"I can't fathom what the thought process was behind that one," said Mayor Adam Schneider, who did not know the law existed until a reporter questioned him on it. "We can do a pretty good job of looking foolish when we enforce `real' ordinances, let alone something like this. I just hope I don't get embarrassed and find out I voted for it in the past."I like the mayor. He's aware of political reality (looking stupid, weird processes, possibility of embarrassment); he's not too proud - he can admit the law seems bizarre; and he's smart enough to realize he might have voted for it. Politics would be a lot more fun if more people had his wit and honesty.
My blog. Obviously. If you're reading it, you probably already know me one way or the other and so it's clearly a subset of my thoughts and experiences. If you somehow stumbled on this blog without knowing me, that's cool too, but, well, there's not much more of a description.
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Honesty and Wit in Politics
I came across this article today. It's mostly a light-hearted essay about weird beach laws. But one of the quotes is from a mayor when asked about a law "prohibiting baby carriages from being parked on sand within 15' of a beach entrance":
I always liked the law about ducks that cannot wear pants. There is a whole website devoted to these things. http://www.dumblaws.com/laws/united-states/michigan/
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