
Senator
Goo Goo Eyes
Wherefore
take unto you
the whole
armour of God,
that ye
may be able to withstand in the evil day,
and having
done all, to stand.
--
Ephesians 6:13
When one of our daughters was about 2, she
developed a very effective way of saying "no." That's a 2-year-old's favorite
thing. They say "no" a lot, and they're so darned cute that parents usually let
them get away with it unless it's a life or death situation.
We practically made up things to ask her to do,
just to see her go into her "no" act.
She would plant her feet stubbornly in her
little tennis shoes, which we called "fop-fops."
Her little face would immediately transform from
sunny skies to black hurricane force.
Her little eyebrows would knit together in one
fierce frown.
Her little lips would stick 12 inches in front
of her face as they formed the word "no" with exaggerated oomph.
And best of all, she'd kind of tip her head
down, and her blazing blue eyes would stare at us in mock intimidation through
her blonde bangs for several seconds, until one of us would finally cave, and
say, "OK."
Poof! Her face would go right back to sunny
skies. She'd go traipsing off to play, her staredown forgotten . . . until next
time she needed to say "no."
We called that look "The Goo Goo Eyes."
Funny thing is, we ALL had better get some these
days. We've all been saying "yes" far too much. We say "yes" to the TV too much
. . . "yes" to the wrong foods too much . . . "yes" to the temptations of
materialism and greed, 'way, 'way too much. And it has come back to bite our
nation in the you-know-what, bigtime.
Saying "no" goes far beyond protecting our
teenagers from the physical and emotional destruction of drugs, alcohol and
sex. The inability to say "no" goes all the way to the top in the making of national policy. Our most elite politicians have
demonstrated in recent weeks that they can't say "no" to political pressure any
better than Madonna, Paris Hilton and the Octuplet Mom combined.
Especially in our nation's economic and
political arenas, we need more people with Goo Goo Eyes - self-control and
common sense, exercised with passion and persuasion -- to get in there and put
a stop to the excessive and outrageous government spending that is threatening
our nation's future.
They could take a lesson from the life of the
late Sen. Edward Zorinsky of Nebraska. He was in the U.S. Senate from 1977-87,
and before that, he was mayor of Omaha. Of course, this happened a long time
ago and I want to make it clear that I observed him from my stroller (!). But I
vividly remember how excited everybody got when he had the door to the mayor's
office removed off its hinges to symbolize his commitment to open government.
And I really liked his solution to perpetual
government overspending, fueled in large part by "featherbedding." That's when
bureaucrats ask for budgets that are 'way more than they really need. It's a game: they inflate their budget
requests and expect them to be cut a little, figuring they'll wind up with the
amount they want in the end, which is always bigger than they actually need.
Usually, though, the lack of accountability allows excessive budgets to be
approved, anyway, and so they get 'way more than they need. And that's how
we've been saddled with runaway government spending.
Zorinsky's idea would've prevented that. It's
called "zero-based budgeting." Instead of collecting everybody's budget
requests and then going out and getting the taxes to pay for them, the equation
is flipped. Bureaucrats are told how much money they are going to get, and it's
up to them to make the cuts in their spending to balance out the income and
outgo.
Too bad Zorinsky died before he could really
push zero-based budgeting through. It might've prevented the very crisis we're
in now.
But the best thing about Zorinsky is that he had
a powerful set of Goo Goo Eyes, and he could not be seduced by lobbying. He
stuck to his guns despite immense political pressure. Zorinsky kept saying that
he was there to represent the people in Nebraska who sent him to Washington to
do what was best for them and the country, not to cut deals and try to get pork
and bennies for them.
Sigh. Think how much better off we'd be in this
country if we had more leaders like that.
Get this: he was a Democrat, resisting a
Democratic President! How we could use that spirit of self-control in
Washington, D.C., today.
TIME Magazine had a fascinating account of Zorinsky
refusing to let President Jimmy Carter twist his arm on a big issue 30 years
ago, despite the President pulling out all the stops to lobby him. Carter
talked to him personally, had Rosalynn call Cece Zorinsky, and had the Secretaries
of State, Treasury and Defense all lobby him, too. The President invited the
Zorinskys to a state dinner, had luminaries like Henry Kissinger talk to him,
and even had one high official invite Zorinsky to play tennis . . . and let him
win.
President Carter invited 190 Nebraskans on a guest
list provided by Zorinsky to come to the White House to be personally briefed
by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and top State Department people, a heady
experience for sure.
And after all that pressure . . . all that seduction
and cajoling . . . in the end, Zorinsky still voted "no."
Read the story here:
www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,915998-1,00.html
Here's praying for our whole country to get the
cool head and strong backbone of leaders like Ed Zorinsky. We need to give our
public servants the Goo Goo Eyes on all these unnecessary, unsustainable tax
increases and spending hikes.
We need to say "no," plant our "fop-fops" . . .
and take a stand. †