We could have the same conversation about healthcare.
The people making decisions “on our behalf” should live with those decisions.
That should be a law, but it’d never pass.
(We could have the same conversation about healthcare.
The people making decisions “on our behalf” should live with those decisions.
That should be a law, but it’d never pass.)
Know what we should do? Never accept that it won’t pass. That’s what Charlie’s murder changed: we no longer talk ourselves out of holding our elected officials feet to the fire. Things are different now. No longer will we accept them not having skin in the game. If you make a law, it must affect you in the same way. We’ve allowed this for far too long. That sh!t stops now.