Terry M. Sater of Eureka, Missouri, is a regular monthly columnist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. I'll speak out, and I'll vote, but I won't write checks until politicians put principle above power and ideals above money. We don't want the best government that money can buy; we just want the BEST GOVERNMENT.
I'm not a cynic, for I know that there are honorable and principled people of both major parties who answer the call to public service. Unfortunately, the system for getting there has degenerated into nothing more than a high-stakes money machine driven more by power and greed than by noble ideas for the good of our country.
I don't regard this as a Republican or Democratic issue. It is a bipartisan plague, and it threatens the life of our democracy. That's why I am about as likely to donate to a political campaign as to the Paris Hilton Legal Defense Fund.
Candidates could commit their time and energy to appearing on television and radio talk shows, free of charge, to discuss subjects in depth and answer questions. They could cover tough issues in print and on their websites. Instead, they prefer the compressed images and messages of television ads that last mere seconds, and are just the televised equivalent of bumper stickers. The ads are aimed at voters who choose not to read, and who aren't curious enough to demand more than slogans.
Complaining about campaign financing is like complaining about the weather. Nobody really does anything about it. But I'm going to do something:
I won't donate to any campaign until our borders are secure, the hiring of illegal aliens stops, and there are workable safeguards against fraud using Social Security numbers.
I'll write a check after our wounded warriors and disabled veterans are properly cared for.
I'll start making campaign contributions after the Social Security system has been secured, something we've been talking about for decades.
I'll write campaign checks after they've replaced our burdensome, unwieldy tax system with a flat tax or any plan that is simple, fair, and efficient.
I'll donate after they get rid of the destructive, costly, and corruptive power of lobbying by special interests.
I'll write a check to the party or candidate who mounts an aggressive, effective "Manhattan Project"--sized effort to achieve America's energy independence. We have been talking about it since the 1970s, and we're worse off now than we were then.
In the meantime, I'd rather send my contributions to the Salvation Army or the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund, a privately funded nonprofit charity helping the families of military service members who have died or been severely disabled.
I'll speak out, and I'll vote, but I won't write checks until politicians put principle above power and ideals above money. We don't want the best government that money can buy; we want the best government.