"I'd tell him, 'Thanks, John, I've been there. I've done that. You can find much better.'"
Shouldn't this rare example of good sense automatically disqualify Joe from public office? I'm just sayin'...

I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
I do like it when Sprots and I agree.SportsFan68 wrote:I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
I know what you mean. I feel the same way when folks use a broad brush to paint "the media," without considering that some news organizations are trying very hard to be balanced. Kay probably feels along the same lines when any of us makes generalized mean comments about the insurance industry. Etc.SportsFan68 wrote:I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
For Joe Lieberman, politics is in fact service of Joe Lieberman. All politiicans have egos but his is approximately the size of the national debt, and keeps growing like the debt too.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
By 'people' do you mean the people who are in politics or people who are judging and evaluating those who are in politics?Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
One bad apple don't spoil the whole bunch.SportsFan68 wrote:I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
LOL - me tooTheCalvinator24 wrote:I do like it when Sprots and I agree.SportsFan68 wrote:I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
I was thinking about Cal when I wrote that. As far as I know, besides the two of us there's been only one other Bored denizen who's been willing to put the time, energy, money, reputation, etc. etc. on the line and actually run for public office, and I'm pretty sure she doesn't come around anymore.TheCalvinator24 wrote:I do like it when Sprots and I agree.SportsFan68 wrote:I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
I think it's because of Area 3. Cal and I agree/disagree in three ways.peacock2121 wrote:LOL - me tooTheCalvinator24 wrote: I do like it when Sprots and I agree.
It has never been fun for me to watch when you two don't agree.
Made me start to wonder why.
As, I really like it when either of you disagree with others.
I believe that the the problem is that the excesses are so horrific (Tom Delay, for example) that people feel perfectly justified in making sweeping generalizations. Somebody posted a poem, or I guess it was a song, the other day skewering all campaigners indiscriminately with the same knife. That's not the way it is, but the song is so catchy and the knife it wields is so sharp.peacock2121 wrote:One bad apple don't spoil the whole bunch.SportsFan68 wrote:I'd like it if the folks on this Bored would believe it and quit making snarky and scatological assessments about us politicians.Buffacuse wrote:His book, "In Praise of Public Life," should be mandatory reading for every high school senior in the country. When more people believe that politics is in fact public service, this will be a much better country.
How do you make sure you are not put in that bunch?
The bad bunch, I mean.