Thursday, January 31, 2008

Pre-paid cell phones

The Nightly Build...

When Phones are Outlawed...

Trey Garrison took time out from denigrating the goal of equality to mock Senator John Carona's plan to make pre-paid cell phones harder to get and easier to track as a crime-fighting measure. This time, Garrison's libertarian streak is put to good use. Sure, allowing the government to track all pre-paid cell phone use might make it a bit easier to control gangs, drug smugglers, and terrorists, but there's still something about the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure that appeals to me. How much of the Constitution must we sacrifice to protect ourselves and our liberties?

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

The pursuit of happiness

The Nightly Build...

The Measure of a Life Well Lived

Pop some corn and pull up a chair. It's always entertaining when Trey Garrison of Frontburner and Rod Dreher of The Dallas Morning News square off. It's the battle between the Pavlovian libertarian and the Old Testament scold.

In this corner, Rod Dreher decries the modern attitude that "the autonomous self is its own judge and personal satisfaction is the measure of a life well lived." In other words, better that we all wallow in the guilt of not living by the timeless commandments dictated by God to Moses.

In the other corner, Trey Garrison wonders when "the pursuit of happiness became morally suspect." In other words, if it feels good, do it.

Most people reject both extremes, not wanting Rod Dreher imposing his puritanical morality on others and not wanting to be part of Trey Garrison's spoiled, dissolute leisure class, driven only by self satisfaction. Most people want to see a society that values life and liberty as well as the pursuit of happiness, a society that can't achieve happiness without also achieving equality and justice.

But sometimes, the escapist entertainment value of watching the likes of Dreher and Garrison butt heads together is too much to resist. Utopia can wait.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Kennedy endorsement

The Nightly Build...

Did the Clintons' Hardball Tactics Backfire?

The Dallas Morning News suggests that hardball political tactics on the part of Bill and Hillary Clinton played a part in Ted Kennedy's decision to endorse Barack Obama for President. Perhaps. A lot of pundits are concluding that the Clintons overplayed their hand and a backlash has ensued.

But go back to last summer, when Hillary Clinton was riding high. One of the things she had going for her was her contention that the Clintons were proven winners. She knew how to stand up to the Republicans' own hardball political tactics, in a way that Al Gore and John Kerry did not. If Democrats wanted to win, they needed a tough candidate and Hillary fit the bill. If I remember correctly, this line won Hillary Clinton a lot of favorable press at the time:

"For 15 years I have stood up against the right-wing machine, and I’ve come out stronger. So if you want a winner who knows how to take them on, I’m your girl."
Hillary Clinton is demonstrating that her talk last summer was not just talk. But what sounded attractive when directed at Republicans isn't as welcome when directed against Democratic primary opponents. If Clinton wins the nomination and turns those guns back against Republicans again, Clinton hardball politics might begin to look attractive to Democrats again. There's a lot of time between now and the November general election for sentiment to swing again. Pundits and voters are fickle.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Fabricated media recession?

The Nightly Build...

Has the Economy Tanked?

James Reza, pretending to be resident economist for Dallas Blog, assures readers that the economy is strong and getting stronger. How does he know? Because American businessmen are the backbone of this Great Nation. Because DFW freeways are clogged with cars during rush hour. Because the Fed cut interest rates 3/4 percent, arresting a stock market rout, at least temporarily.

So, if you read somewhere else that more mortgages are delinquent than at any time in twenty years or that new home sales have fallen by a record amount, dismiss it as liberal propaganda. If you read that Citigroup lost $9.3 billion last quarter thanks to bad debt, that the value of the dollar and retail sales are sinking, that housing starts are plunging, that unemployment is rising, that the price of oil and household debt are at all-time highs, dismiss all this news as a "fabricated media recession." James Reza of Dallas Blog, who is retired and watches Channels 4 and 5 mostly for the weather, crime and politics, knows it's all a liberal plot to get Democrats elected. This is what passes for economics analysis on Dallas Blog.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Slagel, don't go

The Nightly Build...

Richardson, Our Little Town

When it comes to discord, corruption, and pure drama, Richardson doesn't compare to Dallas, or even Farmers Branch, a suburb with a name that doesn't fit the civic tensions dividing that city. But something is lurking behind the boring front Richardson shows the world. Richardson's city council has been a cozy club for a couple decades. That coziness has had a few shocks lately, but the behind-the-scenes story has yet to be told.

