsuit to overturn the term limits, opposing the will of 77 percent of the voters. In California, a recent poll showed 73 percent support term limits more now after 9 years on the books than when the law was first proposed. But that hasn’t stopped legislators from writing bills to repeal or weaken term limits.

The same is true in Oregon. In Maine, legislators were all set to weaken term limits. A bill passed the House by a vote of 76 to 71. But then radio ads alerted the public to the legislature’s actions and with the public up in arms, members reversed themselves defeating the very same bill 94 to 52.

Here’s the message for career politicians in every state: you can’t run and you can’t hide either. The people are watching.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.