Suff wrote:It is a sad fact that our highest politicians and civil servants must be protected from the public in order to do their jobs effectively.
I disagree. It is one thing to be effective, it is entirely another to act criminally in order to be, in their terms, effective. I am all for protecting people working within the laws and implacably opposed to those working outside them in order for them to promote their agendas.
Suff wrote:What is even sadder is when a criminal charlatan winds up with that protection. It doesn't warrant the changing of the laws as they are needed.
But it does warrant the changing of the laws. You and I cannot operate outside of the laws, as they are indeed, needed, why should politicians and civil servants be allowed to?
Suff wrote:The saddest fact, for me, is that the key lesson is never learned. That we, the public, bear the responsibility to vote in honest and responsible administrators. Blair is our failing and we, the people, just want to blame someone else or try to eradicate "our" mistake in the courts.
And here we have a problem. The way the system works is that we get very little choice in who our prospective representative will be. The political elites, in central control, decide who we get to vote for - think parachutes. We vote for who is put before us, but we have not one iota of responsibility, none whatsoever, over who they are. The only ways we will ever be responsible are if we get proper PR or the option of none of the above - NOTA. Until then, or Hell freezing over, we have to go with who 'they' choose as our options to vote for.
Suff wrote:I'd prefer we take it as a salient lesson and don't do it again.
I sort of agree, but how is that achieved?