Nathan Morgan hints at what might be happening with a story in Pegasus News examining the curious effect of the last council elections on the career of Mayor Gary Slagel. Slagel has taken some criticism in the past for the business relationship between his own company and the city. Yet the mayor was unopposed in his re-election bid for his seat on the council. Richardson's mayor is then chosen by the council itself from the council's own members. Slagel was not chosen by his fellow council members to serve another term as mayor. Slagel indicated he might step down from the council altogether, but after a show of public support, he announced he would serve out his term.

All very curious. None of it very well explained to the public. Nathan Morgan doesn't have the full story, either, but he's asking the right questions. It's too bad that Richardson, surrounded by other suburbs and dwarfed by Dallas and its more public scandals, doesn't have a source of investigative journalism to dig up the answers.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

User-hostile Web sites; Tax rebates

The Nightly Build...

Journalist, Heal Thyself

Today's dose of unintended irony comes courtesy of The Dallas Morning News' Steve Harris, who grouses about his difficulties making a bill payment at Wells Fargo Financial's Web site. After several attempts, he reports being told by a phone representative, "Our Web site isn't very user-friendly", with which Harris undoubtedly agrees. Harris plays the part of the customer inflicted by a faceless, clueless corporation. The irony, of course, is that his readers have to navigate the user-hostile Dallas Morning News' Web site to read Harris' grouse.


President Bush's Hammer

Michael Landauer, of The Dallas Morning News, sees the deal on tax rebates to fight a looming recession as a reason for critics to apologize to President Bush for his call for the nation to go shopping after 9/11. Landauer sees Bush's call as a prudent move to keep the economy from falling into recession in 2001. He admits to wishing for more of a sense of shared sacrifice regarding the war in Iraq. D'oh. In World War II, the country went on a war footing. Not only did the economy keep humming away, it picked up the pace, producing jeeps, tanks, planes, guns and ammunition for the war effort. FDR didn't call for Americans to visit amusement parks, and George W. Bush shouldn't have, either.

President Bush never met a tax cut he didn't like. Budget surpluses as far as the eye can see (as in 2000)? Cut taxes. National crisis (as on 9/11)? Cut taxes. Growing budget deficits (as in 2002-2004)? Cut taxes. Shrinking budget deficits (as in 2005-2007)? Cut taxes. Good economy (as in 2007)? Cut taxes. Looming recession (as in 2008)? Cut taxes. When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Bush gets no credit for swinging his hammer left and right until the US economy imploded. No apologies are due.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

DART auditor

The Nightly Build...

Cozy Chair at DART

Now that the Trinity developers have their green light to do whatever it is they plan to do down in the river bottom, Jim Schutze, of Unfair Park, has turned his sights on DART. He's been watching carefully as, first, DART tries to explain how its estimates for extending lines to new suburbs came up about a billion dollars short. And, now, he's watching the DART chair, Lynn Flint Shaw, twist slowly in the wind as details of various personal financial arrangements dribble out.

The latest was an announcement by Deloitte & Touche, external auditors for DART, that they had cancelled a $20,000 annual consulting contract with Lynn Flint Shaw. Jim Schutze suspects that Deloitte "must have felt the heat coming" and decided to cut Lynn Flint Shaw loose. Schutze wonders how many other side deals the supposedly independent auditor might have with DART board members. We might just find out. Schutze is on the case.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Demolished landmark; Recession

The Nightly Build...

Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

Last week, Dallas' 100 year old Hard Rock Cafe building, originally home to the McKinney Avenue Baptist Church, was demolished. Trey Garrison, in Frontburner, takes great satisfaction in seeing a Dallas historic landmark demolished. He asks, "What exactly is with the drive to designate every old, useless, run-down property a historic landmark." The simple answer is that his premise is false. Straw men make such easy targets. There is no drive to designate every old, useless, run-down property a historic landmark. But there is interest in the historic, cultural, and architectural heritage of the city. Some buildings are sources of community sentiment or pride and deserve recognition and preservation. Garrison may take pleasure in seeing landmarks demolished ("Another Landmark Demolished. Good."), but others will strive to see his pleasure deferred. Good.


Quit Digging

Dallas Blog's William Murchison, who has more expertise in ancient Greek than in economics, offers his own theory on why the economy is sinking into recession. It's not the yawning federal deficits we've had since George W. Bush took office. It's not the ballooning oil price, trade deficit, or shrinking dollar. It's not the bursting housing bubble and bursting subprime credit bubble.

No, the reason is that government is taking in more more money than is needed to pay for government. (Apparently, Murchison thinks we have a secret surplus.) The reason is not too little regulation of financial markets, but too much. (Apparently, Murchison thinks mortgage companies were too constrained. Poor credit risks are not able to buy enough house or get enough credit on revolving credit cards.)

