lobbyist
political analyst
contractor for company with deep government ties (say, northrup grummman or lockheed martin)
any government payed vocation (includes mailman)
attorney
The idea is to remove even potential (however far fetched) routes that corruption could maybe, possibly, take root through-- even if that causes terrible chafing, and chapping of asses.
the candidate can have career backgrounds in the above, just time in that vocation does not count toward their required outside vocational requirements for eligability. (eg, you can be an attorney, but the time you spend working as one does not count when evaluaing your candidacy. There's nothing stopping an attorney from also working a second, eligable job.)
The basic idea there is to force government officials to endure and experience, first hand, what thier policies do to the general public-- vocations that are historically sheilded from those impacts need to be off the table.
scoopbeard:
define freedom as you intend it please. that word has too much newspeak and double-speak injected into it. Freedom to do whatever you want? That's the antithesis of government, who's main function is to subvert such pure freedom for the safety and protection of the masses. (otherwise, the rapist, the murderer, and the con artist would all be free to ply their arts.) The argument with government is to arrive at a workable balance between necessary removal of freedoms for genuine protections needed for a society to function, and the unnecessary removal of freedoms for the illusion of protections needed to placate public anxiety and fear.