Palin to run for Senate? If only …

Oh, how I wish this story would come to pass: Sarah Palin campaigning for a seat in the U.S. Senate.

Alas, I fear it’s only the passing fancy of the hard-core right wing of the Republican Party.

http://www.politico.com/story/2013/07/sarah-palin-senate-run-alaska-mark-begich-93962.html?hp=r5

As one who is not a member of that wing, I too wish for such a campaign, if only to reveal perhaps once and for all how utterly unqualified Palin is to seek — let alone occupy — a high public office.

The rumor mill already is churning out grist that she might seek to run against Alaska Democratic U.S. Sen. Mark Begich in 2014. Oh, let me count the ways this could end up badly for the former half-term governor of Alaska.

Begich already is saying Palin “quit” on her state by resigning the governor’s office the year after she and John McCain lost their White House bid in 2008 to Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Since then, Palin has become a star “contributor” on the Fox News Channel. She left Fox for a time but then returned, where she faces zero serious questions. She rails against the “lamestream” media, which is anyone who doesn’t work for Fox or any other right-wing media outlet.

Were she to run for the Senate, she’d have to answer probing questions from those “lamestream” media types who would ask her such things as, well: “Why, governor, should voters trust you to serve out your term when you’ve already quit one high office just two years into your first term?”

Begich already is questioning whether Palin actually lives in Alaska. I won’t weigh into that mess, given that I live a long way from the Land of the Midnight Sun. But rest assured that Begich would seek answers to a question — her residence — that will cause her as much discomfort as the questions that surfaced about her record as governor.

And I haven’t even mentioned the reality-TV shenanigans she and members of her family have engaged in.

Sadly, Palin won’t run for the Senate. She won’t give up her lucrative Fox gig. She won’t hold up to the scrutiny that all candidates for the U.S. Senate should face.

It would be intriguing, though, to see her try.

 

Gravel on the loose yet again

 

Loose gravel alert!

I’ve noticed in the past couple of days some signs of concern about loose gravel within the Amarillo city limits. The city’s street department is at it again, laying down that oil-soaked gravel base over perfectly good streets.

You know what I’m talking about. The crews put that stuff down and gravel gets kicked all over the place: gathering along curbs, being tossed onto sidewalks. We’ve lived at our current address for more than 16 years and the street department crews have laid down that, um, stuff twice in the past decade.

I’m still trying to figure out why they had to come by the first time, let alone the second time. The street didn’t have any potholes. It was smooth and quite drivable, actually.

Well, they’re at it again. I noticed the bright orange “Loose Gravel” signs along Coulter Street. I peered down a couple of streets east of the main drag and noticed the freshly laid oil-gravel. I also noticed that much of the gravel already had been tracked onto Coulter.

I mention this only to gripe out loud about the city’s street-paving policy. Don’t misunderstand: I appreciate that we have a decent street grid — for the most part. The city does a good job of maintaining the quality of the pavement. It patches up potholes fairly regularly.

That gravel, though, becomes a royal pain when it gets picked up by vehicle tires and it gets lodged inside the vehicle’s brakes, which has happened to me.

Get ready, Amarillo. More of it is on the way.

Go ahead, nuke the filibuster rules

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is threatening to drop the “nuclear option” on a rule governing Senate filibusters.

He should carry out his threat if his “friends” on the other side, Republican senators, continue to deny President Obama the chance to fill his team with folks who share his world view.

http://registerguard.com/rg/opinion/30141958-78/democrats-filibuster-republicans-senate-president.html.csp

The filibuster is a legitimate tool that minority members – in this case, Republicans – use to their advantage. It can be used to stop nominees who aren’t qualified or who have political baggage that senators deem unacceptable. It’s been abused by both sides over many decades.

But as the Eugene (Ore.) Register-Guard editorial notes, Republicans have elevated the abuse in recent times to “an art form.”

Reid is considering whether to toss out the 60-vote rule to end filibusters and rely instead on a simple majority, 51 senators, to break it. Democrats – and their “independent” colleagues – have 55 votes in the Senate. The rule change would apply only to non-judicial appointments. As it stands now, the Obama administration has several key appointments awaiting confirmation votes simply because Republicans have launched filibusters to prevent those votes from occurring.

Reid says he’s serious. He won’t get any help, of course, from Texas’s two Republican senators – John Cornyn and Ted Cruz – both of whom have been near the head of the pack in leading these filibusters against virtually all of President Obama’s appointees.

I’ve long thought much of presidential prerogative. The president is the one elected leader selected by a majority vote of all Americans. Thus, that individual is entitled to be surrounded by like-minded individuals to help guide and shape U.S. political and governmental policy. Denying the president even an up-or-down vote by invoking dubious and often phony concerns is an abuse of the system.

It has to stop.

Go for it, Mr. Majority Leader.

Pakistan coming clean on bin Laden failure?

Pakistan is reportedly looking inward into how it might have contributed to one of the worst intelligence failures in modern history.