Following Murchison's prescription for the economy has dug us a deep hole that will take a generation to climb out of. Yet Murchison's only advice is to dig faster.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Political reporting

The Nightly Build...

Journalists Are Not Asking the Right Questions

Mike Hashimoto, in The Dallas Morning News Opinion blog, excitedly passes on "the most insightful piece of political commentary I've seen in weeks, if not ever." What could it possibly be? Edward Wasserman's contention that journalists are not asking the right questions regarding political campaigns. Journalists endlessly speculate on voters' perceptions of race (Obama), gender (Clinton) and religion (Huckabee, Romney) when they should focus on the issues.

Why Hashimoto thinks this observation is novel is unexplained. Thomas Dewey was mocked for looking like the little groom on top of wedding cakes. Richard Nixon lost his debate with JFK because of his five o'clock shadow. JFK himself had to battle religious discrimination. Bush beat Gore because Bush was portrayed as a regular guy and Gore the class nerd. Elections have always been more American Idol than College Bowl. 2008 is no different. In 2008, gender, race and religion are the easy, superficial hooks that fill papers and air time and draw eyeballs. That's why the media focuses on them.

Ironically, Hashimoto falls right in line, giving us yet another analysis of gender, race and religion instead of the issues the matter. That's because Hashimoto knows he is a journalist and a journalist's job is to sell papers. Quit your day job, Hash, and become a fulltime blogger, and you'll have the time to do what you say journalists should be doing, instead of just whining that they aren't.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Farmers Branch; Marty Cortland

The Nightly Build...

Farmers Branch Rebuilds its Border Fence

Robert Wilonsky, in Unfair Park, publishes a revised Farmers Branch ordinance designed to prevent illegal immigrants from renting in the city. An earlier ordinance ran into legal problems. The new ordinance seeks to get around that by removing from the landlord the burden of checking the residency status of renters. Instead, the city itself will submit a request to the federal government to verify residency status of renters. Failure to verify would result in revocation of the license to occupy.

Farmers Branch might have crafted an ordinance that passes court review. Regardless, it still is the wrong way to go about immigration reform. As long as illegal immigrants are accepted into this country to do jobs that Americans themselves are not willing to do, it is simply cruel to deny those workers a place to live. Putting the poor on the street does not serve the greater good of a community, even if they are here illegally. The focus needs to be on, not the housing market, but the labor market. The focus needs to be on matching up willing workers with willing employers, not on making them both criminals. Until Americans accept that being poor and wanting to work is not a crime, strategies like those being adopted by Farmers Branch will only exacerbate the immigration problem, not solve it.


Lifestyles of the Rich and Obnoxious

Apparently, D Magazine has been publishing a column by one "Marty Cortland" who tells readers how it sucks to be rich. I say apparently because I don't actually read D Magazine. I don't know why, but I do read Frontburner. Maybe it's to catch the occasional posting by Trey Garrison.

Steve Blow, of The Dallas Morning News, tells us in today's paper that Cortland's columns are not biting enough to be good satire and not funny enough to be good humor. Blow excerpts enough of Cortland for me to join his thumbs-down review.

Tim Rogers, executive editor of D, saw Blow's column in the paper and couldn't be happier anyway. He anticipated some negative reaction from readers, but never imagined getting negative reaction on the front page of the The Dallas Morning News' Metro section. Rogers must be a believer in the old advice that any publicity is good publicity. Hmm... I wonder if some editor at The Dallas Morning News is congratulating Steve Blow for the blowback he's generated on Frontburner. Everybody's happy, then.

Always one to please, let me offer my own thumbs-down to D Magazine and Marty Cortland. No need to thank me, D.

Getting in on the action, Tom Pauken, of Dallas Blog, calls it "much ado about nothing." Meaning Marty Cortland, I think, not Dallas Blog, that is. I understand if that wasn't clear.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Partisan bickering; Amend the constitution for God

The Nightly Build...

The Case for Partisan Bickering

Lynn Wooley, in The Dallas Morning News, makes the case for partisan bickering. He argues that the founding fathers set this country up with three branches of government, two houses of Congress, judicial review, checks and balances, all in order to make it difficult to pass laws. According to Wooley, the founding fathers did this because of their contempt for government:

"The more laws Congress passes, the more miserable we all are likely to be. The federal government has a unique ability to mess up almost anything it touches, with the exception of our great fighting forces. Our founding fathers knew that. That's why they made it so hard to get things done."

Nice theory. Too bad it's wrong. If the founding fathers had so much contempt for federal government, they had an easy option -- no federal government at all, just thirteen independent countries. That they didn't try this option disposes of Wooley's warped view of American history.

