OUR AMERICA

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How can we tell if the US Government is serving the average American who is still loyally supporting a shrinking tax base?

How do public servants treat the sick and dissatisfied who are being forced to dwell in the shadows of life? 

How does our government treat small children who are at the dawn of their lifespan?

How does the US Congress treat the elderly who are in the twilight of their lives?

Members of Congress should be representing the community they were elected to serve, but there is a clear difference. It is time to clean the House and Senate alike. Some say the Republicans have 

When a Republican candidatecalled Mexican immigrants "rapists", that wasn't campaign hyperbole. When he demanded a "total shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" six months later, that wasn't political positioning. When he defended neo-Nazis as "very fine people" after Charlottesville, that wasn't poor phrasing. It was a blueprint for mainstreaming the new American politics. And it worked. First, make the unthinkable speakable. Then make the speakable acceptable. Finally, make the acceptable inevitable.

Critics claim the GOP has damaged our economy, and warn that we're heading into recession. Others say they destroyed our reputation internationally. They Implemented tariffs, which are an added tax on the American people. And now the huge tax break for the rich at the expense of those who can least afford it. What have they done right?

The most famous quote about government "for the people" is "government of the people, by the people, for the people." This quote is from Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, delivered in 1863. It is a powerful expression of the ideals of democracy and self-governance. 

While Lincoln's version is the most well-known, the concept of "government for the people" has roots in earlier ideas. Theodore Parker, an abolitionist, used a similar phrase ("government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people") in 1850. Additionally, some sources suggest the phrase may have appeared in a Wycliffe Bible translation before 1384. 

Regardless of its origin, the phrase "government of the people, by the people, for the people" has become synonymous with the idea that the power of the government ultimately resides with its citizens.