It’s about time.

http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/07/09/19378780-in-aftermath-of-scathing-bin-laden-report-pakistan-asks-itself-hard-questions?lite

The probe looks into how Pakistan let Osama bin Laden hide in virtual plain sight for so long until May 2, 2011, when a U.S. Navy SEAL team launched a raid deep into Pakistan that killed bin Laden.

The 336-page report wonders whether Pakistani officials might have looked the other way when suspicions arose as to whether bin Laden was living in a highly fortified compound not far from an elite military academy. It’s been noted that bin Laden might have worn a cowboy hat to avoid detection by anyone peering into the compound.

Oh, please.

Many of us on the outside — yours truly included — have wondered since the raid was announced by President Obama to a cheering U.S. public whether the Pakistani government had knowledge of bin Laden’s presence. I still have trouble believing bin Laden — the world’s most wanted terrorist — could have escaped the Pakistani intelligence network, which is reputed to be a top-notch outfit.

That might explain what U.S. spooks knew when they laid the proposal for the raid on the commander in chief’s desk.

Pakistan is right to ask itself some tough questions about what its intelligence officials knew and when they knew it. My hunch is that they knew plenty all along, but kept the information quiet.

 

Pulling for Pauken

A big part of me kind of likes the message that one-time Texas Republican firebrand Tom Pauken is delivering to the GOP faithful.

Pauken is running for Texas governor. His only opponent so far is Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott, who’s been declared the prohibitive Republican favorite to succeed Rick Perry in January 2015. Perry announced he won’t run for re-election and will “pursue other interests,” such as possibly running for president of the United States in 2016.

http://www.texastribune.org/2013/07/09/pauken-kicks-campaign-governor-capitol/

Pauken says there should be no assumption that Abbott will be anointed governor simply because he holds a statewide elected office. Pauken declares in effect that Abbott is part of whatever problems that plague Texas government.

Pauken plans to launch a fight for the soul of the Republican Party and wants to return it to what he calls “true conservatism,” the kind preached by the late Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan.

Why am I pulling for Pauken?

Most of it is personal. I’ve known Tom for more than 25 years. I’ve visited him at his Dallas office. We’ve shared a few meals together over the years in Beaumont and here in Amarillo. We’ve had a long-standing friendly relationship and he understands we have differing world views. He’s a conservative; I, on the other hand, tilt to the left of center.

But I like the guy. He dislikes the “neocons” who populated President George W. Bush’s inner circle and advised him — badly, in Pauken’s view — about going to war in Iraq. He won’t say it publicly, but much of his criticism of them seems to stem from their lack of military service and a lack of understanding about the consequences of war, such as the casualties it produces and the misery it brings to those who are harmed and their family members.

Pauken served as an Army intelligence officer in Vietnam and has seen war up close. He knows of which he speaks.

He holds a special disregard for Karl (Bush’s Brain) Rove and believes that G.W. Bush was ill-equipped to serve as president.

I look forward to listening to this vigorous debate between Pauken and Abbott. I’ve met the attorney general many times over the years but our relationship has been strictly professional. With Pauken, my regard for him kind of crosses that vague line separating personal and professional relationships.

Would I vote for Pauken were he to be nominated by the GOP next year? That remains to be seen.

But I’m pulling for him nonetheless.

 

W says little, sadly, about immigration

What precisely did former President George W. Bush say about immigration reform?

Turns out not much at all.

The former president, speaking at a forum on immigration this week at his library-museum in Dallas called for a “positive” outcome in the debate but said he won’t get involved in policy specifics.

Too bad about that.

http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/310087-bush-calls-for-reform-but-says-he-wont-enter-immigration-debate

I was rather hoping President Bush would have something specific to add to the discussion, given that he spoke well about immigration while he served as Texas governor from 1995 until 2000 and later as president.

Bush has long thought to be on the side of true reformers, the folks who favored a “pathway to citizenship” for the 11 million individuals who are here illegally. That side of the debate already has won the first round with a decisive vote in the U.S. Senate to approve legislation that establishes that pathway while also shoring up border security.

The House of Representatives’ Republican leadership – the individuals who run that chamber – are threatening to stall it (imagine that) if they can’t get a majority of GOP members to sign on.

President Bush has been quite circumspect in his public comments since leaving the White House in January 2009. He’s refrained from criticizing his successor, Barack Obama, declaring that the president has a difficult enough job without being sniped at by those who served previously. I admire that about Bush.

However, the 43rd president has something of value to add to the specifics of the current immigration debate. I would hope he’d reconsider his reluctance to get involved and weigh in – constructively, of course.

Media give Perry the cold shoulder

Mike Hashimoto writes editorials for the Dallas Morning News and, thus, might be excused if he limited his recent blog post to the big-city media perspective.

He writes about how the big-city newspaper editorial boards aren’t exactly sobbing aloud over Gov. Rick Perry’s decision to go on down the road once his current term is up.

http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2013/07/texas-ed-boards-send-perry-off-about-the-way-youd-expect.html/

But here’s a flash: I’m guessing there isn’t an editorial board in the state — large, medium or small — that’s heartsick over Perry’s pending departure from Texas politics.