In fact, the founding fathers had great respect for federal government. The checks and balances they imposed were not to incapacitate government, but to ensure compromise. The Constitution itself is the world's greatest example of the good that can come from compromise. It is built article by article on compromise -- compromise between north and south, between big state and little, between urban and rural interests.

Wooley considers compromise to be a dirty word. He explains his attitude towards political opponents as, "I don't want to compromise with them. I want to defeat them." Wooley hypocritically publishes his column praising gridlock just as Democrats regain control of Congress and look likely to regain control of the White House. His understanding of history is not only warped, it's self-serving, too.

If the founding fathers could work through their deep differences and reach consensus on a constitution, it ought to be possible for today's politicians to work through our differences on health care, social security, global warming, illegal immigration, etc. Lynn Wooley exemplifies how far we have fallen from the principles held by our founding fathers. Ben Franklin famously said, "We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately." His next words, not recorded by history, were probably something like, "Stop the partisan bickering, and get something done!"


Huckabee Tap Dances Through the Bible

Jeffrey Weiss, on The Dallas Morning News Religion blog, points out, without editorial comment, that Mike Huckabee is trying to put "context" around his "amend the Constitution for God" comments.

Huckabee is tap dancing without lessons.

He creates a straw man for his anti-abortion argument. He claims others want to have a right to terminate a human life because of its inconvenience to others in society. He doesn't address the fundamental disagreement over when a human life begins. That's an issue that the Constitution doesn't explicitly settle. Neither does the Bible, for that matter.

He says the Bible was not written to be amended by each generation. Then why do we have so many books of the Bible, written over hundreds of years? Why was a New Testament needed? Why is there a book of Mormon? Besides, so what? Why should the United States Constitution have to align with the religious laws of the ancient Jews anyway?

He draws the line at amending the Constitution at just these two amendments: abortion and marriage. He says it's OK for the Constitution to not match Biblical tithing laws. Why? He doesn't offer a rationale. Maybe he just doesn't want to go where his reasoning would take him. It won't take him to the White House, that's for sure.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Huckabee and theocracy; Clinton and civil rights

The Nightly Build...

Huckabee Goes for the Theocracy Vote

Rod Dreher, on the The Dallas Morning News Opinion blog, defends Mike Huckabee's outrageous proposal to amend the constitution to ban abortion and gay marriage "because it's a lot easier to change the Constitution than it would be to change the word of the living God."

Dreher believes the nation's laws should enforce Christian morality. He considers it a double standard that liberals want to force Christian theocrats like Huckabee and himself to respect individual civil rights and liberties.

Huckabee and Dreher scare me. So do Muslims who want to impose sharia. The US Constitution enumerates individual liberties and rights that not even a democratic majority has the right to take away. Some rights are unalienable, as asserted in the Declaration of Independence. It's one thing to pass a Constitutional amendment to clarify Presidential succession, or to legalize an income tax. It's something else again to tamper with basic Constitutional freedoms. Not even the tyranny of a democratic majority should be allowed to mess with these. Huckabee and Dreher are threats to our liberties. Liberals are not.


Clinton and Civil Rights: Phony Controversy

Mark the date. Mark Davis, in his column today in The Dallas Morning News, defends Bill and Hillary Clinton. You heard that right. Specifically, he defends them against charges of racism. Sure, it's a preposterous charge in the first place, but in the heat of the presidential campaign, words are taken out of context, words are twisted, words are made up of whole cloth, to smear an opponent.

Mark Davis knows how to play hardball himself. But he doesn't this time. Davis' column might come after both Clinton and Obama have taken steps to tamp out the flames. Davis might make a few left-handed compliments about the Clinton's support for civil rights. But, all in all, he's right that charging the Clintons with not supporting civil rights is absurd.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Beyond race and sex?

The Nightly Build...

William Murchison and Other Political Irrelevancies

William Murchison, in a Dallas Blog column titled "Race, Sex, and other Political Irrelevancies" asserts that any mention of race or sex in the presidential race is "stupid and time-wasting." Spoken like a white male, don't you think? You can almost hear him say, "Pipe down, woman. We're talking politics here" despite his claim that he doesn't say that anymore.

Murchison favorably quotes a conservative friend as saying, "I'm fine with a black president." You half expect Murchison to say, "Some of my best friends are black." Murchison, while claiming America is now color-blind, reveals how much he himself is aware of race by referring to Barack Obama as the "half-black candidate". Murchison fondly recalls his own clever characterization of Britain's Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as "the best man in Europe," mistakenly thinking such a comment proves his lack of sexism instead of the opposite. I'm reminded of a recent column by Starita Smith published in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram:

"Simply saying 'I am not a racist' appears to be enough for some to claim exemption from responsibility for doing and saying the most patently racist things. As the grand wizard of the KKK in Texas once told me in an interview, 'We're not racists; we just believe in segregation.'"

