This from Michael Benson in the
 Huffington Post:
Most students in my American Government class at Eastern Kentucky 
University can readily list the rights enumerated in the First 
Amendment: freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly -- along with 
the establishment clause and free exercise clauses relative to religion.
  What they tend to forget, however, is one of the most powerful and 
important rights which each American possesses: "to petition the 
Government for a redress of grievances."  It is both a right AND an 
obligation.
 In my role as the Chief Lobbyist for a public 
institution in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, I always marvel at those 
people who gather daily in Frankfort, just as they do in capitols across
 our country, to petition their Government -- in the form of their 
elected representatives -- for a whole host of causes and issues.
In my role as the Chief Lobbyist for a public 
institution in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, I always marvel at those 
people who gather daily in Frankfort, just as they do in capitols across
 our country, to petition their Government -- in the form of their 
elected representatives -- for a whole host of causes and issues.
I
 am inspired by their temerity and sincerity -- common citizens 
committed to championing everything from raising the minimum wage to 
advocating for voting rights to supporting victims of sexual assault to 
lobbying for increased funding for education; and a whole panoply of 
issues in between. 
 
As citizens of this great democratic republic, we are all empowered to 
make a case for our cause, whatever it might be.  And the old adage is 
true -- if we don't represent ourselves and our issues, no one else 
will.  Napoleon Bonaparte famously observed, ""Ten people who speak make
 more noise than ten thousand who are silent."
Consider the tens 
of millions in the world today who will NEVER have the chance to 
petition their government for ANYTHING.  If they were to attempt what we
 as Americans too often take for granted, it could very well mean 
sanction, imprisonment, torture and even execution.  But our right as 
Americans to lobby has been affirmed and reaffirmed again and again.
In the case of Marshall v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company (1853), the United States Supreme Court's ruling argued:
All
 persons whose interests may in any way be affected by any public or 
private act of the legislature have an undoubted right to urge their 
claims and arguments, either in person or by counsel professing to act 
for them, before legislative committees as well as in courts of justice.
So
 it falls to each of us to urge our own "claims and arguments" always 
keeping in mind the sage advice of the late Senator Hubert Humphrey: "The right to be heard does not automatically include the right to be taken seriously."
1 comment:
Not sure why we are soliciting money to tear down a building in the middle of campus to build a parking garage - that will no doubt only be used by faculty and staff. Would be nice if some renovated my 1960's dorm I am in now instead of looking for ways to make the campus appearance more marketable (pretty and hip)when I am long gone.
Post a Comment