You see, I worked on one of those medium-sized papers during the 2010 election, the one in which Gov. Perry declared he didn’t have anything to say to any of the state’s newspaper editorial boards. Therefore, he wouldn’t seek their endorsement for re-election. Turns out he didn’t need them.

He didn’t get it from the Amarillo Globe-News. We endorsed former Houston Mayor Bill White in the 2010 general election, believing that White — a business-friendly Democrat with a lot of solid ideas on how to build the state’s economy — was better suited for the times. The reaction from our readers was, um, interesting to say the very least. You’d have thought we recommended Mao Tse-Tung for governor, based on the reactions from some of our more fervent Republican readers.

Our colleagues in Lubbock also went with White and I understand the South Plains reader reaction was as livid as it was up here on the Caprock.

Did the governor’s stiffing of editorial boards influence our decision to recommend Bill White? I don’t recall it. We did have plenty of questions to pose to Perry and it would have been mighty swell of him to stoop to talk to answer them for us. Mayor White was candid and forthright and I suppose those are the kind of qualities you would want in the chief executive of a state government as large as ours.

At least that’s what I remember our medium-sized editorial page hoping we could get in 2010 when all the ballots were counted.

So long, governor. Don’t let the door hit you in the backside.

 

National park on moon? Bad idea

Two Democratic congresswomen want to set aside space on the moon, of all places, for a national historical park.

Bad idea, ladies of the House.

http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/house/309829-dems-propose-historical-park-on-the-moon

Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson of Texas and Donna Edwards of Maryland think it’s OK to set the land aside and furnish it with memorabilia taken from all the moon missions that occurred from 1969 through 1972.

Allow me this brief historical recap.

The Apollo 11 mission, the first one to the moon, occurred in July 1969. There was a brief debate within NASA over who should command that mission. The task fell to Neil Armstrong partly because at the time he was a civilian test pilot and was not serving on active military duty.

The idea was intended to deny the Soviet Union any political ammo. We were involved in a race to the moon with the Soviets. We got there first and NASA didn’t want the Evil Empire to concoct some half-baked theory that a military man planting the Stars and Stripes would constitute some kind of goofy military conquest.

The moon missions were intended to promote at some level a sense of international peace and understanding.

The notion now of making a national park site out of one or more landing areas flies in the face of that mission. There is no compelling need to establish such a park on moon.

 

Perry eyes wide-open field of options

Career politician Rick Perry is likely to have some decisions in his future, such as: What am I going t do with the rest of my life?

The Republican Texas governor announced Monday he won’t seek re-election to his umpteenth term. He’s dropping hints all over the place that he’s considering a run for president in 2016. Good luck with that one, guv’nuh.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2013/07/08/breaking-perry-not-seeking-re-election-for-governor/comment-page-13/

He’ll step away from the governor’s office in January 2015, then likely will hit the speech-making circuit, making big-time money talking to political interest groups who favor his brand of conservatism. He’s likely as well to raise money in case he decides to run for president.

But after he loses the GOP presidential primary contest for a second time in 2016, then he’ll have some time to really reflect on his future. It won’t include politics, which for a political animal such as Perry is likely to create something akin to a form of detoxification.

I’m looking forward to a post-Perry world in Texas government. My lingering curiosity, though, is wondering whether Rick Perry will be looking forward to a life without politics.

Israelis looking for a few good men

I heard something this morning on National Public Radio that caught my ear — and reminded me of a complaint I heard while traveling in the Middle East four years ago.

The NPR story told of how the Israeli Knesset — the country’s parliament — is considering a plan to draft Orthodox Jews into the military. Orthodox Jews currently are exempt from military service, unlike the rest of the Israeli population — male and female — that is subject to be drafted into military service.

I met many young Israelis while touring the country in May and June 2009 on a Rotary International Group Study Exchange visit with four young West Texans. The young Israelis all had served in the military. They did their service and returned to civilian life to begin their careers. It’s expected of them. One young woman I met in Karmiel had just gotten out of the army and was planning to take a lengthy trip to Europe, which she said many young people do as they transition back to the civilian world.

I also heard from more than a few Israelis about how Orthodox Jews — the most observant of Jews — skirt the obligation that others must fulfill. One gentleman, in his 60s, complained quite loudly to me about how the Orthodox Jews keep taking from society. “They won’t work,” he griped. “All they do is pray and go home and make more babies,” he railed, suggesting that their mission in life appears to be procreation, filling the Israelis population with more people who will be exempt from having to serve in the military.

And, yes, one sees many Orthodox Jews at holy shrines, such as the Western Wall in Jerusalem. The males cannot be mistaken for anyone else, as they have lengthy sideburns and beards, wear long black coats and wide-brimmed black hats.

Should they be conscripted into the military? I am not qualified to answer that question. After all, the United States did away with its draft in the early 1970s, creating an all-volunteer military machine.

I will suggest, though, that if the Knesset goes through with forcing Orthodox Jews into the formidable Israeli armed forces, a lot of complaining will stop. It could unite the country that — given its uncomfortably close proximity to ancient enemy nations — needs all the unification it can muster.

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