Stossel: Hot Air on the Hill
Politicians use congressional hearings to score cheap points and bully productive people.
Congressional hearings date back to the first Congress in 1789, and they're supposed to educate lawmakers. But now hearings are more about scoring points.
During recent impeachment hearings, Rep. Adam Schiff (D–Calif.) shouted at least five times, "Gentleman is not recognized!" to shut down opposition points.
Republicans are ridiculous, too. Some should wish they'd been shut down. Several years ago, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R–Utah) asked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg the silly question: "How do you sustain a business model in which users don't pay for your service?"
After a pause, Zuckerberg responded, "Senator, we run ads." Hatch couldn't figure that out on his own?
Rep. Al Green (D–Texas) interrogated Zuckerberg about groups that Facebook partners with to create a new cryptocurrency.
"How many are headed by women?" Green demanded.
"Congressman, I do not know the answer," Zuckerberg replied.
"How many of them are minorities, Mr. Zuckerberg? … Are there any members of the LGBTQ+ community?"
Republican Steve King (R–Iowa) complained to Google's CEO about what his granddaughter saw on an iPhone. He demanded, "how does that show up on a 7-year-old's iPhone, who's playing a kid's game?" he asked.
"Congressman, the iPhone is made by a different company," Google's CEO had to tell King.
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We're pretending that Zuckerberg is "productive" now? He may have once been, but that stopped a long time ago.
So congressional grand-standing, amplified first by cable TV and now internet broadcasting, make pols act even more stupid than they did in the past.
Just a thought: would we be better served if congress conducted most sessions behind closed doors?
If Congress operated behind closed doors, they'd have no reason whatsoever to continue to pretend to work.
"Hey! Everyone! Heads down, Thumbs up!"
That might be an improvement.
Mama Gump might well have been referring to members of Congress (and politicians in general) when she uttered the truism that stupid is as stupid does.
That said, you have to cut them some slack for all the grandstanding. It’s not like they can pass budgets, declare wars, ratify treaties, or do any other kind of work. They haven’t done any of that in a very long time. If you take away their grandstanding, they would have nothing to do at all.
"It’s not like they can pass budgets, declare wars, ratify treaties, or do any other kind of work."
Whatever their responsibilities were, like legislating, has been passed on to the administrative sector years ago.
Grandstanding and virtue signaling is about all they have left.
And perhaps that is all most voters want.
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