Sunday, January 28, 2007

Posting delays on Dallas Blog

Dallas Blog:
“Some of our regular bloggers may be wondering why their posts are not appearing automatically on Dallas Blog as they have in the past. Earlier today the Web site was overrun with duplicate posts from one blogger using various screen names of others who frequently post on the site.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

As someone who has experienced more than my share of censorship at the hands of Dallas Blog (for example, here and here), I regret seeing the heavy hand of censorship extended even more.

I personally found the posts by people such as Geoff Staples and Wilma to be left wing, extremist, predictable, and altogether counter-productive. There were similar right wing diatribes, but these did not attract so much as a raised eyebrow from Tom Pauken. Mr Pauken defends his heavy-handed censorship by saying he censors ad hominem attacks, not differing political opinions. Well, that's not quite right. Ad hominem attacks are often allowed from the right, including Mr Pauken himself, who, for example, has an obsession with my own anonymity, attacking that instead of the logic of my arguments (for example, see here).

In the few days since the moderation has been imposed, right wing opinions tend to go unchallenged. For example, the only responses to the Dallas Blog censorship announcement itself were by Bildo, James W. Walker, Jan B., Bill De Ore and G.S. McCorkle. A token moderate voice might show up before the thread runs its course, enough for the right wingers to claim Dallas Blog is fair and balanced, but the tone of the site has taken a turn to the right.

One of the conservative readers described the postings that purportedly triggered the moderation as the "kind of behavior [that] has a chilling effect on other folks that might otherwise want to join in the discussion." In fact, the chilling effect is on the voices that dare challenge Tom Pauken and Scott Bennett and the Dallas Blog institutional opinion.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Appraisal Task Force Report Out Today

Capitol Letters | Mike Drago:
“The final report from the Tom Pauken-led task force on property appraisals releases its report this afternoon in a presser with Gov. Perry. Quorum Report's Harvey Kronberg obtained an early copy, which reveals few, if any, surprises.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

I've commented on this task force many times before. My bottom line has always been that Gov. Perry and Tom Pauken have used so-called appraisal reform as a cover to target their real aim: capping the growth of local government spending. That may or may not be a worthwhile cause, but it's disingenuous to use the appraisal process as a cover to attack local government.

Let's look at the task force's final recommendations to see how many deal with the appraisal process. (The quotes are from Mike Drago's story, not the task force's report itself.)

  • "Require voters' approval for government spending to increase more than 5 percent year-over-year."

    EC: This has nothing to do with the appraisal process. Let the people elected by local voters do their jobs. If you don't like the budgets they draw up, vote them out and replace them. Don't trash representative government itself and institute government by referendum. It all makes one wonder: why wasn't the task force named something like "Task Force on New Restrictions on Local Government"?

  • "Reform the property appraisal process by establishing minimum qualifications for appraisal board members and taking other steps to protect property owners."

    EC: There's nothing wrong with setting qualifications for these appointed positions, as long as the qualifications are professional, not political.

  • "Require taxing entities to give taxpayers more specific and explicit information in their bills."

    EC: Truth-in-taxation is OK, even if it is worded in a way designed to stimulate taxpayer revolts. So be it.

  • "Require the comptroller to give taxpayers better information about their rights -- notably their rights to appeal -- under the tax code."

    EC: Truth-in-taxation is OK, even if it is worded in a way designed to stimulate taxpayer revolts. So be it.

  • "Change the makeup of the appraisal boards to include taxpayer representatives."

    EC: Of the current five member board, all now appointed by local taxing entities, two members would be replaced by appointments by a District Judge and one member would be replaced by the elected county tax assessor-collector. As this provides a check against potential abuse of the appraisal process by the local taxing entities, it is a reasonable recommendation.

  • "Prohibit legislative actions that are in effect unfunded mandates — services that the state requires local governments to perform but does not fund. One example: Requiring school districts to lower the student-teacher ratio without providing additional money to hire more teachers."

    EC: This is a reasonable idea, but this has nothing to do with the appraisal process either.

  • "Require the disclosure of property sales prices. A lack of disclosure is thought to have depressed the taxable value of property, especially on high-end residential and commercial property."

