My mom always told me I should be a teacher. And I must admit I take joy in taking a complex question and deconstructing it, laying out all its elements.
Similarly, prior to putting together Ikea furniture, I make sure I first have every last necessary dowel (those little wooden things, pictured below), including the one that rolled under the bed. And then I proceed to follow every last instruction in order, staring at each diagram until I understand exactly what they want me to do. And I just don't move forward until I understand the instructions. Perhaps it's a little OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder), but I know that if I pound the wrong dowel into the wrong hole, that chest of drawers I'm creating may be forever lopsided, and I'll always regret the mistake I made in acting hastily.
I feel the same way with legislation. It's not enough to believe in a cause. I know if, with sincere belief that I'm doing something right, I neglect the details, I may actually do irrevocable harm to the very cause I'm fighting so hard to win.
So, particularly when I'm trying to upend an established belief, I know I have to move with caution and explain everything. I know from my life experience that you can change people's minds, as long as you proceed logically and methodically, step by step, answer every question and persist without fear of confronting a widely-held position. I have always had the following phrase at the bottom of my website.
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world.
Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.
— Margaret Mead
So please excuse the level of detail I'm about to provide. But it's Black Friday weekend, and you have the time. And surely you don't want to go to the shopping mall. Not this weekend!
So please sit back and I hope you'll enjoy my little detour into the history and politics of gerrymandering. One of the reasons I like representing Alexandria, Arlington, and Fairfax is I know my constituents largely consist of seriously-minded intellectuals who appreciate getting the details right. And whether you think I'm right or wrong, by all means, let me know!