A Time for Impeachment

Guy T. Sturino
Why is America so politically divided? Could it be that a game mentality has replaced wisdom in our government? This should be a rhetorical question, but unfortunately it is not. Winner-take-all may be good for baseball, but definitely not for a democratic government. Far too many citizens seem to feel that when “their side” wins an election, the elected representative is responsible only to them. The representative also relies on this bizarre notion to press the agenda of the party they represent. This position is selfish, childish and extremely destructive to our form of democratic government.

Many recent elections have been decided by an extremely thin margin. The adolescent winner-take-all mentality demonstrated by a majority of Senators and Representatives today allows them to dispassionately disregard up to 49.9% of the people they are supposed to represent. The voting records which substantiate the positions taken by each Senator and Congressperson are available at http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/. Unfortunately, the decisions of the Executive Branch are classified secret and have been impounded.

In the past five years of dominance over both houses of Congress and the Presidency, the Republican Party has taken this high school definition of winning to a degree seldom seen outside the arena of spectator sports. One thing is certain, the opinions of half of the population of the United States today are having little impact on decisions which affect them.

The latest cries of Bush-won-so-give-him-what-he-wants, is an extreme example of adolescent thinking. When we elect a President we understand that he will have leanings toward one position or another which are different from many of us. However, we do not expect the “losing side” to be ostracized from the political process. We do not expect that the President will act like some college football star and insist that his way is the only way, and only the wants of his team matter. We do expect the President to be an example of wisdom and statesmanship. We expect that his leadership is such that not one citizen feels that their opinion didn’t matter, even when decisions are made contrary to that persons desire.


President George W. Bush shows every indication of desiring Coronation. His use of recess appointments and signing statements demonstrate a contempt for the will of the people which is further demonstrated by his condescending doublespeak. There can be no doubt that our President lied us into war, we have documentation to prove it. There can be no doubt that his agenda trumps ours, and he keeps his agenda carefully hidden. There can be no doubt that he perpetuates a divided electorate in order to keep us busy fighting amongst ourselves so we have little interest in watching him unravel our Constitution. The smirk on his face, when presenting his position was once considered an unfortunate mannerism. The performance of his branch of the government in times of crisis leaves not a hint of doubt that his smirk reflects his security in knowing that even if we can prove he is lying there is nothing we can do about it.

To make matters worse, reflections of the President’s condescension can be seen on the faces of far too many members of Congress as they disregard confirmed facts during their speeches in favor of uttering hyperbole when justifying their positions. Those congresspersons play the adolescent game of follow-the-leader instead of demonstrating the compassion, understanding and wisdom we should hope for and expect to find in those elected to such high office. Every day that passes brings us closer to the destruction of the government our founders formed and fought for.

That fight, the American Revolution, was necessary, as we know, in order to get out from under the contemptuous rule of their own King George. Our government, and the very essence of who we are, is at risk today. It is past the proper time for impeachment, but not too late to get the job done. If we don’t do it now, we may very well not have sufficient rights remaining to get it done in the future. In the game being played today there will be only one winner. If it is the President, he will assume winner-take-all. For all our sakes, the winner must be “We the People.”
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Guy T. Sturino

My Name is Guy Sturino and I came to be in November of 1940 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. By the time I reached six years old my dad was back home and we had defeated both Germany and Japan.

The country was riding high. Sure, times were tough. Both my parents worked fairly regularly, but still we moved often and we spent a few of those early years in government project housing. TV came to our house when I was eleven.

When I was twelve I became an alter boy at Holy Rosary Catholic Church. Like all alter boys, I even thought someday I'd become a Priest. By the time I finished high school that illusion was gone and with it my fondness for the Catholic church. But, that's another story all by itself.

In high school Civics class we learned that we were the greatest. We learned that Democracy meant capitalism and Communism was the same as socialism. We were taught that Democracy was good and that socialism was bad. At the same time Joe McCarthy was telling us that Communists were hiding under our beds and if the bomb didn't get us those Commies sure would.

I took all that with me when I joined the Marines in '59 when my education really got started. In Thailand I learned about Buddhism, and how people who had very little and worked from dawn to dusk every day were the happiest and most sharing as a group that I had met up until that time. In Japan I saw and lived in a culture built around working together to achieve great things as opposed to the do-it-yourself rugged individualism expected in the American culture. Along the way I got to visit the Philippines and South Korea.

When I came home in '63 I drove a bread truck for a while and then hand poured aluminum in a foundry until the GI bill was signed in '65. I got a degree in Applied Science and Technology and went to work for American Motors. After a few years as a chassis engineer I moved over to quality control and eventually traveled Europe assessing quality systems in supplier manufacturing facilities. By the time I had interacted with workers in England, Ireland, France, Germany, Switzerland, Spain and Italy, as well as China, South Korea and Japan, I had a totally new perspective on what was a fair return for a days work.

I worked for a couple of other companies before vacationing in Virginia Beach with my daughter and deciding that the tickets in my pocket for Riyadh and New Deli were simply too much after just returning from Beijing. I found a pizza shop for sale and bought it. Unfortunately I wasn't very successful as a restaurateur, and took a job as a substitute teacher for a year.

Undaunted, I applied for a job as a teacher assistant the next year and got it. Two years later I was teaching algebra in an alternative high school where, at 62 years old I retired.
I already had a serious interest in politics, but having the time to actually watch the House and the Senate on Cspan really got my interest. I learned things about our government that I certainly never heard about in school and I had to wonder why not. About 2005 I decided to begin sharing my thoughts on the web. By the middle of 2007 I sort of lost, not the interest, but the drive to communicate.

Recent events have changed that.

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