In the 6th grade (Lone Peak eagles for life) at the tender age of 11 my mother ran for a District Office position in Sandy, Utah. She ran against an unnamed republican who we shall call John Shmallow. Being 11 years old, I was naive. At first thought, it seemed awesome to have your mommy as a big powerful lawmaker! Little did I know running for office meant hours and hours of sign placement, really crappy t-shirts, and a parade stuck inside a horse trailer that literally smelt like an overflowed toilet. And not to mention that as a 6th grader, I had teachers intentionally mistreat me as a student because my mother was a Democrat in a Republican state. They talked openly and poorly of democrats and my mother, all because I was reppin' that Sherry Hall swag. That being said, I learned a lot about politics through my mother. The reason I believe my mother ran was to help the public, mostly because of her passion for education. And I truthfully believe a lot of politicians run for the right intent to help others.
My mother lost that election by a few hundred votes. THANK GOD she did. In large part it was because her opposition accused her of being pro abortion (A mother of SIX.. LOL). It also does not help that she was running as a Democrat in a Republican state. John Shmallow, the unnamed republican she ran against, probably started out wanting the same thing: to help others, to impact a community - but is now currently under federal and state charges of money laundering, fraud, and other illegal acts. What happened? Why does this seem to be a consistent theme in politics? Why does a system of parties and delegates generally lead to blind hate and opposition?
No matter your stance on any topic I strongly feel it is time that we as individuals look deeply at ourselves and our choices when it comes to politics. Republicans... when was the last time you trash talked Obama (I rarely hear republicans address him as president)? Democrats... what have you said openly about the republicans in the house? It is ridiculous to me that we use parties as a My Team vs. Your Team mentality. This gets nothing done, ever. And it starts with you, not congress. Not the senate. It starts with you. Don't blame congress or President Obama. If you can't see past blind hatred then how do you expect your representatives to do the same. Stop acting like children over life changing political choices.
I fear that we as individuals are influenced too much by outside sources. It has become very challenging to have pure genuine personal thought on politics. Think for yourself. Educate yourself. Attempt to be unbiased. Try to switch aisles for a day. Approach your day as if you were the other side. See what happens. Neither side is right. That is my opinion. Neither side has all the answers and I do not expect them to, but the current system is not working. Government shut downs, delayed budget ceilings, and the increasing national debt - the choices made by both parties over the past two decades has led us to this point. A faltering economy, a declined national credit score, and government programs that do not even function as intended (Example: Social Security).
To close I want to address the core problem: money in politics. Our congress, our senate is "bought," which means they are too strongly influenced by the money that funds their campaigns. IF you want to know a politicians view, follow the money. The votes will show where and what they support and it is rarely the "good of the general public"(Example: current government shut down over the Affordable Health Care act). Do i believe politicians are evil? No. But we need to demand more as a public, stop finger pointing, and start changing. Stand up to party politics and demand your representatives to change. Stop posting on Facebook ignorant statements about the other party being at fault for this or that.
We will disagree, we will argue, and we will debate. But its time we all realize that we all want the same thing: a better today for a better tomorrow. And that has to start with you.