You don't really expect anyone to buy the "being worn down" line, do you? Both sides have more money than the average 2nd world nation at their disposal. Republicans are losing the battles because they hitched their wagons to the wrong (or non-sustainable, more accurately) horses. "Provide their own" answers would be a great strategy for them, but their answers are appealing to a rapidly diminishing base.
My point was that neither party in Congress should be providing answers for the entire country. Alabama is vastly different from Oregon. Why should anyone in Oregon have a say as to what goes on in Alabama?
And I'm not excusing Republicans from this either. They're offering their own answers, which are asinine in their own right. Mainly, they're tried to be the moral, General Patton, Christian saviors since Gingrich called out Clinton for smoking cigars in other people's orifices.
The point is that we are not a whole. We do not need nor truly want a federal government that decides what is best for the country. We are a bunch of vastly different parts who require different services and needs. We're being forced to act like a unified single entity through 24/7 media with an agenda and a now very vocal, very large group of politicians with personal ideologies that don't work for everyone.
And what you said is exactly what I think is the problem. "Provide their own answers" would not work. They shouldn't be providing answers for the whole country for every little life event possible. They are caving in to that pressure. And it's not recent. I'm not saying this is an Obama administration-led event. This has been going on for decades.
We need less government intrusion from the federal level and more from the state level. We representatives in Washington that represent Alabama or your own state and not representatives who are leading the federal charge.
Here's a question - why do our congressmen spend so much time in Washington? How much time does Spencer Bachus spend in the state of Alabama? Or Pelosi in San Francisco? How could they really be in touch with what their local constituents truly want and not just what wins them votes?
We have the technology to keep representatives at home for the majority of the year. Video phone and video conferences would be just fine for most of the conversations held in DC.