Kyrsten Sinema sits above the moral high water mark and voices lofty conclusions about the states of Democratic and Republic political parties. Fair enough. She is not standing again. She has her $11 million in contributions to sit on, a good wine cellar, better clothes, a nicer house, travel abroad and the prospects of an interesting life hobnobbing with friends and political acquaintances. She's set. Once upon a time she wasn't. She was an ordinary citizen standing for the people of Arizona, representing her constituency, shining the bright light of hope for servicemen, for people who didn't have large houses or large bank accounts. The message was clear - here was a politician above the fray, representing the people. Write her an email. You got a reply. She worked hard to build trust. Now, not so much. Money poured in to her campaign. She improved her wardrobe. She burnished her image. For the first time in her life she had money to spend. The money came from those who needed her support in Congress. Big companies. Not for her the restrictions of poverty. That's what the system's for. That's what they all do, don't they? Clarence Thomas gets his bus and expensive holidays etc. etc. etc. Corruption? No way.