When you see an actor in a movie or on a TV show, you know that the person is acting. You don’t expect that the lines he says reflect what he is in real life. What you probably don’t know is that you should assume the same thing about politicians.
I was reminded of this earlier today when a frustrated friend sent me a link to a story about a married Republican state legislator in Ohio who was found drunk with a young stripper and charged with DUI. The legislator is Rep. Robert Mecklenborg, who has a history of backing strong “family values” legislation that plays well with the GOP voter base. My friend is originally from Germany, and she gets frustrated with American politics at time. Her comment today:
“This is sad. Why are some thinking they are so above the standards they impose on others?”
I don’t get outraged by these incidents and haven’t in years. It hadn’t really occurred to me until today why that’s true. The people who are outraged at such hypocrisy assume that the things politicians say represent something about what they really believe and think. I know better. I know that the delivery of their lines on a political stage has almost nothing to do with how they live their lives.
Ignore the happy face it presents: Coercive state points a gun at you
What’s the best word for those of us who just want to be left alone?
Once you taste what is possible, you can’t accept being ‘normal’

Are modern Americans tough enough to survive in united nation?
Well, if you really want to know, this is what I’m still looking for
Have choice between two loves? Failing to choose may lose both
Evil and idiocy stripping away veneer of western civilization
When I’ve done something great, nothing seems impossible to me
After years of wasting my life, sands of time are slipping away