And a little child (well, teenager) shall lead them

Thankfully, there are some days when I don’t have to write too much to prove a point. That is true today. I will give the basics, present a link to read and then it’s up to someone else. That sounds good to me on this day when I just want to kick my feet up and maybe watch a little news or indulge in some other diversion.

My point concerns a 16-year-old Jersey girl (not of the MTV kind) named Amy Myers who has challenged U.S. Rep. Michelle Bachmann, a possible GOP presidential contender, to a debate on the Constitution and American History. I saw Amy on Lawrence O’Donnell’s MSNBC show and she certainly seems as if she could go head-to-head with the loopy Minnesota congresswoman.

The story linked above tells about how a backlash came from this story with “thugs” who support Bachmann or Sarah Palin or their ilk. These are people who leave very nasty comments about Amy and her family just because she is brave enough and intelligent enough to stand up for what she believes is right. Some people have even looked up where Amy’s dad works and have decided to harass him as well. Some of the threats are violent although likely the vast majority are those chicken s**ts who say all kind of nasty or racist or threatening things about people but don’t leave their name because they sure as hell wouldn’t want to have to stand up to some one who challenged them.

A bad, even terrible byproduct of the Internet is exposing the rampant cowardice that pervades our nation. Yeah, you heard me right! Cowards. When I wrote for a newspaper I used to get all kinds of calls from people who would be raising hell about this or that. But for the most part,  the conversations would have a civil tone because we all identified ourselves. But these “thugs,” as the writer of the linked story puts it are content to let there yellow streaks do their work for them. Some of those comments being left are of the type that the normal person would want to harm these gutless wonders who dare insult or threaten their daughters or granddaughters.

I don’t use my name here on this blog because I don’t feel the need to call attention to my life, at least that which I choose not to write about. If you read this blog, you will find that I choose to write about a lot about my life. It also isn’t very hard to figure out who I am if you don’t know. Not that I am prominent. You ask me who I am and I will probably tell you. I say probably, it depends on why you want to know and how you ask. It’s all pretty simple.

In no way am I expressing pity for Amy Myers. She made a big decision to stand up to a congresswoman and ask her to debate the Constitution and history, especially since Bachmann is an attorney (although I am not sure of the standing in the law community of graduates from Oral Roberts University, where Bachmann received her law degree. I would bet they have to have great oral arguments. You thought I was going to say something else, didn’t you? Dirty mind!) It takes guts to do what Amy did and is doing. Too bad she can’t be an inspirational figure for all those who disagree with her.

 

Good hair and the inexact science of compromise

BACK IN TEXAS — Coy seems to be the watchword these days among the growing crowd of would-be candidates for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.

Pundits and GOP talking points distributors have thrown themselves all into a big ol’ tizzy this week over the on-again off-again presidential ambitions of Sarah Palin, a.k.a. Caribou Barbie, suddenly switched into the on-again position. A piece of interesting journalism from The Christian Science Monitor poses the intriguing question: Will Palin face her “mini-me” in Michelle Bachmann should the almost one-term Alaska governor decide to run? Meanwhile, our good-haired boy Gov. Rick Perry — between denouncing the federal government and asking for its help — is thinking of throwing, at least his coquettishness, into the presidential ring again.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry gets ready to lead the secession

These GOP politicians who otherwise take up valuable air on this planet are, of course, joined by declared candidates his Mormonesque Mitt Romney, his Newtwitishness Newt Gingrich, his Weirdness Ron Paul and other well and less well known Republicans such as pro-Pot former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson and pro-anything that works at the time former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

Coy. The rest are being coy. Coy can be cute. But it’s not so much in this case.

Soon you will need a program for the players. And, I am not talking about a television program hosted by his Donaldness Donald “The Donald” Trump.

Such a wide-open field makes for a more-interesting race sometimes. In this case, the race might evolve into a contest in which  of the biggest harebrain crackpots might be nominated rather than the traditional GOP “good party man.” If this next presidential challenge doesn’t finish off the Republican Party as we know it, then I don’t know what will.

But what if the dog actually catches the car? What will Fido do with it?

My prediction is that a Republican president taking office in 2013 will not be the cure-all for all those, supposedly, long-suffering GOP and/or Tea Party boosters. An example is the furor over the state of Texas failing to receive a major disaster declaration from Spring wildfires.

