Government exists to protect people
who can’t protect themselves, to provide a mechanism for collective action so
that no one slips through the cracks and is forced to fend for themselves in a
hostile world.
This is what I tell my freshmen
students in my Intro to American Government class on the first day and that
thesis statement provides a framework for the rest of the policy discussions
that we have throughout the semester. This
is how I frame the Affordable Care Act, SNAP and WIC and other social welfare
programs, foreign aid, and anything else we discuss.
I think that if we accept this basic
premise, it’s possible to have a discussion about the pros and cons of policies
to achieve that end. I truly believe
(perhaps this makes me naïve) that it’s possible for reasonable and intelligent
people who are deeply invested in the public good to disagree on the means for
achieving it. I’ve met kind and
compassionate people across the political spectrum.
What I haven’t come across before are
people who are so invested in their own self-interest that they are willing to
let the country burn, to let our most vulnerable citizens as well as their own
employees go hungry. Shutting down the
government was a shock to my system because I truly believed the Tea Party
would blink. Polls were telling them to stop. Democrats were telling them to
stop. Moderates in their own party were practically begging them to stop—including John Boehner, who has now apparently
lost any remnant of a moral compass and has joined them in their “small
government” crusade without even truly believing in it.
I went to work in shock, and was
surrounded by my shocked and saddened civilian colleagues. Some of them had been working during the last
shutdown, 17 years ago. They remembered
feeling much the same way, as though they were the victims of the very
government they worked for. Now, though,
they were fairly united in pointing the finger at the GOP for responsibility in
a way that perhaps they were not under the last shutdown.
I have given much of my life, much of
what is good in me, to my country and my job.
My debate team is the second child that I did not and could not have. I believe that what I do as an educator makes
my students better officers, better front-line ambassadors to other countries,
better stewards of the enlisted people entrusted to them as junior officers,
better advocates for compassionate policy changes both inside and outside the
military. For that reason I have
sacrificed countless weekends, countless nights, countless hours I could have
spent with my family and I have done it smiling. Now I feel lost and small and sad, as the
government I work for turns its back on me, calls me “non-essential”, refuses
to pay me; my employer pays lip service to my importance while not only not canceling the football game scheduled for this weekend, but going ahead with
the pep rally they’re paying for beforehand.
Think about that—the civilian professors of the service academies are
LESS ESSENTIAL than not just a football game, but a pep rally for a football
game. It breaks my heart.
Even more heartbreaking is the impact
this has on those who rely on the government.
Does the loss of a paycheck or two hurt me? Yes, but my family will survive it. We won’t lose our house or our food security
or our cars over it, and even if we were at risk of doing so, our families
would step in to shield us from the impact.
There are many employees, both at my own workplace and throughout the
federal government, who are not so lucky.
Not all of us are “overpaid” desk jockeys with doctoral degrees—many are
the workers who clean up after us or who prepare food for our students. They are suffering in a way I’m not.
Or how about the families that rely on
SNAP or WIC to get through the month?
This is not just in support of the unemployed, though God knows they
need it in this economic climate. It
also goes to support the working poor who still can’t quite make ends meet, including many military families. The idea that a
few selfish members of Congress are quite literally taking food from the mouths
of children makes me ill. Of course,
their answer is that the hungry should rely on private donations—which is what
the wealthy and selfish always say. Never mind the fact that this year
donations to food banks are down 68%, or that many food banks are still
experiencing depletion from the summer due to a decrease in school and
university-based drives and the fact that they feed children over the summer
who rely on school nutrition programs during the school year (school nutrition
programs that the GOP would also like to see cut). Many who are impacted by this absurd
hostage-situation-cum-temper-tantrum will find they have nowhere to go to feed
their children.
Women and children are suffering
because of this decision, the decision to “shut down”. The language is reminiscent of Todd Akin's 2012 comment that “legitimate” rape victims wouldn’t get pregnant because women’s bodies have a way to “shut that whole thing down”. What is it with the GOP and shutting things down? This terminology that they use as a weapon to hurt women, children, and
families? I hope the American people
remember this, remember how they felt during this wild-eyed Tea Party crusade into
madness, when it comes time to vote.
Maybe it’s time for America shut that whole thing down!
Danielle Verney O'Gorman is the Director of Debate at the United States Naval Academy
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