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John T writes:
The Speaker is second in line to succeed the President and is entitled to more security than most other public servants. Why? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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Mxsmanic wrote:
John T writes: The Speaker is second in line to succeed the President and is entitled to more security than most other public servants. Why? Because |
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John Theune writes:
Because Because why? One of the advantages of a democracy is that nobody is indispensable, and if someone high in the government is lost, the government continues to operate normally. If this ceases to be true, you no longer have a democracy. High-ranking officials often have heavy security because (1) they are cowards; (2) it makes them seem more important; or (3) they like the special treatment (essentially just a power play). Security teams often cannot prevent bad things, anyway, and at the same time, the world will continue to turn if a politician in a democracy is lost, no matter how nominally important he may be. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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