FEMA rejected a request earlier this month by Gov. Good Hair for a declaration that would help reduce the state and local fiscal burden for those wildfires that have scorched more than 2.2 million acres across Texas. Perry said at the time of the rejected request: “It is not only the obligation of the federal government, but its responsibility under law to help its citizens in times of emergency.”

This is the same governor who shocked millions of Americans by saying Texas could secede if it wanted to do so.

“We are very proud of our Texas history; people discuss and debate the issues of can we break ourselves into five states, can we secede, a lot of interesting things that I’m sure Oklahoma and Pennsylvania would love to be able to say about their states, but the fact is, they can’t because they’re not Texas,” Perry said.

The governor must have been tossing back cold Lone Stars at the Dixie Chicken when Texas History was being taught during his college days at A & M.

An 1845 joint congressional resolution annexing Texas allows, theoretically at least, the state to divide itself up into five states. That doesn’t mean Texas would leave the United States. The Civil War took care of that notion. That was after Texans turned their back on one of its most revered figures, then-Gov. Sam Houston. The leader whose troops defeated Mexico at San Jacinto and who was later president of the Republic of Texas and a U.S. senator for Texas — before Texas he also served as governor of and a U.S. representative from Tennessee — was removed as governor because of his strong opposition to secession.

Knowledge of Texas history  aside, Perry has appealed the ruling for no disaster declaration and the Obama administration’s contention that almost $40 million in grants to help battle Texas wildfires was sufficient.

In addition to the millions already granted to Texas, federal help has come in the form of wildland firefighters from 35 states. Many of those who have helped battle fires across the state are from so-called “hotshot” crews which come from three federal agencies, Native American tribes as well as from the states of Alaska and Utah. The U.S. military has likewise lent assistance in the form of helicopters and air tankers.

Having the federal government take an additional burden of the funding for fighting these fires would be welcome and might have been readily deliverable to the state. Unfortunately, Perry and his faux secession act as well as a number of Texas congressional members made that declaration a non-starter.

An increasing number of Republicans were elected to the U.S. House from Texas over the past decade. Yet, few of them have found access to power and have spent more time obstructing and less time working with the administration. Congress members from the state with more tenure and more oomph might have grabbed the president’s ear or found ways to, as that great scholar Larry the Cable Guy says: “Git R Done.”

Sometimes it takes a little more than just sending someone to Congress who is of your party preference. Also, the notion of a House member serving only one or two terms is ridiculous. It takes that long just to find your way from the Capitol to the congressional office buildings.

It seems cruel to say that voters who think the federal government should fork over millions every time their governor says: “Go,” only have themselves to blame. But that is about the gist of it. People who want ideologues in office and get them are often disappointed. Life isn’t easy to stand for your principles unbending. I have seen the word politics defined as “the art of compromise.” Perhaps it is more an inexact science. Although, “compromise” remains an essential particle.

When it comes to picking the next nominee to run against President Obama, perhaps something more substantial than nice hair and a pretty smile might be entertained by Republican voters.

Sharks everywhere

More and more nowadays the Tea Party seems as if its prime target is the Republican Party. Sooner or later the GOP faces possible vaporization of the Whig Party type if the TP frustration with the Republicans finally reaches a China Syndrome phase.

William Temple, chairman, Tea Party Founding Fathers, is exasperated that Newt Gingrich would dare finding fault with the plan by House Speaker John Boehner and his budget guru Rep. Paul Ryan to put Medicare into the hands of private insurance companies. Gingrich called the plan “right-wing social engineering” and “radical change.” Temple rebuts:

“Mr. Gingrich, who seems not to mind “radical change” in his domestic life, is simply wrong about the Boehner-Ryan Medicare plan,”  Temple says in a press release.

Boom goes the dynamite.

Temple goes on to criticize Gingrich while damning Ryan and Boehner with faint praise:

“It is not “radical.  It is tame as a pussy cat,” says Temple. ” The Boehner-Ryan Medicare plan is to fix Medicare and Medicaid sometime way off in the future, in the sweet bye and bye.  While Obama, Gingrich, Romney, Pelosi and Reid favor the essential tyranny behind ObamaCare – forced purchasing of a product – Boehner and Ryan have, up to now, been content to fiddle while Rome burns with regard to Medicare.”