    EC: Finally, something that sounds like it will actually improve the accuracy of property appraisals in Texas. But it turns out that this recommendation technically doesn't require disclosure of the sales price at all, only the buyer's estimated value, with supporting documentation. A "liar's affidavit" in other words. Sigh.

  • Give the option to city and county governments to enact a 1/2 cent sales tax dedicated to property tax reduction.

    EC: Again, this has nothing to do with the property appraisal process. I would vote against a sales tax increase because sales taxes are inherently regressive. Shifting the burden of funding local government from property taxes to sales taxes results in shifting the burden from the wealthy to the working class and poor. Nevertheless, if local voters want to choose such a scheme, the choice should be available to them. So, I accept allowing a vote on higher sales taxes, but I hope voters reject the idea.

Race, sex, and other irrelevancies

Dallas Blog | William Murchison:
“ Hillary and Barack have the media lobbing into our midst a question of great intensity. Is it time -- oh, yes, brothers and sisters, has the time come at last for the United States to have a woman president, or, if not that, a black one? Forgive me. I can't stifle the yawn. ... The First of His Race, the First of Her Sex -- bah, humbug, horsefeathers, all that stuff! Surely Sens. Clinton and Obama can lose on their own without tottering on so despicable a crutch.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Irrelevancies? Maybe Mr Murchison hasn't noticed that the first 43 Presidents in US history have been white males. Perhaps he thinks it's just a coincidence. That race and sex were totally irrelevant to voters in election after election, all of which resulted in a white male moving into the White House afterwards. On the contrary, race and sex have been the very opposite of irrelevancies up to now. Race and sex have been litmus tests for enough of the electorate to ensure those 43 white males their electoral victories.

Mr Murchison is absurd in saying Senator Barack Obama and Senator Hillary Clinton somehow have an advantage because of race and sex, that the hurdle in front of them is not a hurdle at all, but a "crutch" propping them up. Nonsense. The significance of 2008 is that maybe, just maybe, race and sex are no longer an insurmountable hurdle. Except, judging by the appearance of articles like Mr Murchison's, focusing as they do on race and sex, perhaps 2008 is still too soon for race and sex to be truly irrelevant to Americans choosing their next President.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Looking back at the Confederacy with modern eyes

Star-Telegram | Jerry Patterson:
“Any attempt to judge our history by today's standards -- out of the context in which it occurred -- is at best problematic and at worst dishonest. ... Many believe that the War Between the States was solely about slavery and that the Confederacy is synonymous with racism. That conclusion is faulty because the premise is inaccurate.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Mr Patterson is repeating the tired old revisionist argument that the Civil War wasn't really about slavery. That instead, it was all very theoretical, all about dry political science, about principles like federalism and states' rights. Nonsense. It was about slavery.

For the first eighty years of its existence, the American nation was a balancing act between the interests of the slave-holding states and the free states. The US Constitution was a patchwork of compromises designed to balance those interests.

As long as the political power of the North and South was roughly equal, the compact held. When the North's political power grew to the point that the South felt that their way of life, i.e., slavery, was threatened, the Union disintegrated.

Now Mr Patterson would have you believe that attitudes about slavery were not sectional and therefore not a cause of war. He selectively quotes Robert E Lee and Abraham Lincoln. Yes, Lee joined the Confederate cause more out of loyalty to Virginia than slavery, but Virginia's cause was the preservation of slavery. Yes, Lincoln delayed emancipation in a diplomatic attempt to keep the border states from joining the Confederacy, but it was his certainty that the US could not endure "permanently half slave and half free" that triggered secession.

Make no mistake about it. This was a war between slave-holding states and free states. Texas' own declaration of secession leaves no doubt. Pick almost any paragraph and you'll get something like this:

In all the non-slave-holding States, in violation of that good faith and comity which should exist between entirely distinct nations, the people have formed themselves into a great sectional party, now strong enough in numbers to control the affairs of each of those States, based upon an unnatural feeling of hostility to these Southern States and their beneficent and patriarchal system of African slavery, proclaiming the debasing doctrine of equality of all men, irrespective of race or color - a doctrine at war with nature, in opposition to the experience of mankind, and in violation of the plainest revelations of Divine Law. They demand the abolition of negro slavery throughout the confederacy, the recognition of political equality between the white and negro races, and avow their determination to press on their crusade against us, so long as a negro slave remains in these States.

