Tocqueville3 wrote:
All of that so called "mayhem" could have been avoided if Obama had just said "Look, times are tough. I don't want you all to spend your hard earned money on plane tickets and bus tickets and gasoline and lodging and food and all the other travel expenses that go along with the trip to DC for my inauguration. Stay at home and gather with your friends and watch me get inaugurated from home. Our country needs to learn how to practice some fiscal self control and I want to start by setting the example. Instead of having the normal festivities that accompany an inaguration this time we are going to be more subdued. Give me a chance to turn this economy around and hopefully if I am elected again in another 4 years then we can have an inaugural celebration like no other. But for now it would be in poor taste for me to expect you to make that sort of sacrifice for me."
All he had to do was set the tone and he could have avoided the look of hypocrisy that accompanies him spending 150 million taxpayer dollars on a bunch of big show. I mean what a slap in the face for someone who is out of work and can't pay their heating bill for them to see Obama and his big extravaganza a their expense. Try telling them it's "necessary".
It would not have worked. Everyone who went out from Podunkville would not be deterred, not by the speech you would have had President Obama make, not by anything. Some of our Podunkians contributed to the "four day" part because that was the only flight they could get. One group of Coloradans flew in to Harrisburg to get within a couple hours of ground transportation to the Capital (
http://www.demnotes.com/ -- the Jan. 18 entry). Just using Colorado as an example because I know some of those people; I can promise you that millions of people all across the country felt even more invested, more a part of the President's road to the Presidency, more willing to make sacrifices to attend the inauguration than the 800 or so I know about. They were going to be there. The Inauguration Committee could plan for that and deal with it, or they could spend Bushian amounts and watch things spin out of control.
Not that Bushian amounts were any small change, I hasten to add.
http://momocrats.typepad.com/momocrats/ ... unked.html
As hypocritical as it looks to you to spend a lot of money on President Obama's inauguration, I believe that it would been even more hypocritical of him to make your proposed speech. Here's what I would have heard: "OK, y'all turned out in unprecedented numbers to get me elected, you talked the talk, you walked the walk, you weren't even registered to vote and you became community leaders, but now I want you to make the choice to stay home and watch on television instead of coming out to DC and being a part of it all because I don't want to face criticism resulting from the expansion to the inauguration you'll create by coming here." I believe that even the people who can't pay their heating bills would have heard it in a similar way and felt slapped.
-- In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people.
-- America would be a better place if leaders would do more long-term thinking. -- Wilma Mankiller