But don't hold your breath waiting for a moment of intellectual honesty from the likes of William Murchison.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Obama doomed? DART defense; Same old Pauken

The Nightly Build...

Lessons for Obama from Bush

Wayne Slater on Trail Blazers has a curious take on an op-ed piece in the New York Times by Paul Burka of Texas Monthly. Burka and Slater claim that "can't deliver on his politics of hope any more than Bush could deliver on his promise of being a uniter, not a divider." The argument is that the American political system is inherently adversarial. Burka and Slater support their argument by identifying divisive tendencies in Bush even in Texas, before he ran for President on a reputation for being a uniter.

Well, Obama is no Bush. It's one thing to say being a uniter in Washington is a hard promise for Obama to keep. It's another to imply that Bush ever had any intention of keeping that same promise. Big difference.

A week ago, pundits were inaugurating Obama as president before he won even his first primary. After New Hampshire, where Obama lost by about the polls' margins of error, a hypothetical Obama presidency itself is being dismissed as "doomed". The press is fickle but never in doubt.


The Politics of Construction (of Light Rail)

Rufus Shaw on Dallas Blog puts up a spirited defense of his wife, Lynn Flint-Shaw, chair of the DART board. Or maybe he doesn't, on the advice of her attorney who advised him not to comment. Defense is needed because of the embarrassing fact that DART's estimates for building lines to Irving and Rowlett were off by 100%, or a billion dollars.

In the end, it comes across as him saying he could defend her, if he was free to, but you'll just have to take his word for it. She's a victim of "race mongers" or something like that. She didn't know of a billion dollar shortfall until just a month or so ago. And it wasn't misappropriated. They just did a lousy job of forecasting. Besides, Denver miscalculated by three billion dollars. There, don't you feel better about the DART board and its chair, now? If this is the best defense Rufus Shaw can offer, he should have listened to his wife's lawyer and just kept his mouth shut.


2008 Tom Pauken, Same As 2007

The new year finds no changes in Tom Pauken's tired old whines. He goes to a real estate CEO to report the shocking discovery that Dallas property taxes are too high. He again fails to find a link between the state's constitutional allergy to income taxes and the reliance on property taxes instead. Tom Pauken is more interested in shifting the tax burden from the rich to the working classes than in achieving a fair, broad-based, progressive tax system in Texas. So far in 2008, it doesn't look like he's found any more convincing arguments than he offered in his failed run at this issue in 2007.

Pauken then goes all the way to Vietnam to find his latest example of religious persecution against Catholics in the world. Or rather, a decades-old example, since the case in question involves confiscation of church property in the 1950s and 1960s. A lone priest has been overseeing a Hanoi church alone ever since. A weekend public protest against the treatment of the church gives Tom Pauken reason to believe that the Communist government may be headed towards collapse. See if Tom Pauken ever gets to buy his plane tickets for his triumphal return to Vietnam before he dies. See if Pauken ever shows any empathy towards victims of religious persecution other than Catholics. Just don't bet the farm.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Honor killings

The Nightly Build...

Domestic Violence Respects No Religion

I've listened to Rod Dreher of The Dallas Morning News go on and on about the killings of two high school girls by their abusive father, a Muslim immigrant from Egypt. Rod Dreher repeatedly told us the tragedy had all the earmarks of an "honor killing". You know, something demanded by the father's religion and culture. Which is Islam, in case you missed it. The man just had to do it, being Muslim and all. It's not that he was an abusive husband and father. It's that he was a good Muslim. After all, Americans don't have "honor killings." Muslims do. Got it?

There was something about Dreher's coverage that made me feel, ... well, icky. It was as if Dreher had no real interest in the victims. As if he welcomed the story as evidence of his theory that Muslims are the source of evil in the world and, if good Christians don't wake up, America will be overrun by Muslims and our Christian daughters will all be killed, too.

Today, Megan Feldman of Unfair Park reveals that she had similar feelings, but she expresses herself much better than I. Her story points out the evil that led to the killings, the sad fact that domestic violence knows no cultural or religious boundaries, and the reprehensible behavior of journalists who exploit the tragedy to advance their own anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim agenda. All of us should take Feldman's conclusion to heart:

"So why don't people stop shouting about the evils of Islam and start talking about how to protect women and children who have been so brutalized, and are utterly dominated by their abusers that they are powerless to protect themselves? It happens all the time, and not just in immigrant families."

