Good political writing occurs in many places. As members of the new media, it is our obligation to publish not only facts and research, but also great and relevant essays, letters, and opinions we find or create. I believe this letter that was originally posted at
Democratic Underground deserves to be shared far and wide across the blogosphere.
Nancy Greggs wrote this very poignant & profound open letter to Republican representatives in Congress. With her permission, I have provided it here in its entirety. Nancy has also given open permission for her letter to be widely distributed to other blogs, newspaper editorial boards, representatives in Congress, etc. She only asks that we give her attribution as the author and a plug for Democratic Underground (when possible) as the original publisher.
Please read it, act on it, and share it...for the future of our children and our country.
What do WE tell our children?
by Nancy Greggs
An Open Letter to the Republican Representatives Who Control Our Government:
We heard it over and over during the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal:
What do we tell the children? It was a phrase obviously premised on the fact that the average first-grader was parked in front of CNN all afternoon, asking uncomfortable questions about the sexual conduct of the president.
Well, there are some very uncomfortable questions being asked by
our children these days, and they flow from the very circumstances you have created. Therefore, I think it only appropriate that you give us some advice on how to deal with the queries being posed by the children of ordinary Americans across the country.
What do we tell our children when they ask why their grandmother's health is failing, due to the fact that her life-saving medication is no longer within her financial means? Should we explain to them that the multi-billion dollar profits of the pharmaceutical companies are more important than Grandma's health, or anyone else's?
What do we tell our children when they ask why soldiers in Iraq have to fight without the necessary equipment, or have to use contaminated water to bathe in? Should we explain to them that Halliburton has been handed billions of dollars that were earned by mommies and daddies all over America, but that money goes into already-wealthy people's pockets instead of being spent on the welfare and safety of the men and women who may die fighting for their country?
What do we tell our children when they see us crying because we have lost our jobs, and we can't find another one? Should we explain to them that someone in another country was given that job because they agreed to do it for less money, so that the children of the people who own that company can have $250,000 birthday parties?
What do we tell our children when we have to feed them cheap meals four nights a week, because the price of gas just went up again and we had to use the grocery money to get to work? Should we explain to them that the oil companies can't get by with the billions of dollars they are making already, along with the subsidies that mom and dad have to pay for as well?
What do we tell our children when they ask if we can help them go to medical school, or law school, or even a community college to learn a trade, when we can't afford to contribute a single penny? Should we tell them to get a job that pays minimum wage, and maybe in ten years they will have saved enough for their first semester? Should we explain to them that training for
any job right now is a waste of time, because it will wind up being given to someone in another country anyway?
What do we tell our children when they see photographs from Abu Ghraib, or hear stories about Guantanamo Bay? Should we explain to them that because we go to church on Sunday and sing `God Bless America', God just looks the other way when we imprison and torture our fellow human beings?
What do we tell our children when they ask why the kid down the street who was caught with drugs had to go to jail to be punished, but when one of
your kids got caught with drugs, they went to the hospital to be cured? Should we explain to them that the difference between being a criminally inclined addict and a non-dangerous substance abuser depends on the financial wherewithal of the parents?
What do we tell our children when they ask why multi-billion dollar corporations are allowed to pollute our air and water? Should we explain to them that if the air is unbreathable and the water undrinkable by the time they are grown up, that's because you thought it was more important to look after the companies that give you campaign contributions than to think about the world you were bequeathing to future generations?
What do we tell our children when they ask why there are people living in cardboard boxes on the street, when they've seen you and your colleagues argue about million dollar bridges-to-nowhere? Should we tell them that real people in need don't matter, in comparison to people who might vote for someone who brought the bacon home to their state?
What do we tell our children about honesty and integrity in government, when the president gets caught lying or ignoring the laws of our country, and you make yourselves busy looking the other way, or come up with endless excuses for his behavior? Should we explain to them that although our country was built on the Constitution and the rule of law, once you get to be president you can arbitrarily decide that those concepts are no longer valid?
What do we tell our children about American democracy and its system of representational government, when you, our representatives, pay no attention to the needs or desires of the people who elected you? Should we tell them that this whole "democracy" thing has been a scam all along, and they'd better smarten up and get used to it?
What do we tell our children when they ask about The American Dream? How do we explain to them that it is no longer within their grasp, that it no longer exists for kids like them, that it is only available to
your children, and not ours?
I'm truly curious. On the off chance that any one of you has inadvertently raised a child with a social conscience, with morals, with compassion for their fellow citizens, when they become adults and look at what you have allowed to happen, what will
you tell your own children?
You may not deign to answer the questions I have posed, but when that one is asked by your own child, you'll have no choice but to respond. And I'd give almost anything to be there when you do.