The declarations of secession of all the Confederate states read like this. They are screeds about how slavery is threatened by Northern abolitionists, about how Constitutional federalism and states' rights protect the slave-holding states' peculiar institution, about how the Southern states are entitled to secede to protect the "beneficent and patriarchal system of African slavery" which is supported by the "plainest revelations of Divine Law."

Mr Patterson really ought to put his quotes from Lee and Lincoln in the context in which they occurred. Read these declarations of secession and tell us with a straight face that slavery was not the cause of the Civil War. That cause belongs in the dustbin of history and the flag that represented that cause belongs there, too, even if there may have been some honorable and noble men who went to war under that ignoble banner.

In the end, I can agree with only one thing Mr Patterson says, and only if he turns it on himself and his own attempts at revisionist history: "Retroactive cleansing of history is doomed to failure because it is, at heart, a lie."

Conservatives, our hubris created this waste of a war

Dallas Morning News | Rod Dreher:
“When 9/11 happened, I was relieved to have a stiff-spined Republican in the White House instead of a Democratic squish. ... I was a fool. Now I find myself in an unsettling position for a conservative: duty-bound to instruct my children never to take presidents or generals at their word and to always question authority.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Rod Dreher is experiencing a mid-life crisis. In other forums, he explains how he put his faith in the Catholic Church ... and was let down. Here, he put his faith in the Republican Party ... and was let down. He knows he was let down, but only dimly understands what let him down. He thinks it was Presidents and generals and authority. In fact, it was faith itself. Let reason be your guide.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

School District and Landowner Embroiled In East Texas Land Dispute

KLTV.com | Tracy Watler:
“Henderson ISD has plans to build a new primary school, but they say in order to do so, they need a certain four acres, owned by a city councilman. But that councilman says the school's offer is just not good enough. ... The Rusk County Appraisal District says Ashmore's land is worth just 3,000 dollars an acre. ... 'We definitely feel like, from what we've been told, that $15,000 per acres for these four acres is a fair amount of money to offer for that property,' says [Henderson ISD Superintendent Tommy] Alexander. But Ashmore doesn't think so. That's why he's asking for $150,000.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Let me see if I've got this straight. The councilman has been paying property on land that's appraised at $3000/acre. A buyer offers hims $15,000/acre. He says his land is really worth $37,500/acre.

Knowing nothing more, if I were the arbiter, I would award him the $15,000 and tell him he's lucky the city doesn't take his land for the value he's been happy paying taxes on — $3,000/acre.

Governor Perry's so-called Task Force on Appraisal Reform is beating the drums to strangle the growth of local government. If they took seriously the title of their task force, appraisal reform, they would be doing something to stop abuses like this in Tyler. When landowners like this city councilman are underpaying their property taxes by, what, 10x?, that means those taxes are shifted onto someone else, probably the homeowners in Tyler, who can't hide the true value of their homes as easily as this city councilman has.

The most obvious way to achieve more accurate property appraisals is public sale price disclosure. Only when appraisers can see what properties actually sell for can they accurately set a value.

In cases like this undeveloped land in Tyler, whose situation is unique, perhaps other reforms are necessary. Perhaps landowners should be required to accept the appraised value when their land is taken by eminent domain. If he's been happily underpaying his property taxes, he ought to be happy accepting less than true market value. On the other hand, if the landowner wants government to pay him an outrageous sum for his land, he at least ought to have been paying property taxes on it in like amount. If he hasn't been, he has no right to complain he's being cheated now.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Nuclear Vision: Are reactors the answer to energy, enviro fears?

Dallas Morning News | Editorial:
“The nuclear energy debate in the United States used to be summarized in two words: No nukes. But now other threats seem far more menacing: global warming, dangerous car and industry emissions, and skyrocketing energy prices resulting from geopolitical unrest.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

I used to come down on the side of "no nukes". My concern was nuclear waste. This deadly residue of our demand for energy today will remain harmful to life on earth for thousands of years in the future. I consider this to be an inexcusable crime of making our children and grandchildren (and great-grandchildren for untold generations) pay for our selfish energy demands today. I still believe this.