Great stuff. With friends like Temple, the Republicans sure don’t need enemies although they’ve got them up the yang.

So, let the political allies tear themselves to shreds. I’m going fishing. Well, maybe not. Here is why.

Scott Jennings, a Texas Parks and Wildlife Department game warden, responded to a call back in March that a commercial fishing boat had pulled into Freeport with an 8-foot, short-fin mako shark. A Game Warden field report states that the crew told the Jennings that the shark had jumped into the boat’s stern as they were weighing anchor.

Yeah, right.

Incredibly, the shark flipped over the crewmen’s heads and landed forward beside the center console of the boat. The crew told the game warden that at one point, they had seriously considered abandoning the boat to the shark.

The report goes on to say that the shark couldn’t be removed from the boat without it being harmed so the game warden called up National Marine Fisheries Service agent Charles Tyer, who arranged the purchase of a “federal highly migratory species permit so that they could legally land the shark.”

Now that’s one hell of a fish story and a lot more fun to relate than the continuing soap-opera-like squabbles between the Republicans and the Tea Partiers.

So until next time, Show me the way to go home/I’m tired and I want to go to bed …

 

No Trump. No Huckabee. No Lincoln.

The great big circus jerk that was not quite The Donald Campaign 2012 ended today as yet another TV host said they would rather be the boob on the boob tube.

Donald Trump told nervous TV and advertising executives today he would not run for president. They were nervous because they drank too much Starbucks. Trump will stay on his so-called “reality” television show “What’s It’s Name.” Really, “Celebrity A**hole” or something like that.

Trump comes out claiming he made the world safer from the Mau Mau hordes by demanding Barack Obama show his full birth certificate. In reality reality, the President made Trump disappear after ordering that Osama bin Laden be terminally terminated. Yeah, I know, Obama didn’t do it all on his own. Hillary helped — as did joint chiefs chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, defense secretary Robert Gates, Seal Team 6 and everyone’s mothers.

The hairball that would be president, at least in his mind, joins former Arkansas Gov. and Fox News pundit Mike Huckabee in pulling out from the Republican nomination race. Let’s see, who is left without a television show?

It is somewhat difficult to rejoice at the fact that Trump is gone. He could have made Obama look like Lyndon Johnson in his 1964 defeat of Barry Goldwater. That is, LBJ minus the drawl, the beagles, a nice but rather homely wife and oh yes, the skin thing. I know the media is in deep mourning because their lives would be on Easy Street with Trump running.

Huckabee is a lot different case. He was a somewhat attractive candidate in 2008, that is until he had to sell out to his base like every other GOP candidate these days. What is it with Republicans anyway? Their best and brightest ultimately have to sell their soul to the most ugly elements of the right in order to be elected, even to dogcatcher.

It is enough to wonder “WWLD?” Translation: “What Would Lincoln Do?”

What’s up with The Donald’s Slavic-Georgian Sandwich?

Donald Trump was in the news this week probably more than the future king of England whose royal marriage was televised all over the place today. The Donald has been saying some crazy stuff, even more so than normal. But inspired by all the conspiracy theorists who might have inspired Mr. Trump to join the Obama birther conspiracy bandwagon, I have thought about one of my own conspiracies.

What if Trump is colluding with Obama? What if Obama struck a deal to make Trump, Secretary of Commerce or head of the Fed, in exchange for Trump running for president? Crazy? Crazy like a fox. Listening to some of the baloney  The Donald is spewing there is no way that man will become president. He might become dictator, but not president. I don’t think.

You can create your very own The Donald conspiracy. Just look at some of the business deals (real estate, airline, vodka, etc.) Trump has tested and failed. And his marriages: One American beauty named Marla Maples from Georgia  in between two other beauties who were both born in then-Communist Block countries — Ivana born in Czechoslovakia and Melania from Yugoslavia — formed Trump’s Slavic-Georgian Sandwich. If you can’t get a conspiracy out of that then you don’t have your tin foil thinking cap on. C’mon, get creative with those conspiracy theories involving the Donald. Der Kommisar’s in town uh-oh!