It is all one big joke. The sooner we accept that these people are not to be taken seriously -- that they are a bunch of crooks and frauds who work in the public sector to gain advantages because they couldn't make it in private life, the sooner we can get the government off our back and out of our lives.
When I imagine the founding father's thinking about who they wanted to represent the people, I see a group of largely retired folk who had been fairly successful in life and thus had no reason to govern to benefit themselves; they were to serve as competent and honest stewards and largely maintain the status quo (i.e. the Constitution) because they felt it was their duty and valued the sacrifices made to build a country guided by the rule of law and the belief in preserving the life, liberty and property of the people. The government was never intended to be the intrusive, insolvent ignoramous of an institution that it is today.
Benjamin Weingarten has had it with the mischief at the Fed and the shenanigans in Congress. And don't get him started on Obama. I predict we will see a lot more outrage from the mainstream media (MSM) and the public when hyper-inflation comes our way but our leaders will try to shift the blame to greedy businessmen and Wall Street.
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