I have a proposal.
Next time some politician goes before the cameras with his figurative pants down around his metaphoric ankles and says, "I made a mistake," let's form a mob and drag him from the podium. You bring the lanterns, I'll bring the pitchforks.
South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford is, of course, the latest. Having bought plane tickets, told his staff he would be away hiking the Appalachian Trail, left his wife and kids behind and flown to Argentina to rendezvous with his paramour, he apologized by saying he'd made a mistake.
Before we go any further, let me concede the obvious. Yes, all human beings make mistakes. That's how you know they're human beings.
But surely I'm not the only one to notice how "I made a mistake" has become the go-to explanation for every human houndog in public office. It's been dragged out by or on behalf of everyone from Jesse Jackson to Kwame Kilpatrick to John Edwards to L.A. mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to former Pennsylvania Rep. Don Sherwood to Gary Hart to Eliot Spitzer to Sen. John Ensign to Bill Clinton.
It isn't the cheating I'm complaining about. Nor is it the lying (which is, after all, an integral part of the cheating.) And for our purposes today, we can even ignore the hypocrisy of self-proclaimed moral champions — particularly family values conservatives such as Gov. Sanford — getting busy with women who are not their wives.
No, what incites this diatribe is those four words of putative explanation: "I made a mistake." There is to them a connotation of honest error, unwitting miscalculation, accidental omission and "Oops, my bad." They allow the offender to appear to accept responsibility for his offense while at the same time, minimizing it. He just misjudged. It just happened. He was just careless, inattentive or forgetful. He couldn't help it.
The excuse has never been flimsier than it is in the post-Bill Clinton era. I mean, if I put my hand into a fire because I've never seen fire before and I get burned, that is a mistake. If you see me get burned and then put your hand into the same fire, that's not a mistake. That's an idiotic calculation that somehow, the rules do not apply to you.
So what does it say about the politician who saw Clinton burn his public and political lives to bits, then turns around and does the same thing he did? I'll tell you what it says. It says he's a fool.
And it also says he's a man, though some might argue that's a synonym. But surely you've noticed that the list of cheating hearts in high office is rather, shall we say, testosterone-exclusive. It is not that women are paragons of marital virtue. A 2008 study by the National Science Foundation found that 15 percent of women over 60 admit to having had an affair in their lifetimes and that the rate of female infidelity is actually growing faster than that of males.
And yet, when's the last time you saw a woman governor saying, "I made a mistake," while her husband stood there looking as if he might toss up his lunch any second? Apparently, your average woman governor-elect has the good sense to tell Sven the Swedish pool boy that she's about to enter the public eye and their long lunches will have to end.
The man governor-elect figures he can get away with it. With the arrogance, recklessness, self-delusion and lack of foresight common to my gender, he figures he can handle it, somehow. Granted, he does this figuring with the part of the body that does not contain the brain, but still, he does it.
And then, when it all falls apart, he stands there and insults the intelligence of every human being within earshot.
"I made a mistake?"
Beg pardon, but what he made was a decision.
Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for The Miami Herald. His e-mail address is: lpitts@miamiherald.com. Leonard Pitts will be chatting with readers every Wednesday from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. EDT on www.MiamiHerald.com.
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A very good article from Mr Pitts. When he's not playing the race card he actually writes with some keen insight.
"A government big enough to give you what you want is strong enough to take everything you have." Thomas Jefferson
A better solution to the problem with the schools would be to get rid of "No Child Left Behind". That unfunded mandate is what is causing our schools to fail because the teachers have to teach to a damn test instead of teaching to the basics. The tests also do not take into account that some kids just do not test well. There is no help for the kids that just need a little extra boost to actually grasp things. It took me 6 years to get my child into Title 1 for math, now that he is there his test scores went from 208 to 220. We are focusing so much attention on the tests that we are forgetting the basics.
Another thing, parents need to take responsibility for sitting with their child while they are doing their homework and making sure the student is doing it and understanding it. If the child is not understanding it then it is up to the parent to get to the bottom of why. It is up to the parent to go to the school and advocate for their child. It is up to the parent to call a meeting with officials and say what are you going to do to help me (us) get this child where he belongs.
Stop putting the failure all on the teachers and put it where it belongs....the parents, the students, the system, the government and fix the problems versus putting a bandaid on the problems.
Interesting. If you listen to people today, no one at all voted for Baldacci in 2006. It must have been rampant voter fraud that got him reelected by that whopping 38%. But don't feel sorry for ol' John. He got a cushy government job, with lots of nice bennies, in the Pentagon, screwing up health insurance for servicemen and veterans. He got the job based on his stellar track record of screwing up health insurance in Maine for everyone.
So what. That's what I meant by Mr. Nachman's letter meaning almost nothing. Of course, there is fraud and some undocumented immigrants will benefit from fraud. So. As long as thee Government does what reasonably can be done to control fraud it isn't an issue because no matter what is done the cost of proventing the fraud will exceed the benefit of preventing it. What sensde does it make to spend $100 t save $95.
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