Doug Scribner: Like those he wants to represent
Lolita Harper
Doug Scribner is the anti-politician.
He’s not a lawyer, he’s not a millionaire, he’s not an Ivy League
legacy and he wasn’t born with a silver spoon in his mouth.
He is a “regular guy” who is best equipped to adequately represent
the people, he said.
“The reason I am qualified is because I am just like [the
constituents],” said Scribner, who is running for the realigned 68th
Assembly District seat. “I am a citizen of the district who wants to
participate.”
Scribner said government has moved away from including average
citizens in the decision-making processes and instead promotes career
politicians who have a lot of money.
Ordinary people may not have political connections and large
campaign donors, but it doesn’t mean they don’t have great ideas,
Scribner said.
Scribner’s experience with government is limited to his time in
the Air Force and his substitute teaching job, which he said gives
him a refreshing perspective on leadership.
“I will be able to reflect what average people dream for and live
for and hope for,” Scribner said. “I think my ideas are important and
more people need to here them.”
Scribner added that he values people and respects the diversity
that makes this country wonderful, he said. It is his deep-seeded
respect for individuality that prompted him to seek a leadership
position. He is looking to incorporate diversity and variety in state
government.
“People are so special because they are so unique, and any system
that treats us as if we are all the same -- a one-size-fits-all
solution -- is inefficient and not the best way to treat the
citizens,” Scribner said.
Too much regulation stifles people’s options and limits them to a
stringent mold, he said. Politicians seem to delight in pitting
special interest groups against each other -- placing ethnic groups
at odds with other ethnic groups or Christians against homosexuals --
by passing laws that favor one group over another.
Once one group gets slighted, it urges its leaders to pass laws
for them, which irritates another group who pushes for their own
rules and the nasty cycle continues, he said.
Scribner said he has the ability to listen to and understand
various points of view. He also understands that what works for one
person, or group, won’t work for another and people can agree to
disagree, he said. His work as a substitute teacher in alternative
education programs has taught him that not all people flourish at the
same time, and individuals must be given the freedom to pursue what
works for them.
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