Have you ever really stopped to think about this?
Many of the people sent to run our government already come from money, power, or privilege. They stand before everyday Americans, look us straight in the eye, and say whatever needs to be said to win our trust. We, the so-called “deplorables,” put them there hoping they will fight for our well-being, defend our interests, and remember who sent them.
But once they get comfortable in office, everything changes. The longer they stay, the more they are surrounded by lobbyists, insiders, donors, and career politicians who teach them how the game is really played. Before long, they stop thinking like representatives of the people and start acting like protectors of the system.
Then the money starts talking. Influence starts paying. Power becomes addictive. And the very people who elected them become little more than background noise. We are ignored, talked down to, taxed, regulated, and manipulated while they enrich themselves, protect each other, and pretend it is all being done for the public good.
That is, until they need us again.
When they need our vote, our obedience, our sons and daughters, our labor, our money, or our sacrifice, suddenly we matter. Suddenly we are the “heart of America,” the “backbone of the nation,” the “valued constituents” they are proud to serve. For that brief moment, they remember us. Then, once the election is over or the crisis has passed, we are pushed back to the side and forgotten again.
That is the cycle: promises before power, neglect during power, and praise only when our usefulness returns.
“In the end, too many in government do not see us as citizens to serve, but as tools to use.”
Yesterday’s show was a wake up call. The video of the young man so casually discussing a plot to brutally murder another conservative commentator during a debate, was troubling to watch. I’m having a really hard time processing how we got here.
Yes, we live in a peerless country, full of kind-hearted and giving people. But there’s a festering infection growing, and it must be stopped. Arendt’s “banality of evil” is on my mind often lately. People I once respected have let the evil in, and it’s spreading as they give it a microphone and a megaphone. I wonder where I went wrong as well. How could I have so misjudged them?
This is not an academic issue. We’ve seen where this goes. Death and destruction are the final chapters of this book in every version, and in every place it surfaces. I fear we are running out of time. I hope I’m wrong.
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Federal Crimes Statute Of Limitations
U.S. law sets the statute of limitations for federal crimes. The statute of limitations is a guideline for the allowable or maximum time after a criminal action takes place within which a legal case can be initiated.
Statutes of limitations allow prosecutors sufficient time to investigate a case before bringing charges while also providing protection to individuals from unfair prosecution. Once the statute of limitations expires for a particular crime, the alleged offender can no longer be prosecuted for that offense.
For most non-capital federal crimes, the statute of limitations is five (5) years per 18 U.S.C. § 3282. This means that the federal government must bring charges against the defendant no later than five years after the commission of a crime.
There are exceptions to the standard five-year statute of limitations. Some crimes are subject to extended time limits, while others have no statute of limitations at all.
Capital Offenses: For crimes ...