Why am I slowly coming around to support nuclear power? Because the alternative, fossil fuel-burning power plants, itself imposes a burden on future generations. Global warming is real. Human activity is a significant cause of global warming. Climate change threatens our environment and our livelihoods for centuries, perhaps millennia, to come.

So I now see nuclear power as the lesser of two evils. We still need to do more to develop safer waste storage sites. We still need to do more to protect nuclear fuel from falling into the hands of terrorists. We still need to do more to help ensure public safety as reactors age and/or maintenance is neglected. After all, money spent on public safety is too often a target of greedy tax cutters.

When faced with only unpleasant choices, one must hold one's nose and choose one. That's what I'm doing when I endorse nuclear power. And praying that our descendents will understand and not condemn us for our selfishness.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Conservative Congressmen call for border agents pardon

Dallas Blog | Tom Pauken:
For the information of our readers, 'fair and balanced' also uses the phony name of Ed Cognoski, and calls herself 'secular liberal', Her views (I say her because our regulars all say they know her real identity and that she is a liberal activist and former reporter in Dallas) reflect a consistency that lays out the liberal position on issue after issue, just like her comments on this story about the sentencing of our border agents. By the way, 97% of those polled online on a NBC poll thought that it was ridiculous what the government has done in this done. But not our E.C. who enthusiastically defends the government's actions in this case.
Ed Cognoski responds:

Mr Pauken:

  1. I just quoted another news story to provide some balance to the Dallas Blog's one-sided presentation of the supposed facts of the case. I did not "enthusiastically defend the government's actions." Neither did I jump to condemn those who defend our Constitution and enforce our laws like you did. News stories should present the facts and not take sides. The Dallas Blog failed that fundamental principle.
  2. I use varying aliases on Dallas Blog because Dallas Blog does not prevent others from impersonating me and signing their own ad hominem attacks with my usual moniker.
  3. Your last paragraph makes a pretty good ad hominem attack itself. By the way, your obsessive accusations about me being "a liberal activist and former reporter in Dallas" are completely unsupported by fact. That reflects very poorly on the editorial judgment of Dallas Blog.

News attacks Calderon for his aggressive stance against Mexican drug cartels

Dallas Blog | Tom Pauken:
“Longtime Mexico City Bureau Chief of the Dallas Morning News Laurence Iliff attacked the new Mexican President Felipe Calderon for his aggressive use of the Mexican military to go after the drug cartels in Mexico in a front page story in Tuesday's Dallas Morning News.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

If an American President began using the US military for police work inside the US, I expect the inevitable criticism would be newsworthy here, too, and rightly so. Especially if civilian control of the military were weak in the US and the fear of a military takeover of government real.

Obama files for President

Dallas Blog | Scott Bennett:
“The day after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,' birthday, Sen. Barak Obama, African American Democrat of Illinois, filed papers to become a candidate for President of the United States. While other blacks have run for President, notably Rev. Jesse Jackson and Rev. Al Sharpton, Sen. Obama becomes the first black to seek the office with serious credentials as an elected official.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Serious credentials as an elected official? Are you serious? Barack Obama's inexperience is the first issue he has to overcome. It's no accident that he plans to announce his candidacy in Springfield, Illinois, home of Abraham Lincoln, who himself had only two years in Congress before ascending to the Presidency. That Lincoln is also the Great Emancipator and Obama an African-American allows Obama to deal with a second important issue at the same time — whether the country is ready for a black President. But make no mistake — lack of experience is a criticism Obama has to address early and often.

Experience is always an issue. George W Bush had to overcome charges that he was a foreign policy lightweight. In 1999, he famously failed a pop quiz that asked him to name the leaders of four countries in four hot spots around the world, one of them Pakistan. In contrast, his father, George HW Bush, came to the Presidency with arguably more foreign policy than any previous President. For how important that is, contrast the different results in Gulf War I and Gulf War II. Experience does matter.

