This is truly a great country, right Ted?

U.S. Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Loony Bin, is inviting a special guest to President Obama’s State of the Union address Tuesday night.

It’s none other than the Motor City Madman, Ted Nugent, himself. Stockman, who now represents a portion of East Texas in Congress, has extended the invitation to the man who has called Obama “un-American,” who once said that he were to win re-election that Nugent would be in jail (which some took as an implied threat against the president), who once said that Obama should be “shot” like a coyote, and who once, well … I think you get the point.

http://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/in-the-know/282283-lawmaker-invites-ted-nugent-to-obamas-state-of-the-union-address-on-tuesday

Nugent, the washed-up rock-and-roll guitarist, is an avid hunter and gun owner. He seems to hate – and I don’t believe that’s not too strong a verb – those who want to place more controls on guns. How do I know that? He’s virtually said so himself.

I don’t begrudge Nugent’s love of guns. That’s his right. I do begrudge, though, the virtual hate speech that continues to spew from the guy’s mouth when it comes to those who disagree with him on matters relating to guns.

Suffice to say that Steve Stockman is a member of Nugent’s fan club. Stockman was one of a handful of GOP congresspeople who has threatened to impeach the president if he tries to exert executive authority mandating controls on guns.

My hunch, if Nugent actually shows up to the State of the Union, is that the Madman won’t applaud. Any bets on whether the TV cameras look for him when the president enters the House of Representatives chamber?

So long, Saturday mail delivery

Count me as one American who supports the end of Saturday mail delivery to help the U.S. Postal Service stay afloat.

USPS announced its plans to shut down Saturday delivery as a way to save an estimated $2 billion annually. The service has been bleeding money for years. It keeps raising postage rates, which now stand at 46 cents to deliver a first-class letter; in my view, that’s still a pretty good bargain for sending someone a piece of mail across this vast country.

It’s not that I dislike my mail carriers. They do a fine job in our Amarillo neighborhood. On most days you can set your watch to the time they show up with that day’s mail. USPS critics suggest the service ought to use more “cluster boxes” to deliver mail, which would reduce the time it takes to distribute the mail along their routes. We already have that in our ‘hood. Problem solved here.

Of course, we all know who the villain is in this drama. It’s the Internet, which has sunk its teeth into mail delivery the way it is savaging other business enterprises.

Newspapers come to mind, yes?

Few of us send actual letters any longer … although I recently did just that in reconnecting with someone with whom I served in Vietnam, and I’m hoping to hear back from him soon. Our mode of messaging our friends and family? Email and “social media” have taken the place of letters. And let’s not forget how many of us – including little ol’ us – pay virtually all of our bills online.

These days, the bulk of our USPS deliveries consist of “junk mail,” catalogues and other solicitations.

No, I won’t miss Saturday mail delivery when the USPS pulls the plug on it. Getting mail five days each week is good enough.

Panhandle Day: Fruitful or wasteful?

I’ve long been intrigued by the practice of leading business people and civic leaders piling onto an airplane, or into motor vehicles, going to Austin for a day of glad-handing and back-slapping for something called “Panhandle Day.”

Many friends of mine have taken part in this activity. Based on what I’ve been told over many years in Texas, here is what I perceive happens:

Delegation arrives, shows up at legislators’ offices, visits with representatives and senators, tells them what the region needs from the Legislature, shares some food and drink with each other and the legislators (and staffers), attends a few committee hearings, has an after-hours gathering of fun and frivolity and then comes back home.

This endeavor is costly to the businesses and the local government agencies that spring for this field trip.

Now, I recognize fully that almost all regions of the state do this very thing. The Golden Triangle region of Southeast Texas assembles its collection of luminaries for a similar exercise. I saw that parade take off from Beaumont every other year when I worked in that part of the state.

But what I don’t quite grasp is the tangible benefit that any region gets directly from this type of contact with local government representatives and state authorities while on this junket.

Has the Panhandle gotten a state-funded project approved that wouldn’t have been approved had the delegation not made the trip to Austin during the legislative session?

I understand fully the value of having senior legislators at their post protecting the interests of the region. I also know that our legislative delegation over many years has taken very good care of the Panhandle. West Texas A&M University and Amarillo College have thrived in good part because of the efforts of our senators and House members. Texas Tech University’s medical school in Amarillo is doing well, also because of those efforts. Yes, they’ve taken plenty of budget hits in recent years and local administrators have done well here cutting when and where it’s necessary. The state is spending plenty of money maintaining our highways … and causing traffic delays, I should add.

All of that is good and welcome, particularly at a time when Gov. Rick Perry and other state brass keep telling us the state can’t afford to spend any money on anything. Of course, Perry blames the feds for every problem that falls on the state and takes credit for every success Texas enjoys, but that’s another story.

But are any of these successes a direct result of the biennial Panhandle Day migration? I keep wondering …

Drone attacks under attack

http://thehill.com/blogs/defcon-hill/policy-and-strategy/281849-brennan-spars-with-senate-dems-over-drones-

CIA director-designate John Brennan stands by his boss’s use of drones against terrorists bent on destroying the United States of America.