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Horse meat; Hillary's tears

The Nightly Build...

Horse Slaughter Moves to Mexico

Now that the horse lovers have gotten the slaughter houses in Texas shut down, they've discovered that the business has just relocated across the border to Mexico. American horses are still being slaughtered, only now it's after a much longer trailer ride and in perhaps more abusive conditions.

I can't figure the logic in opposing slaughtering and eating horses, but having no problem with slaughtering and eating cows and pigs.

One argument is that horses have other uses -- riding, racing, drawing and hauling. So? Why can't they be eaten, too?

Another argument is that the animals are abused. Well, pass animal protection laws to ensure the slaughter is done humanely. Just banning the slaughter doesn't ensure humane treatment for the old or injured horses and may result in more abuse, not less, for unwanted horses. At least PETA is consistent. They oppose all animal abuse. But I bet the horse lovers hate PETA. Go figure.

Yet another argument is that horses are so intimately tied to the romance of American history that it is unacceptable to eat them. OK, you love horses and don't feel anything for cows and pigs. There are others who don't feel anything special towards horses, but may think cows are holy or pigs are dirty. Logically, there's no way to differentiate. Majority rule would settle it, I suppose, but everyone agreeing not to impose their own animal preferences on everyone else would be another solution.


Hillary's Tears

Tod Robberson of DallasMorningViews raises a volatile subject, wondering whether Hillary Clinton's tears were genuine when she choked up when an answering a question in New Hampshire. His blog headline, "Clinton's Planted Tears," implies she was faking. But his admission that her campaign officials reacted in horror, would lead to different conclusion.

Others have wondered whether the scene gave insight into Clinton's humanity (working to her advantage) or showed a feminine weakness (working to her disadvantage). Some of those rushing to Clinton's defense accuse the second-guessers of sexism for even discussing the incident. Robberson scrambled to say all he is questioning is Clinton's sincerity, not her toughness.

Yesterday, Rufus Shaw (Dallas Blog) accused the Clintons of racism for criticizing Barack Obama. Now, Robberson is accused of sexism for criticizing Hillary Clinton. Politics is a blood sport. Reporters sometimes will be caught in the crossfire. Reporters sometimes will take a pot shot or two themselves. Here's an example of one reporter shooting himself in the foot. Get used to it. The campaign of 2008 is just heating up.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Race and Democratic Politics

The Nightly Build...

Inserting Race into the Race

Up until now, the race card has been absent in the Democratic race for the Presidential nomination. Rufus Shaw, on Dallas Blog, changes that with his commentary on the New Hampshire primary. Obama wowed Shaw with his dramatic win in Iowa, hinting of a "world seriously considering the possibility of having our first Black president." Having hopes raised only to be dashed five days later, prompts Shaw now to fire a shot across the Clinton campaign's bow, warning them that any criticism of Barack Obama will alienate African-American voters. It doesn't matter that Clinton and her surrogates attacked Obama's experience in the closing days in New Hampshire, not his race.

Of course, Shaw is out of line. Shaw is playing the race card. But this is politics. It's a blood sport. Clinton must act very carefully not to give critics an opening. Obama must, too. If Obama himself even hints at what Shaw is saying, the Democrats could split, ruining their chances, no matter who wins the nomination. But it might be out of Clinton and Obama's hands. If the attitude expressed by Rufus Shaw is shared by any sizable percentage of African-Americans, a Clinton victory might inevitably trigger a split. And an Obama victory, if perceived by other Democrats as some kind of surrender to threats by African-Americans, would doom his own election chances.

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

New Hampshire picks

The Nightly Build...

New Hampshire Picks

The political reporters at Trail Blazers make their picks for today's New Hampshire primary. Everyone thinks the polls will prove accurate. They all pick Barack Obama to win the Democratic primary and all but two pick John McCain to win the Republican primary. The two exceptions expect Mitt Romney to eke out a narrow victory.

There is a lot of disagreement about what happens below that. They are all over the board as to guessing how Mike Huckabee, Rudy Giuliani and Ron Paul will fare. Fred Thompson is usually picked to finish last.

After my disastrous picks in Iowa, where I went against the polls, I'd be a fool to make that mistake again. Polls weren't destiny in Iowa, or so I thought, because the caucus system there is so arcane. New Hampshire holds a straight, popular vote primary election. If polls proved accurate in Iowa, they should be even more so today. So, it'll be Obama by 10 points over Clinton with Edwards far back. And it'll be McCain by 3 points over Romney, with Huckabee, Giuliani, Paul and Thompson finishing far back, in that order. My only doubt with those picks is over the influence of a tidal wave of independent voters going to Obama. If that happens, McCain might slip below Romney in the Republican primary.

