Personally, I don't care because it does not touch my immediate family but for the general and all purpose it serves nothing more than politics. MN legis needs to agree to disagree on certain items and pass a budget. It matters to NGOs, and other people who relies on gov't to go about their life. For that, I do care.
I'm glad to hear that this shutdown doesn't have any affect on your immediate family. Unless you count yourself as among the top 1% of Minnesotans, you might want to do a quick check down the list of all state services that you and your immediate family benefit from. Here's that list:
http://wjon.com/shutdown-list-minnesota-services-affected-by-government-shutdown/Still not affected, at all? If so, good for you.
You said that this shutdown "serves nothing more than politics"? Politics is everything, therefore, it serves everything, and everyone is affected in some way.
We have a shutdown because Minnesotans, just like the people they voted for, cannot agree, cannot compromise on some fundamental questions about HOW to do things.
Politicians aren't entirely to blame for this shutdown. The fact is, all Minnesotans are to be blamed. After all, they were the ones who gave money, campaigned for, and voted for these politicians. Yes, the people of Minnesota, in a democratic system of government, gave their consent to those who represent their views, wishes and dreams for their version of a better Minnesota.
If anyone thinks they can wash their hands clean by blaming those elected representative
s at the negotiating table, they should realize that they would almost certainly do the exact same things to protect their own beliefs when they are at that same table! You put any two highly charged, completely politically opposite Minnesotans together, and they would mostly likely have the same arguments, the same divide, the same impasse.
There is a way to solve this issue, only if the 99% of Minnesotans who are not millionaires but the struggling working class and poor, would wake up, realize that their overwhelming numbers of interests are being pitted against the interests of a few (who of course is supported by their own elected representative
s)...and say NO to those who continue to exploit the masses to serve their corporate interests.
But here's the problem. Even though 99% of Minnesotans are the working class and poor, almost HALF (50%) of them fully supports the ideas and visions of the top 1% of Minnesotans who, with money and power, somehow have an equal voice at the table in deciding the fate of this state, as the 99% of us.
The most disturbing fact is that these 50% of Minnesotans who are working class and poor are ones who want's government out of their lives, to leave them be, to be less regulated, to take care of themselves as they see fit, and if people need help, there's always prayers and God on their side of course, that's just the American way. But these are the same ones who are shameless about taking from state and local government funds, whether it's their paycheck, roads and bridges or police and fire, and assistance to the poor and sick in our communities. These are the same ones who are now complaining the most about all the services that are shutdown. But...but, didn't they want government to stay out of their way? They can be on their own, can't they? The state government is very small now, why are they still complaining? They want much more smaller government than this shutdown?
You see? It's not just the politicians, it's the people!