DEAR CONGRESSMAN KINGSTON: WE THE PEOPLE DON’T CARE ABOUT YOUR PROBLEMS
I’m not quite sure
what Jack Kingston was trying to achieve, but if it was to give the rest
of us a serious case of eye-roll, then mission accomplished.
Kingston is an
eight-term Republican congressman from Georgia’s 1st District, an area
extending south from Savannah and Brunswick to the Florida border and
northwest to Warner Robins. He is also not very happy with his world
right now. Kingston has been publicly complaining about the new
Democratic majority in the House mandating a five-day workweek, instead
of the current three. For one thing, he thinks a five-day week will mean
that “marriages suffer.” Oh, please.
He says members of
Congress work hard, and for most of them it is a 60-hour, six-day
workweek. A lot of that time, Kingston says, is spent back home
“listening and learning.” He talked about all the meetings he held in
his district and the number of speeches he made. Spending more time in
Washington, he says, means “members of Congress are less in touch with
those they represent.” He may be right as rain, but, Jack, guess what?
We the People really don’t care. That’s your problem. You go work it out
with your colleagues in the Congress. You won’t be getting a lot of
sympathy from us, because being sympathetic to politicians is like being
told to kiss a frog
—
it ain’t gonna happen.
My daddy used to
tell me that there were two things you should never try to convince
people of: One, that you feel worse than they do, and, two, that you
work harder than they do. The only way Kingston’s comments could have
been less well received would have been for him to say that not only is
his job harder than yours, but his sinuses hurt a whole lot worse than
yours ever did.
The reaction to his
pity-poor-me plaints could have been predicted by Sheila the Family
Wonderdog. One disgusted reader opined that, “Jack Kingston needed a
crane operator to remove his foot from his mouth, but crane operators
work long hours and were too offended by his whining to help him out.”
Zing!
Another said,
“Kingston should ask one of his constituents what they think about his
salary, schedule and health-care plan and see if that gets him any
sympathy.”
One perceptive
reader asked, “If U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston is so concerned about having
enough time to spend with his family, then why has he appeared multiple
times on ‘Real Time with Bill Maher,’ which is taped on Friday nights in
California?” An excellent question, to which I would add
—
Of what benefit is it to his constituents that he hobnob with a liberal
weenie like Bill Maher, who referred to the 9-11 terrorists as “heroes”?
He’d be a lot better off if he associated with common folks like Jeff
Foxworthy and Ron “Tater Salad” White or even Larry the Cable Guy. Then
we might be more sympathetic to his long workweek.
Jack Kingston was
not marched to Washington at the point of a gun and forced to be a
congressman. He went up there of his own free will and because the
voters of the 1st District sent him there to represent them to the best
of his ability
—
regardless of the circumstances. If he feels that the job is too hard,
then quit and go make a bundle as a lobbyist or learn to operate a
crane.
I know most of the
members of the Georgia delegation personally
—
Republican and
Democrat —
and they are
decent people trying to do a good job for us and under the same
conditions as Kingston. His complaining doesn’t help them either. We can
all name a bunch of people who make a lot less money, have a lot fewer
perks and a crummier retirement plan than members of Congress.
So,
Jack, suck it up, and let’s hear no more whining from you. Besides,
things could be worse. You could be writing a column week after week,
trying to deal with pesky editors telling me where I should stick my
commas —
and with a gimpy knee to boot. Now, that’s a real problem!
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