Trail Blazersdoesn't speculate on who might drop out, but I suspect Bill Richardson might be gone tomorrow. Clinton definitely will stick around until at least Super Tuesday, February 5. On the Republican side, the picture will be so muddled that no one will drop out, not even Mitt Romney, whose script for the nomination has gone terribly awry. Look for Fred Thompson to drop out after South Carolina. The others will hang on until Super Tuesday.

Monday, January 07, 2008

Global cooling; Texan of the Year

The Nightly Build...

Global Warming Denier Learns About Global Cooling

Scott Bennett of Dallas Blog sarcastically reports news that cyclical sunspot activity might trigger global cooling. He calls global warming a "plot by discredited Commies and gullible liberals like [Al] Gore." He says he is not kidding, that "we will be in deep snow" by 2041. This according to a press release from something called the Space and Science Research Center (SSRC), which appears to have little history, few peer-reviewed scientific papers, a director who isn't even a scientist, and a mission of selling "research and study products tailored to meet the requirements of SSRC customers." In other words, pay us and we'll write it.

In fact, cyclical sunspot activity and cyclical ice ages have been known and studied for decades. In the 1970s, the popular press was full of stories about the possibility of the onset of another ice age. Left to itself, the Sun and Earth just might be about to enter another ice age. But the Earth is no longer left to itself. Human activity is influencing climate change. And the preponderance of evidence is that, despite sunspot activity, the Earth is warming, not cooling.

None of this is news. None of this is a surprise to anyone who has been reading the science for the last 20 or 30 years. But Scott Bennett is a journalist, not a scientist. Worse, he's a journalist who's prone to conspiracy theories. He'll accept any press release from anywhere as long as it supports his denial of global warming, but he dismisses mountains of contrary evidence by reputable scientists. Scott Bennett should be investigated for journalistic malpractice.


DMN's Texan of the Year

The Dallas Morning News chose the "Illegal Immigrant" as its Texan of the Year for 2007. Keven Ann Willey explained the controversial choice:

I fear that many of the people upset over our choice for Texan of the Year have read only the headline of the essay and not its content. The essay makes it clear that we're not glorifying the illegal immigrant. We are noting that nobody else has so roiled Texas (and all of America) in the past year as the illegal immigrant.
The avalanche of critical reader reaction to the News' choice confirms the decision as a good one. Nothing has stirred the political pot, from city council apartment regulations to presidential electoral politics, as the issue of illegal immigration.

Tom Pauken of Dallas Blog piles on by calling the selection "silly" and approvingly quotes one irate reader who asks, "What part of stupid are you guys that support illegal aliens?" Pauken's coverage shows no evidence that he himself actually read the essay. The choice was not "asinine" as another reader quoted by Pauken asserts. What's assinine is leaving unchallenged the accusation that the News' choice indicates that the News supports illegal immigration.

Tom Pauken spends more time criticizing the News and its current staff than he does reviewing its choice for Texan of the Year. Pauken is bitter with the News for dismissing the old guard, journalists whose time was long past. The Dallas Morning News suffers from declining circulation, almost all newspapers do, but one thing's for sure. It's not because of the dismissal of the likes of Scott Bennett, Carolyn Barta, Bill DeOre and William Murchison, who now can be found at Dallas Blog. Maybe Dallas Blog should try to hire Ed Bark, Tom Siegfried, or other former News' writers known for good writing, not just for conservative propaganda. But don't count on it. I don't think good writing is at the top of Tom Pauken's list of goals for Dallas Blog.

Friday, January 04, 2008

Whither independents?; Wingers' dilemma; Godtalk in Iowa

The Nightly Build...

Does Obama Help McCain in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire has an open primary. Independents are allowed to vote in either the Republican or Democratic primaries. Barack Obama benefited from independents in Iowa and he's expected to benefit again in New Hampshire. John McCain's victory in 2000 is attributed to his ability to attract independents then. McCain's opposition to Bush tax cuts, his support for campaign finance reform and his support for immigration reform all are more likely to appeal to independents than the Republican base. So, you'd think John McCain needs to compete with Barack Obama to get independents to vote in the Republican primary, not the Democratic primary, right?

Not if you listen to William McKenzie of The Dallas Morning News. If you can follow his logic, Obama helps McCain by drawing away independent voters, freeing McCain from the "burden" of having to attract independent voters. Does this make sense to anyone else? Does Romney really do better than McCain with independents? I don't see it myself.