Someone please tell me: Why is that such a bad idea?

The drones have been used by the Obama and the Bush administrations with deadly effectiveness. Both presidents, Barack Obama and George W. Bush, sought to deploy these pilotless aircraft seeking to minimize the hazards to young American pilots. What’s more, the missions have worked.

Has the drone policy worked flawlessly? Of course not. Then again, manned airstrikes and commando raids have gone bad on occasion. That’s is one of the givens of battle, whether they’re being controlled by men in the field or in a computerized control room many thousands of miles away.

Brennan’s hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee also featured questions about whether it’s legal to kill American terrorists, such as what happened when a drone strike in 2011 took out a major al-Qaida leader in Yemen – who also happened to have been born in the United States. I prefer to take a pragmatic view: Someone who sides with an organization that declares its intention to kill Americans becomes an enemy of this nation; he takes up arms against us and exposes himself to the consequences of thrusting himself into harm’s way against the mightiest military force in the history of the world.

Granted, the CIA should be as transparent as possible about the drone strikes, which Brennan pledged to the committee. But in times of war, there must be some secrets kept from the public.

I happen to agree with Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., who called Brennan the “right man for the job” of CIA director. And Brennan stood firm on what is proving to be a successful strategy in protecting this nation against who seek to do us harm.

Gas pricing is a true mystery

http://www.connectamarillo.com/news/story.aspx?id=857775

I’m actually proud to admit that I don’t claim expertise in anything. That lack of intimate knowledge protect me, I suppose, from those who think I should understand the intricacies of every subject that crosses my mind.

The latest perplexing subject deals with gasoline prices. They spiked dramatically in the past few days, up about 16 cents per gallon across Amarillo. Remember when they drip-dripped their way back down to around $2.92 per gallon at some locations? As my friend Jon Mark Beilue noted in a recent newspaper essay, it almost made him want to “wash my car with gasoline.”

I’m always bumfuzzled by the pace of these price increases compared with the pace of their decreases. What goes up does so rapidly; but what goes down does so at a snail’s pace.

The cynic in me – and it’s just a tiny fraction of my DNA – suggests it’s greed. Retailers want to hold on to those few extra cents for as long as they can before giving us poor shmucks a break when we fill our vehicles with fuel.

I’m acquainted with some folks in the gasoline retail business in town. I’ll just have to ask them straight up: Why don’t the prices seemingly ever decline at the speed with which they increase?

My hunch is that I’ll get some gobbledy-gook response that only will confuse me even more.

Maybe someone out there can explain it to me.

Media do go negative on Obama

A Facebook friend of mine recently noted that America’s “greatest president,” Ronald Reagan, would be 102 today and lamented the economic course on which the nation has set under President Obama.

I responded with a short note that questioned whether the economy has “collapsed,” as he had said. Then a friend of his fired back a note, apparently challenging my assertion about the state of the economy, that noted the media report “nothing negative” about Obama.

I could hardly hold back the laughter. Of course the media have reported plenty of negatives about the president: the jobless recovery, the tragedy that occurred last September in Benghazi, the mounting debt and budget deficit, the continuing war in Afghanistan, the president’s failure to close Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba and … well, you get the point.

I’m sure I’ve missed someone’s hot-button issue.

But my intent is to suggest that the media haven’t protected Obama from criticism. How do I know that? Consider all the negative comments that show up on social media outlets, on websites all across the Internet and the infinite sources of opinions being offered by commentators of all stripes. They all represent the “media.” The fact that these items are seen, heard and read by Americans, who then distribute them on social media outlets suggests to me that the media – liberal and conservative alike – are doing their job.

Does the president have his friends in the media? Certainly he does, just as George W. Bush had his media allies. Every president dating back almost to the beginning of the Republic has cultivated his share of media friends and had to cope with his share of media foes.

To suggest the current president is being sheltered, pampered and protected by the media illustrates a profound naivete.

School police departments trump armed teachers

http://www.connectamarillo.com/news/story.aspx?id=856546

Dumas school officials have employed sworn police officers in their school district for the past 15 years. Has the presence of cops on campus deterred heinous acts of violence during that time? Maybe so.

For my money, that is a far better investment than arming teachers with Glocks and then asking them to protect students when trouble erupts.

This, too, might be an investment worth making in other school districts that have the resources to pay for it.

The Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy in Newtown, Conn., late this past year has elevated public awareness of gun violence to new levels. The deaths of 20 students and six of their teachers at the hands of a madman should be cause for all kinds of serious discussion. And that discussion is under way.

Sadly, at least one goofy notion that has emerged has been to arm teachers. Let them put a gun in their desk drawer and when trouble breaks out, let them take down the bad guy with a single shot to the head.

That’s how it’s supposed to go … but my fear is that it wouldn’t happen quite that way. There’s the fear of stray bullets resulting in even more carnage.

Cities and counties too often lack the resources to deploy officers full time to school campuses. They, too, have many other constituents to protect.

That leaves school districts to create and staff their police departments, such as Dumas Independent School District has done.

