The Shutdown Walk
It's hard to live in our nation's capital without drinking our nation's Kool-Aid. And right now, the flavor is shutdown. The will-it-happen, won't-it-happen discussion has given way to talk of how it will happen. Shutting down the government is not unlike steering a huge ocean liner. One doesn't start or stop quickly.
Since there's one government employee and one dependent-on-government employee in this house — to say nothing of a government-employee daughter a few miles away — this matters in an immediate way.
During the last shutdown, in 2013, Congress authorized back pay for furloughed workers. We might not be as lucky this time. In addition to lapsed income, there's also the uncertainty of the situation, the disruption.
Time for some perspective, which for me means ... a stroll. I'm calling it the Shutdown Walk.
Since there's one government employee and one dependent-on-government employee in this house — to say nothing of a government-employee daughter a few miles away — this matters in an immediate way.
During the last shutdown, in 2013, Congress authorized back pay for furloughed workers. We might not be as lucky this time. In addition to lapsed income, there's also the uncertainty of the situation, the disruption.
Time for some perspective, which for me means ... a stroll. I'm calling it the Shutdown Walk.
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