Except the voters sometimes choose style over experience. Barack Obama has style coming out of his ears. The stars are aligning perfectly for an Obama run for the Presidency. In this campaign, his lack of experience won't disqualify him; the country's sad history of race relations won't doom his candidacy. In this campaign, Obama can even turn the doubts about him to his advantage:

  • His rock star celebrity is perfectly timed for a country that's made American Idol the number one rated television program.
  • His intelligence, his disarming forthrightness, his smooth speaking style and soothing demeanor are the perfect antidote to years of listening to George W Bush trip over his own tongue telling obvious falsehoods.
  • His lack of political experience means his opponents will have little personal history of his to smear.
  • His short time in Washington means he won't be tarnished by the culture of corruption, the lying, the incompetence, the breakdown of government that has infested that swamp for the last six years.
  • His stand against the Iraq War has been consistent from the beginning, so he won't have to spin his way out of charges of flip-flopping.
  • His groundbreaking ethnic background won't be the focus in a race where the Iraq War will suck all the air from any domestic issues, particularly race relations.
  • His strongest challengers are, in the primaries, a Democratic throwback to the contentious era of Clinton and Gingrich and impeachment; and in the general election, some candidate from the Republican Party, the party that has brought the country nothing but Iraq, earmarks, Abramoff, deficits, Katrina, etc., etc.
Yes, the stars are aligned for Barack Obama in 2008. Only time will tell whether some fatal flaw will show itself and stop his ambition short of his goal.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Kiss-the-rich, kick-the-middle-class

MySA.com | Roddy Stinson:
“Pardon me while I spend a despairing moment contemplating the many ways that Texas House Speaker Tom Craddick and his kiss-the-rich, kick-the-middle-class Republican henchmen will find to kill any attempt to pass a sale price disclosure bill.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Without sale price disclosure, estimating market value of real estate is mostly guesswork. In middle-class neighborhoods, where the houses are similar and many sell each year, appraisal boards can usually get the information they need to make this guesswork pretty accurate. In wealthy neighborhoods, where the houses are unique and sales less frequent, it's more difficult to estimate market value. When mansions are listed, it's often discovered that the asking price is much higher than the appraised value on the tax rolls. And commercial properties often sell with complex contracts, confidentiality agreements, and other means that prevent appraisers from doing their jobs.

Roddy Stinson doesn't predict how Republicans will kill a sale price disclosure bill, only that they will. In my opinion, they'll do it by distorting appraisal reform into their preferred goal — tax cutting.

Gov Perry set up a commission chaired by Tom Pauken for the supposed purpose of reforming the appraisal process in Texas. You might think that sale price disclosure would be the number one item in their reform recommendations. No brainer, even. But no. Mr Pauken's road show is traveling Texas whipping voters into a frenzy to cap local government revenues.

Expect Perry and Craddick to accept Pauken's recommendations, push the local government revenue caps through the legislature, and claim to be reforming the appraisal process. Sale price disclosure will end up on the floor.

The result will be handicapped local government and a shift of more of the tax burden from property tax to sales tax, from the wealthy to the middle and lower classes.

And Governor Perry will thank Mr Pauken for his service, his service to those "kiss-the-rich, kick-the-middle-class Republican henchmen" that Roddy Stinson talks about.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Lack of diversity hurting legal profession

Dallas Blog | Dr. Amy L. Jarmon:
“The legal profession has provided leaders for our country since its founding. ... Unfortunately, the same legal profession is still not diverse in its membership: more than 90 percent of our legal profession is Caucasian. It is imperative that the legal profession increase its diversity so that attorneys will reflect the diversity of the client population in the United States.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Four women, a Cuban-American, two African-Americans, a Japanese-American, a Lebanese-American, a Chinese-American and a Democrat.

"If you look at my administration, it's diverse, and I'm proud of that."
-- George W. Bush

President Bush never claimed to be aiming for diversity. It's something that just happens when you overcome this country's unfortunate legacy of discrimination and prejudice. The legal profession isn't there yet, but progress is being made thanks to programs like the partnership between the Texas Tech School of Law and Estacado High School, Lubbock Independent School District, described by Dr. Jarmon. Someday the legal profession will be able to look at itself and be proud, too.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Appraisal reform battle

Dallas Blog | Tom Pauken:
“Terrence Stutz has a very fair and balanced analysis in Monday's Dallas Morning News of the Governor's Task Force on Appraisal Reform's efforts to address the problem of skyrocketing property taxes in Texas. ... State Representative Fred Hill, who has become the principle spokesman for the Texas Municipal League in the Texas House, makes an absolutely ludicrous statement in the Stutz article by saying that any such restraint on the growth of local government spending would actually lead to greater tax increases at the local level.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Definition of "fair and balanced": agreeing with Perry and Pauken (see Terrence Stutz quoting Tom Pauken).

