HiTempguy wrote:JeffHarbert wrote: This. Being a saint is not a requisite of holding office. This whole attitude that elected officials should be held to a higher standard than the rest of us is absurd.I haven't read the whole thread yet, but WHAT? So, thousands of people "trust" one person (via their vote) to be an accountable, non-corrupt individual who represents their ideas, values, and lets say "beliefs" in government,
We elect people with the hope that they will represent us when it comes time for them to vote or otherwise act in the professional capacity we have elected them for. In the same way that we trust a transmission shop to rebuild our transmission.
If my transmission rebuilder cheats on his wife, I'm not likely to introduce him to my female friends, and I may or may not want to go back to him for transmission work depending on the local market and how creeped out I am. But fundamentally, if he kept to his reasonable quote and did a quality rebuild, I'm disinclined to try to get him barred from the industry because of it.
I recognize the distinction between being my representative and being my repair guy, but the job description of rep is not to embody your spirit in government, it's to work for the things you voted to work for. You could certainly have a candidate who claimed and offered to represent your very core in every aspect, and that would be his promise to keep or break, and on breaking it you'd have grounds to be appropriately apoplectic, but it's not the job description.
Dem, Rep, or Other, I'm pretty sure that if we chucked out everybody that had done something on this level of bad outside of their job, we wouldn't have enough people left to fill the positions. The idea of electing only angels is great, but I find it completely unrealistic. This terrible game is called 'politics', and the only way that people get to play it at a professional level is by playing it fairly well, and I'm quite convinced that spin, favors, closed-door deals, selective memories, and lies of various proportions are prerequisites long before you get to this level.
And yes, I think there are both decent people and slimeballs who do all of the above. I believe that anybody who doesn't do any of these things would be completely ineffectual.
EDIT: I don't think texting pictures of your anatomy to anybody is a prerequisite to efficacy, but the point regarding the distinction between behavioral perfection and job-appropriateness stands.