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This is a nice piece in The Atlantic by John D. Dingell who represented Michigan in Congress for over 59 years.
For some of you it will be too hard to read. We know who you are.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/12/john-dingell-how-restore-faith-government/577222/
Unfortunately ideas here from Mr. Dingell will never happen in my lifetime and likely never.
For some of you it will be too hard to read. We know who you are.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/12/john-dingell-how-restore-faith-government/577222/
In my six decades in public service, I’ve seen many changes in our nation and its institutions. Yet the most profound change I’ve witnessed is also the saddest. It is the complete collapse in respect for virtually every institution of government and an unprecedented cynicism about the nobility of public service itself.
These are not just the grumblings of an angry old man lamenting the loss of “the good old days.” In December 1958, almost exactly three years after I entered the House of Representatives, the first American National Election Study, initiated by the University of Michigan, found that 73 percent of Americans trusted the federal government “to do the right thing almost always or most of the time.” As of December 2017, the same study, now conducted by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, found that this number had plummeted to just 18 percent.
Unfortunately ideas here from Mr. Dingell will never happen in my lifetime and likely never.