Definition of "ludicrous": having the temerity to disagree (see Fred Hill).

Actually, Terrence Stutz does a decent job of presenting both sides of the issue without the loaded adjectives that Mr Pauken piles on. Mr Stutz gives Tom Pauken more space in his story, but at least he allows Fred Hill to respond. Mr Pauken's account of the The Dallas Morning News' story is anything but fair and balanced. My advice? Skip the Tom Pauken account and go straight to the DMN.

Tom Pauken, in Dallas Blog, calls Fred Hill's position ludicrous without ever explaining his position. Actually, Fred Hill makes sense. He argues that if you cap local government revenue increases at 5%, that's what you're likely to get, whether the need is 3% or 4%. Local governments will be tempted to build a bit of a surplus, just in case next year the need is 6% and the new law caps them at 5%. That inclination to reach for that 5% cap could very well lead to higher taxes over the long run.

So, why does the Texas Municipal League in the Texas House oppose this? Because Fred Hill is looking out for the local taxpayer's interest. He knows the law of unintended consequences can bite back when you start putting artificial ceilings and formulas in place instead of just electing good people to represent you in the first place. Fred Hill was elected just that way. The Task Force on Appraisal Reform was appointed. By an unpopular governor, no less. Who do you trust?

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Bubba, we -- yes, we -- have to stop the war now

Star-Telegram | Molly Ivins:
“The president of the United States does not have the sense that God gave a duck -- so it's up to us. You and me, Bubba. ... This will be a regular feature of mine, like an old-fashioned newspaper campaign. Every column, I'll write about this war until we find some way to end it.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Give 'em hell, Molly.

Molly Ivins has returned from medical leave and has resumed limited writing while undergoing treatment for breast cancer. Wish her a speedy recovery so that we may enjoy reading her feisty commentary for a long time to come. Our nation needs her plain-speaking now as much as Harry Truman's was needed in his day.

Letting the people choose rather than the politicians

Star-Telegram | Jeffrey E. Brooks:
“Perhaps the most outspoken advocate of redistricting reform is Sen. Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio. For more than a decade, Wentworth has proposed bills that would create a bipartisan panel, in which Democrats and Republicans would have equal representation, to handle the redistricting process. No legislators or political candidates would be allowed on the panel, and strict conflict-of-interest provisions would be in place. Wentworth's proposed system defines the terms under which districts can be drawn. A congressional district would have to take into account the existing borders of counties, towns and cities. Most important, no redistricting plan would be permitted to purposefully favor or discriminate against any political party or other group. The days when politicians could highjack the electoral process to suit their own ends would be over.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

This noble goal is going nowhere. Because, simply put, political parties are not noble. Instead of reforms intended to strengthen representative government, Texans get commissions disguised as "appraisal reform" but whose true purpose is to cut taxes by weakening representative government in our cities, counties, and school districts.

Nevertheless, citizens should applaud the quixotic efforts of officeholders like Sen. Wentworth and public interest advocates like Jeffrey Brooks. The abuses of Tom Delay and Rick Perry to redraw Congressional district boundaries to create safe Republican districts no matter the overall will of the electorate should be publicized, no matter how long the odds that Austin will enact reform.

Friday, January 05, 2007

The Coming GOP Crackup

Dallas Blog | Scott Bennett:
“GOP activists are still seething at Gov. Perry, Speaker Craddick and Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst over the passage of the so-called ‘margins’ tax to provide for a local property tax cut. ... However, if you talk to Republican voting suburbanites, who are anything but activists, you hear a different story. They want more spending on education and they want even more property tax relief.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

As a broad generalization, Democrats want quality education and believe that you get what you pay for. The Texas Republican Party wants tax cuts and public education be d*mned.

Voters, in general, want both quality public education and tax cuts at the same time. The Republican Party promised them that they could have their cake and eat it, too, which led to great electoral success. The smoke and mirrors can be hidden only so long, however, which is perhaps why Democrats are making inroads into the Republican majority.

