Who Will Teach Congress to Behave?

August 2, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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To make sense of the vitriol, lack of cooperative spirit and just bad manners being displayed on Capitol Hill, look no further than Massachusetts.

It's not that the Bay State is unusually mean or even rude. Visitors flocking to the Cape, the Berkshires or Boston's North End will surely find friendly people. But recent news in Massachusetts demonstrates just how high our tolerance for—even celebration of—bad behavior has become.

The Boston Globe informs us that the Boston School Committee is drafting rules for basic civility at its public meetings. This is not a response to shouting and disruption by children, who by definition are still learning how to behave in public and how to adjudicate disagreements with honor and mutual respect. No, the school committee's actions are a sad response to the heckling and all-around disrespect shown by adults—parents and teachers—who have been unhappy with school closings and other matters before the committee. Disruptive students have been at the meetings, too, which makes it worse, since the lesson they are learning at the meetings is that it's acceptable to shout and be rude to display one's unhappiness with a public policy. One protestor last December yelled "liar" at Superintendent Carol R. Johnson. Was this individual merely parroting the behavior of Rep. Joe Wilson, who yelled, "You lie!" at the President of the United States during a live, nationally-televised speech in the House chamber? [See the month’s best political cartoons.]

Remarkably, some of the adult activists have not been shamed at the fact that they must be treated as recalcitrant children. The Globe quotes the teacher's union president, Richard Stutman, jokingly comparing the decorum rules to Stalinist Russia. That's not only an insult to the people who lived in the brutal dictatorial regime, but an insult to public education. Surely, teachers do not instruct their students that self-control and civility are akin to totalitarianism.

But if the school meetings aren't distressing enough, Massachusetts can look to its professional football team, the New England Patriots. The team recently signed Albert Haynesworth, whose behavior, on and off the field, was so poor that the Washington Redskins couldn't stomach him anymore. In sports, the bad boys are often given a pass if their on-field passes are complete. But Haynesworth—who was paid $35 million to play in 20 games and didn't always show up for practice because he didn't like the coach's defense strategy—became just too much for the ‘Skins, who traded him to the Patriots for a fifth-round draft pick. At least Haynesworth won’t be a double burden to the Pats, since Randy Moss, another behavior problem, left the team last year and announced Tuesday he would retire from the sport. Defenders note that Patriots coach Bill Belichick whipped Moss into shape. Haynesworth could be a heavier list; at one point, he was juggling four different legal cases against him even as he feuded publically with his coach.

We should expect more from members of Congress, who have been through campaigns and theoretically should know better. But the public—even as they deride the dysfunction and bad manners in the Capitol—are enablers, rewarding malcontented lawmakers with campaign contributions. Republican Wilson and former Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson, who famously accused Republicans of wanting people to die as a way of saving on health costs, were two of the biggest fundraisers last election cycle, with much of the cash coming from out of state. Grayson lost, but the message was clear: acting up is profitable. And both Democrats and Republicans are raising money off the recent uproar over Republican Rep. Allen West, a Tea Party movement favorite who sent an email to a colleague, Democratic Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, calling her "the most vile" member of the House. Wasserman Schultz had criticized West's approach to Medicare, although she did not name him in the floor speech that led West to accuse Wasserman-Schultz of not acting like "a Lady." [See a collection of political cartoons on the Tea Party.]

The Boston School Committee may be able to teach civility to adults who apparently never learned how to sit still and listen. And perhaps Belichick can control Haynesworth. Who will do the same for members of Congress?

Tags:
Joe Wilson,
Alan Grayson,
Debbie Wasserman Schultz,
Congress,
Allen West,
politics

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Debbie Wasserman-Schultz is obnoxious. The lack of civility in congress that dem-shill Susan Milligan finally now notices was on full display if you saw W-S in action on TV just before the 2008 election, when W-S was carrying Candidate Obama's water as her means to advancement within the dem party. She constantly talked over her republican opponents, and even the interviewer/moderator -- a real motor-mouth. She wouldn't let anyone get in a word edgewise against her. And such obnoxiousness on the part of W-S paid off big-time for her.

In comparison to what I've seen from W-S three years ago already, West's e-mail to W-S didn't even budge the outrageousness needle.

That's how it always seems be with leftists. They can be as obnoxious as they want for as long as they want, but if somebody eventually pushes back against them, they cry foul, and start to hand-wring about 'civility.'

Turning to the subject of calling someone a... *****liar*****, Susan Milligan's only take on big squirming toad liar Anthony Weiner, a dem, was that he was treated 'inexcusably' by the media. But Milligan leaped twice now to become W-S's attack chihuahua against West.

And about public school meetings in MA or elsewhere becoming heated -- is it any wonder given how much public schools now are slanted toward indoctrination to a leftist, anti-Christian socio-political philosophy at the expense of actual education? And that public teachers whose salaries are funded by taxes are overwhelmingly pro leftist democrats, and were so rewarded last Aug. 2010 with an extra-special little $26 billion something payback?

Hence, the update:

War Powers 90 plus a whole bunch of days, and one dead Younis later:

Head squirming toad liar Obama's lawyer-shopped non-war Libyan war, and his throwing out $30 billion dollars worth of motivation for intertribal 'rebel' warfare in terms of frozen Libyan assets in the US? Meh, not of interest to political and foreign-affairs 'writer' Susan Milligan. West pushing back against W-S in an e-mail? Now that grabs Milligan's attention. Twice.

-----------------

Speaking of Weiner, safe bet that he finally fessed up because he feared Debbie W-S was going to beat the S out of him if he didn't. No way she'd let Weiner or any other such lowlife drag the dems down any further while SHE was DNC chair.

dom youngross of OH 5:59PM August 03, 2011

So, wait, let me get this straight.....Congress' messes and bad behavior is Massachusetts' fault? Right. Good thing I read this article; now I have all the answers.

Kathleen of AL 12:30PM August 03, 2011

expecting congress to act in a civil manner,well it,s not the nature of the beast,by and large.just as in life,there are certian members of congress who's only accomplishments are spewing rancor and vitriol.no one party has a monopoly on these practices.

as to the comment from FYI.wasserman schultz at times does have a sharp tongue.to put it mildly allen west is a loose cannon,who lacks civility.

i would call it a draw.

bruce b of NV 11:37PM August 02, 2011

Susan Milligan

Susan Milligan

Susan Milligan is a political and foreign affairs writer and contributed to a biography of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, "Last Lion: The Fall and Rise of Ted Kennedy." Follow her on Twitter @MilliganSusan.

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