I have just one caveat: that the officers are as well-trained as their law enforcement colleagues and that school districts wouldn’t settle for officers who couldn’t cut it in other departments. The lives of our children and those who teach them demand only the best protection possible.

Filibustering a Cabinet nominee? Priceless

Senate Republicans now are sounding as though they might filibuster President Obama’s nominee to be the next defense secretary.

If they pull it off, it will mark a new low in what used to be a dignified legislative body.

Republicans senators dislike one of their own, former GOP Sen. Chuck Hagel, because – in my view – he wants to join the administration of a Democratic president. Hagel’s major allies now are Democrats who believe, correctly, that he’s eminently qualified to lead the Pentagon.

But what might Republicans do to stop him? They’ll filibuster, which is to say they’ll block the nomination without ever having to stand on the Senate floor to actually talk his nomination to death. It’s a procedural trick that some Senate leaders want to change. They want senators to actually talk until they pass out, the way senators used to do when they filibustered legislation.

That they would filibuster a Cabinet nominee, though, is virtually without precedent.

I’ve long believed that elections have consequences. They give the president the right to nominate those with whom he will work in the executive branch of government. Obama – who was re-elected in November with a significant Electoral College majority – has chosen a fine former senator, a Vietnam War veteran, a former Army sergeant and a proven businessman to lead the world’s greatest military apparatus.

But that darn filibuster might get in the way. Democrats (and Democratic-leaning independents) hold 55 seats in the Senate, which is enough to confirm a nominee. But they need 60 votes to break a filibuster, if Republicans decide to launch one. They’ve already gotten pledges of support for Hagel from GOP Sens.Mike Johanns of Nebraska (Hagel’s home state) and Thad Cochran of Mississippi. Sen. John McCain of Arizona, who gave Hagel the third and fourth degrees during Hagel’s confirmation hearing said he opposes filibustering this nomination.

The president earned the right to nominate qualified individuals to serve in the Cabinet. He did exactly that by tapping Hagel for Defense.

Don’t filibuster this nomination, Senate Republicans – unless of course you want to shed even more political blood at the next election.

Good luck recasting your party, Mr. Leader

http://thehill.com/homenews/house/281059-major-cantor-speech-to-recast-image-of-gop-and-conservatism

U.S. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor is going to make a big speech in which he hopes, or so it’s been reported, to start remaking the Republican Party’s brand.

He might not be the right guy to deliver this speech. Why? Well, he’s on record saying a few things he might wish he could take back.

Let’s look at one such stated policy view.

Remember when that tornado ripped through Joplin, Mo., in 2011? The F-5 monster twister flattened the city, killing many residents. The city was desperate for federal aid, which in the old days would have been a given. Congress would have approved the emergency expenditure and federal help would be on its way.

Well, Majority Leader Cantor didn’t see it that way. He declared that Congress needed to cut spending to match the money it intended to spend on relief for Joplin. Cantor’s statement drew a firestorm of criticism, particularly from those who wondered how he might have felt had a tornado done that kind of damage in his Virginia congressional district. Cantor never answered that question directly.

The money went to Joplin eventually, but after considerable public teeth-gnashing.

The GOP brand is damaged these days. President Obama won re-election in 2012 at a time when he should have been ripe for defeat, given the fragile state of the nation’s economy. The Republicans, though, ran a miserable campaign under the banner carried forward by Mitt Romney. They lost the Latino vote huge, the African-American vote by an even larger margin; they lost the female vote, the Asian-American vote; they lost the Jewish vote. The GOP is now seen as the party of white, male evangelical Christians.

Majority Leader Cantor will have his hands full trying to recast his party’s image. He’ll have to start with his own image among many Americans.

Best of luck, young man.

Texas boxed into a school finance corner

http://www.connectamarillo.com/news/story.aspx?id=856269

Here we go again, more than likely.

A state district judge has determined that Texas’ public school financing system, which relies heavily on property taxes, is unconstitutional. He issued a bench ruling after a three-month trial meant to settle the state’s clumsy school finance mechanism.

It didn’t settle anything. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott said he plans to appeal the ruling to the Texas Supreme Court.

This isn’t the state’s first public education funding rodeo. In the late 1980s, the Edgewood school district near San Antonio got involved in the first such landmark ruling in which another judge ruled the funding system to be in violation of the Texas Constitution. The reforms produced the infamous “Robin Hood” plan in which property-tax-wealthy school districts – such as Bushland and Highland Park – were forced to surrender some of their tax revenue to poorer districts. That went over badly.

The state cannot seem to get itself out of this conundrum.

One of the reasons is the Legislature’s decision to tie the state’s hands behind its back by declaring that a state income tax should be left up to the voters, who would have to change the Texas Constitution. We all understand how that would work. Texans won’t approve a state income tax, period, end of discussion.

Why is this critical? Because an income tax is seen by many reformers as the only way the state ever will extricate itself from the continuing legal battles over the constitutionality of its school finance system.

Stubbornness is resisting ways to find a fair and equitable system for financing public education in Texas is no virtue.