Intergenerational Divide Is Costly
September 8, 2010Billboards Of President Obama
October 19, 2010By Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D., Kansas City, MO –
Electing the best leaders in November means we need to critically evaluate the candidates who are seeking our vote, and we need to begin now. It is not too early. The upcoming elections in November, unlike many others, should not be treated as your ordinary, off-year, marginally obligatory, civic affair. The outcomes of too many important issues are riding on who we choose to represent us.
We can ill afford to be disinterested and disengaged. The healthcare reform issue has shown us that. But there are critical issues beyond healthcare reform.
On the international front, we are in an atypical and interminable war or terrorism. We seem obliged to continue to engage in traditional military combat in Afghanistan where we have put thousands of our sons and daughters in harm’s way. We are ever watchful of other hot beds of instability that could threaten our well-being: Iran, Yemen, and Iraq – still. Right here at home, we have seen and unseen terrorists in our midst.
On the domestic front, many issues abound. We are in the midst of one of the worst economic conditions in recent history – a deep recession that is reminiscent of the Great Depression. Unemployment is unacceptably high, which has a ripple effect in so many ways.
Despite the financial meltdown on Wall Street that required government bailouts to prevent us from slipping into an economic catastrophe that would have rivaled the Great Depression, we still have uncontrolled greed on the part of executives in some of the nation’s largest most prestigious corporations, and investment houses on Wall Street. This dichotomy still severely hurts and undermines consumers’ confidence in the fundamentals of our economy.
As if the protracted war on terrorism at home and abroad and a fledgling economy were not enough, there are other issues coming home to roost. Our complacency with an educational system that fails too many children can no longer be ignored.
If we do not take seriously the mantra, “Leave no child behind,” some crazed terrorist will be the least of our concerns or fears in the long-run. The quality education deficit is both a national and international issue, threatening our long term well-being and our place on the global stage.
While a healthcare reform bill was passed, it highlighted how dysfunctional the political process can be when elected officials put their own selfish interest ahead of those of the people who elected them.
This election is not a presidential election year, but it is a critically important election year. As a voter, that can shape the outcome, are you engaged? Are you bothering to see where candidates stand on the major issues we face as a nation, as a local community? Electing the best leaders should be the priority.
War, the economy, education are issues that connect us all. Most pundits are predicting that this November election will be a dramatic one because of all the partisan contention around the passage of healthcare reform legislation. Granted it has shown the democratic process at its ugliest – not only in the halls of Congress but in the streets across America. From shout outs of disrespect in the Congressional Chamber to the shouting of racial epithets on the sidewalks.
Must our voracious appetite for the dramatic be whetted to get our attention, to engage us, to motivate us to act? Does that explain why we will bother some of the time to go out and vote for a presidential candidate, yet never go out to vote for a Congressional candidate, state legislator, or a needed referendum?
Do we not believe in the words and wisdom of one of the nation’s most tenured and most effective Congressmen, the late Tip O’Neal, who said, “All politics is local.” Whether it is fixing roads or fixing schools, it really starts and stops right in the voting booth with our selections of who we send to the state houses and Washington D.C.
That being said, which candidate in the respective offices will best handle the issues that are important to you, your family, your community, your state?
War, education, healthcare, corporate corruption, the economy, better roads, tax reform, and the environment. If one or more of these issues, or some other, is of concern to you, one thing is certain: Whoever is elected, with or without your involvement, will have the power to make these issues better or worse. You can also be certain that the outcome will affect your quality of life in one way or the other.
We can all do our part at the ballot box and daily in our own “backyard.”
Edited and Reprinted with Permission of USAonRace.com