If this is the best we can get, the best we can hope for, God help us.
“America is in crisis. Our country is at a critical point in its history.”
“The Democratic Party has been taken over by socialists. Our Republican leaders don’t stand up for truth and …they don’t put the good of our country over their own political ambitions.”
“(The Democratic Party) is endangering our security, bankrupting our nation, killing our jobs, fueling inflation, harming our children, defunding our police, shredding our freedoms, and rewriting our history. (The Republican Party is promoting) dangerous conspiracy theories and attempts to overturn the election helped lead to a deadly insurrection, and (party leaders are) too weak to speak out.”
“They are destroying the country you and I love, and they must be stopped. (We need people) who promote truth, not conspiracy theories. And equality, not hate.”
I’ve come across some campaign statements from people on both sides who want to replace Roy Blunt. Each of the above paragraphs takes statements from the Republican Party side and from the Democrat Party side.
There is no doubt our country is in trouble. On any number of matters.
But neither side seems to have anything useful to say. As an old joke says, it’s just BS, MS, and PhD.
We pray for candidates who will offer us more, who can do more than mouth standard partisan verbiage. It would be such a relief to hear people on both sides of the aisle discuss our crisis, our critical point, with a degree of intelligence that doesn’t degenerate into hackneyed descriptions of the other party.
Unfortunately, gut politics seems to appeal to a public whose expectations have been lowered so far that thinkers cannot be heard above the rumblings of political bowels.
With more than a year to go before voting, does anyone feel good about what is likely to be before us?