The Presidency: "crown jewel of the American penal system"

Written by Eric Olsen
Published November 02, 2004

Why would anyone is his (or her) right mind want to be president, especially this time around? Steve Chapman looks at the ugly details:

    Maximum-security inmates have more privacy than the president does. You can't go out to a restaurant on an impulse. You can't drive to the grocery store. You can't even take a walk around the block without being hounded by cameras and reporters.

    Your every utterance is subject to microscopic examination. You're dogged by Secret Service agents from the time you get up in the morning till you go to bed at night.

    ....On top of that, you have limited powers and unlimited responsibility, which is a sure-fire formula for high blood pressure. You can hardly do anything without first getting permission from 218 House members and 51 senators. But anytime anything bad happens, anywhere in the world, you get the blame--either for causing it or for failing to prevent it.

    ....The guy who takes the oath of office Jan. 20 will have, first of all, the challenge of turning the Iraq disaster into a success--a task on the order of building a sailboat on the beach in a hurricane. George Bush and John Kerry have the same basic policy--train Iraqi security forces, get more help from the rest of the world, facilitate the transition to democracy and wait a decent interval before retreating. It's plausible-sounding strategy based on a combination of outlandish hope and total fantasy. The next president will also have to deal with North Korea and Iran and their nuclear ambitions, which may be scarier than Iraq.

    Then there is the budget. In 2000, the candidates were in the position of George Steinbrenner, with more than enough cash to cover any need. But the next president will be more like the CEO of a bankrupt airline, trying desperately to figure out how to make inadequate revenues cover rising expenses. Whoever wins this election will spend a lot less time ladling out pleasures than distributing pain. [Chicago Tribune]

So what is the answer? A combination of ego and call to service are the primary reasons most politicians are drawn to the game, and once in the game, the presidency is the biggest prize, the biggest ego boost, the greatest call to service of them all. And what real politician would let a few little problems like no private life and no possibility of actual "success" stand in their way? The presidency is where the action is, and politicians are action junkies.

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Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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The Presidency: "crown jewel of the American penal system"
Published: November 02, 2004
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Section: Politics
Writer: Eric Olsen
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