[Essay]
The ads are starting!
The primary is August 11.
"Are you tired of do-nothing Democrats? Well, I promise..."
That is how a political ad starts. The candidate promises to bring change to Washington or Hartford.
I'm not going to vote for him. Why? Because of the attack ads. What I want to hear is not what they are against. I think we are all against high food prices, high electric rates, and crime. I want to know how they are going to curb those problems.
But they never explain how. As they say, "The devil is in the details." How are they going to cut electric rates? Every candidate in the U.S. promises to lower electric rates. Don't you think other politicians have been trying to do that? But here is a secret: it can't simply be done. Rate increases are driven by the price of fuel and by the cost of state-mandated repairs after major disasters.
Last week, we had a local disaster when a line of thunderstorms moved through. The utility crews did a fantastic job. But during emergencies, they are often paid double time or more, and many work close to 80 hours in a week. So you have a choice: weeks without power, or an all-out effort to restore power with cost taking a back seat. Then we complain when the utilities want to recover those costs.
We got where we are today because modern political ads have become little more than attack ads. Not one politician seems willing to tell you what they actually want to do, or even whether they have a real plan.
Democracy is not a spectator sport. It takes work. To write this blog, I read dozens of news sources and look for information from both sides.
The economy and the cost of living are the number one issues. Candidates on both sides say they are going to fight inflation. But very few explain how. We have seen how Trump says he plans to do it: by cutting business taxes, rolling back environmental regulations, and allowing mergers, all of which he claims will help bring down inflation.
Politicians have also promised to bring down healthcare costs. Trump said he would make the healthcare system more affordable and said he had concepts for reforms. But he never explained how. Yet healthcare costs remain the highest in the world.
Elections on both sides of the aisle have become exercises in promising voters the sky and delivering... crap.
For many voters, it is all about party loyalty. Others want substance, and when they don't get it, they end up voting the party line anyway.
We are spiraling downward, and many people don't seem to care. They don't demand honesty, and they end up with the government they get.
They say the number one issue is the economy, yet they keep voting for the same party they believe is holding them back.
[/Essay]

