The man of the people (of Virginia) Ken Cuccinelli, the commonwealth’s
attorney general, needed robust security for his book signing at the Barnes and
Noble in Tysons Corner according to Blue Virginia’s Lowell Feld.[1]
Now imagine if Ken Cuccinelli became the next governor of
Virginia. How much security would he surround himself with then?! Let me wager
a guess and say enough security to fend off a lot of angry Virginians.
From all indications, Ken Cuccinelli gets a kick out of
pissing Virginians off who don’t stand on the same ideological razor’s edge as
he does. He seems to think it’s a game of realpolitik, ideological zealotry,
and just a dash of fun spread into the mix.
Cuccinelli’s in-your-face political style is hardly what Virginia
needs in their attorney general, let alone their governor. Compromise,
compromise, what is compromise?!
Furthermore, Cuccinelli’s hour-long book signing at Barnes
and Noble on Saturday is representative of what a Cuccinelli governorship would
look like: short on ideas, high on himself, surrounded by security, and readily
accessible only to those individuals who stand on his political side of the fence.
Somehow, a sizable number of Virginians see Cuccinelli as ‘their
guy’, the individual who can finally infuse government with…anti-government
policies.
But the issue is not government itself. The issue that
America truly needs to address is bad governance. And bad governance starts
with prohibiting government from filling the spaces that the private sector
will not, cannot, or should not fill itself (i.e., Veterans benefits; Medicare;
Medicaid, etc.).
Our current political imbroglio’s are not between anti-business
and pro-business enthusiasts. Our current political dilemmas are between those
who see the necessity of a public-private symbiotic relationship and those who
find mutual exclusivity between the two spheres of life in America.
For the Cuccinelli’s of the world, government is a beast
that must be tamed. The irony is, of course, that Cuccinelli is the one who has
volunteered to seat himself on the saddle of government, a position he is
unlikely to use to put that horse to sleep.
Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.[2]
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