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The hypocrisy is a fair point Luke. I'll give you that. But I'm not sure it's <a href="http://mvdrnn.com">wothry</a> of all the outrage well, I'm not outraged anyway. It's poor leadership. Some lead by talking the standard, others lead by serving. Ford's a talker. At least on this issue, he doesn't lead by example. Does it make him a hypocrite? Yes. But, does he have the right to lead this way? Yes, he does. His office permits him certain liberties the rest of us don't get. I can't take off from my desk job (even with flex hours) to play golf my CEO can. I have to attend meetings my CEO can delegate them. I have to do certain admin tasks my CEO has an admin assistant. There are certain privileges the executive has. They don't have to make use of them, and we can disapprove of their use of them, but they have them.If my CEO oversteps his bounds, the board can throw him out. If our Mayor oversteps his bounds, a judge or the voters can throw him out. I'm just not sure this allowable use of his office's power warrants the outrage.He's far from perfect, but surely we could save our outrage for when he does something truly outrageous? Hypocritical politics is sort of like soft mashed potatoes the descriptor is somewhat redundant, unnecessary, assumed and expected.