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

Texan of the Year 2007: Who's Next?

Dallas Morning News | Editorial:
“Texan of the Year? If you mean 2006, that's yesterday's news. ... But we're forward thinkers and quickly turn our eyes to the horizon and march boldly into 2007. Sure, you can look back fondly (or not so much) at last year, but wouldn't you rather take a wild stab at some candidates for the next Dallas Morning News Texan of the Year?”
Ed Cognoski responds:

Why bother? None of the many potential choices listed in this editorial has a chance if The Dallas Morning News again chooses a symbolic Texan of the Year instead of a person who individually had significant impact, for good or bad, on Texas, the nation or the world.

Time magazine was rightly criticized for its choice of a collective "you" as its person of the year. The Dallas Morning News' choice for Texan of the Year was in the same vein. In effect, its recognition went to all the Texan families who have loved ones serving in Iraq. To represent these thousands of Texans, The Dallas Morning News chose a single father, who, in the newspaper's own words, "became an unintended symbol of unspeakable loss and grief after losing two sons who went off to war."

Symbolic choices are all well and good, but I suspect most readers expect and prefer a single, real person be singled out for Texan of the Year because of his own actions, not because he's a particularly inspiring representative of a class of people. A debate over whether the right person was named or not is healthy and fun, but debating whether symbols or collective pronouns are suitable choices is just a waste of an opportunity to discuss the important events of the past year. I won't be holding my breath waiting to learn who (or what) The Dallas Morning News decides to recognize in 2007.

Pots, Kettles and Black Oil

Frontburner | Trey Garrison:
“Irving-based ExxonMobil is being accused of funding dishonest ideological groups by, wait for it, a dishonest ideological group.
Ed Cognoski responds:

Trey Garrison, lately of Dallas Blog, now publishes his anti-scientific opinions on the pages of Frontburner's blog. The example above of a non-rebuttal rebuttal illustrates why his departure from Dallas Blog is not a loss for that publication and not a gain for Frontburner.

The claim cited by Mr Garrison is that:

ExxonMobil Corp. gave $16 million to 43 ideological groups between 1998 and 2005 in a coordinated effort to mislead the public by discrediting the science behind global warming, the Union of Concerned Scientists asserted Wednesday.
Instead of rebutting the claim, Mr Garrison attacks the messenger. He posts an ad hominem attack that boils down to ... 'yeah, well, so's your mother.' Left untouched is the claim that ExxonMobil is using its billions in profits to create the illusion of a vigorous scientific debate about global warming.

Recently, another group, Britain's leading scientific academy, The Royal Society, asked ExxonMobil to halt support for groups that "misrepresented the science of climate change." I'm sure Mr Garrison can find links to foster the illusion that The Royal Society is also a dishonest, ideological group.

Maybe Mr Garrison is just upset that he isn't getting anything from ExxonMobil for his own promotion of their illusions. He isn't, is he?

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

A revitalized Christianity needed to meet Islamic challenge

Dallas Blog | Tom Pauken:
“How are we to respond to the challenge of a resurgent Islam? Through military might alone? By persuading the Islamic community of the economic benefits of our materialist society? ... Or, perhaps, instead we should recognize the need to combat the fervor of a resurgent Islam by re-establishing the Christian roots of Western Civilization and seeking to achieve greater Christian unity on matters of culture.”
Ed Cognoski responds:

The United States Constitution is a shining achievement of 18th century liberalism. That Constitution created a secular nation with what Jefferson praised as a "wall of separation between church and state". That secular nation has endured for over two centuries and will continue to endure against external enemies. Whether it can withstand internal efforts to turn America into a Christian theocracy remains to be seen.

Mr Pauken gives primary credit to Ronald Reagan, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Pope John Paul II for defeating Communism. This insults the contributions of statesmen like Dean Acheson, George Marshall and Dean Truman, who, after World War II, crafted a containment strategy against global communism. That grand strategy was adhered to by Democratic and Republican administrations alike, including Reagan's, for forty years, until the Soviet Union collapsed from within due to its own rot.

Trying to primarily credit the Roman Catholic Pope is even more a distortion of history. It was the United States, a secular liberal nation, that won the Cold War. As Stalin himself once dismissively asked, "How many divisions does the pope have?"