THE LAST WORD
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As hard-working and industrious as Americans are, it’s no big secret
that a lot of U.S. workers spend a good amount of effort finding ways to
avoid working hard.
Lollygagging, an extra break snuck here and there, maybe even a solid
nap in the afternoon -- it worked for George Costanza on “Seinfeld,”
right? -- aren’t out of the realm of the imaginable during the 9 to 5
hours.
But cutting corners, skipping out of work a little early, these are
somehow the hard-earned rights of the blue-collar workers, the
lower-level drones who are bent and beaten down by the end of the day.
Our bosses, our leaders are supposed to rise up a bit higher, right?
They’re supposed to set the example the rest of us fail to live up to.
Sadly, it doesn’t always work that way. This summer, when a group of
Washington interns started a Capitol Hill campaign to get voting records
put up on member Web sites, they didn’t get much of a response, including
from Newport-Mesa’s two Congressmen, Reps. Christopher Cox (R-Newport
Beach) and Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach).
The reason? It’s too much work to type it all in, apparently.
Instead, our representatives stress that the records are available via
the Library of Congress to those willing to search the Web site for them
-- a site Cox said ought to be revamped and made more user-friendly.
It’s there for those willing to do a little more work.
In other words, that figures.
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