"If your voices are not heard, you can be sure that many others will be - in particular those who are paid to present a point of view, and often do it most effectively"
About this Quote
Democracy, Sebelius implies, doesn’t go silent when ordinary people do. It just gets ventriloquized. The line is built like a warning label: if you don’t speak, someone else will speak for you, and they’ll likely be better funded, better trained, and far more relentless. The bite is in “paid to present a point of view” - a polite phrase that lets lobbyists, consultants, industry groups, and partisan media all sit in the same culpable bucket. She’s naming the professionalization of persuasion: modern politics as an attention market where messaging is a job description, not a civic impulse.
The subtext is pragmatic, not romantic. This isn’t a hymn to grassroots virtue; it’s a tactical reminder that silence has predictable consequences. “You can be sure” functions like a hard guarantee, stripping away the comforting fantasy that leaders will intuit public needs without pressure. And “often do it most effectively” concedes an uncomfortable truth: the loudest voices aren’t just loud, they’re skilled. They workshop language, buy access, run focus groups, and turn ideology into a repeatable product.
In context, Sebelius reads as a seasoned operator talking to constituents, advocates, or stakeholders who assume policy is something that happens elsewhere. As a Democratic governor and later HHS secretary during the Affordable Care Act fights, she lived inside arenas where organized interests swarm every regulatory line and legislative comma. Her intent is mobilizing: show up, comment, call, organize - not because the system is fair, but because it’s crowded, and the best communicators will fill any vacuum you leave behind.
The subtext is pragmatic, not romantic. This isn’t a hymn to grassroots virtue; it’s a tactical reminder that silence has predictable consequences. “You can be sure” functions like a hard guarantee, stripping away the comforting fantasy that leaders will intuit public needs without pressure. And “often do it most effectively” concedes an uncomfortable truth: the loudest voices aren’t just loud, they’re skilled. They workshop language, buy access, run focus groups, and turn ideology into a repeatable product.
In context, Sebelius reads as a seasoned operator talking to constituents, advocates, or stakeholders who assume policy is something that happens elsewhere. As a Democratic governor and later HHS secretary during the Affordable Care Act fights, she lived inside arenas where organized interests swarm every regulatory line and legislative comma. Her intent is mobilizing: show up, comment, call, organize - not because the system is fair, but because it’s crowded, and the best communicators will fill any vacuum you leave behind.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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