Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Some Considerable Trust Issues

Gloria Borger, the CNN Cheif Political Analyst and a regular on such well-known shows such as "The Situation Room," expressed her view in a CNN article that American's simply don't trust government. We want our leaders to get things done, we want such things as Social Security and Healthcare to be fixed, but the level of confidence we place in these leaders to accomplish such feats is at a crucial low, making our relationship with governement completely bittersweet.

I believe Borger has a point here. Maybe its in our DNA: our ancestors fought for indepedance away from a governement unable to directly represent them, which isn't much different from the attitude that many Americans possess today. Where is all the change we were promised and continue to be promised? Where are the signs of progression? It is likely that we are completely turned off by the governement because we are not seeing the results, we are not experiencing the bond between governement and its citizens that is created when the public's interest is being put first. Instead, as Borger adds, politicans make pitches back and forth, completely demeaning the other while simutaneously making promises they can't keep all for the sake of "winning," all to gain some kind of control or power (which is irrelevant when that control has no respect, which we see occuring all throughout the world lately). We simply aren't being represented, instead, being overlooked by petty indifferences between leaders.

Republicans vs. Democrats, Liberals vs. Conservatives, its all nonsense when nothing is accomplished, and that's exactly where America is at. We believe in what our leaders say is possible, though sadly, we don't believe that they can accomplish it. Nobody is working together while everybody is finding something to pick at, while all this time we could be coming together as a nation and focusing on problems we all are affected by. Quite honestly, I find it more effective to have somone in office who cares less about making themselves look better and more about acting on the issues at hand.

On the other hand, it is possible that maybe leaders of both the past and present have skewed our views on governement entirely. Borger adds that Americans so desperately want the government to fix whats broken, even though they know full well that it is entirely made up of "scoundrels." The Bush Administration, for instance, viololently shook American trust with the government, allowing us to question their decisions, question their ability to govern. Why should we trust a body of people who have been known to lie and decieve? Presedient Obama, Borger explains, wants his administration to help, wants America to believe in him and the government itself. This, sadly, is impossible when the entire structure is questionable. Borger says that "the more Congress fools with people's lives...the more the public turns off," or rather, the more we flip flop between having faith in government and not having faith in government, the more we distrust it altogether. There has to be a solid foundation in order to build a respectible government, which has been shaking for some time now, and in order to to do this we have to be able to believe they are capable of what they vouch for. All in all, Borger is completely correct: most American's don't trust the government, even though we so desperately want them to get the job done. One serious lump of irony? I think so.

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