Wingers' Dilemma

Tara Ross, regular winger contributor to Dallas Blog, reveals just how pitiful a fix Republicans find themselves in this year with their choice of Presidential candidates. She reviews each, finding fatal flaw after fatal flaw. Huckabee is an "unmitigated disaster." Romney can't be trusted as to who he really is. Thompson would have been the man if everyone else didn't find him to be "lazy." McCain is not a "true" conservative. Paul can't be taken seriously. That leaves a cross-dressing, gun controlling, sanctuary city mayor who doesn't share Texas' values but just might leave Texas alone. If only "his personal life were less of a mess."

Vote Rudy 2008. Because There's No Good, Viable Alternative.


Godtalk in Iowa

Jeffrey Weiss of The Dallas Morning News' religion blog noticed something missing from all the speeches after the Iowa caucuses -- namely, any God talk.

The explanation lies in the election calendar. The speeches were given AFTER the Iowa caucuses. They were directed at New Hampshire, not Iowa. Religion will be much less a factor in New Hampshire. And it was never a factor in the Democratic race anyway. In fact, only Mike Huckabee ever made religion a central focus of his campaign. And it's in Huckabee's interest to downplay religion for four or five days, until after the New Hampshire primary. He can go back to airing commercials with crosses in the background once he gets to South Carolina.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Iowa picks; Dirty tricks in Iowa

The Nightly Build...

Iowa Picks

The polls in Iowa offer something for everyone. The political reporters on Trail Blazers announce their picks for winners of tonight's Iowa caucuses. Unsurprisingly, the picks are all over the board. As for me, I'll pick Romney and Clinton.

On the Republican side, it's Romney because he's got the money to buy an army of precinct workers to make sure every last Romney supporter in Iowa goes to the caucuses. Huckabee might do well in the opinion polls, but he simply doesn't have the money or organization to make sure that translates into flesh and blood supporters showing up at the caucuses.

On the Democratic side, it's harder to call. Clinton and Obama both have the money to fund a huge get-out-the-vote drive on caucus night. Edwards may trail in fundraising, but he makes up for it by having lived in Iowa the last four years, plenty of time to establish his own organization. I don't pick Edwards because he's been overshadowed by the Bill & Hillary and the Oprah & Obama road shows. There's not enough oxygen for Edwards, too. And I don't pick Obama because he's relying too much on new voters and independents. They may poll well, but they just don't show up at the caucuses. That leaves Clinton the winner. We'll know soon enough.


Tom Pauken, Dirty Trickster?

Tom Pauken takes one last potshot at Mitt Romney before the Iowa caucuses. Pauken reports that an anonymous letter was sent to pastors in Iowa warning them that their church's tax exempt status was at risk if the pastors campaign for Mike Huckabee. Pauken offers no evidence of any connection to the Mitt Romney campaign but insinuates as much with his headline, "Is Karl Rove Advising the Mitt Romney Campaign?" Not only does Pauken smear Romney, without evidence, by accusing him of dirty tricks, but he smears him again by association with the unpopular Karl Rove, again without evidence. A two-fer. Tom Pauken knows a thing or two about dirty tricks himself.

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Campaign coverage; Huckabee and Leno; Edwards and FDR

The Nightly Build...

24 Hour News Gripe

DallasMorningViews's Michael Landauer asks a very good question. With so many 24 hour cable news channels, how come we get so much analysis about the presidential campaign and so little coverage of the campaigns themselves? I'm afraid the explanation is that covering politicians' stump speeches would be stupefyingly boring. Just watch CSPAN for a day or two to understand.


Heeeere's Huck

DallasMorningViews's William McKenzie reports that Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is flying to California to appear on the Tonight Show Wednesday, the day before the Iowa caucuses. McKenzie concludes that Huckabee "feels pretty darn secure about Iowa" to risk leaving the state for so long.

I suspect Huckabee feels no such thing. Huckabee has never had the money to buy the exposure that rival Mitt Romney had at his disposal. Huckabee is probably making a calculated business decision that he can reach more Iowans with a last-minute appeal via a free Tonight Show appearance than he can hope to achieve by traipsing around Iowa or hope to afford with standard television commercial buys. A smart move, in my estimation.


John Edwards channels FDR

DallasMorningViews's William McKenzie confesses that John Edwards bugs him by making class warfare a focus of his campaign. McKenzie asks how you can bring two sides together in politics if you demonize one of them.

This naively assumes that Edwards wants to make nice with the business and financial powers that consider the government of the United States as a mere appendage of their own affairs. More likely, Edwards wants to battle big business, not make nice. He hearkens back to an earlier day when liberalism was more radical than today, and, by the way, more successful.

Paul Krugman, in The Conscience of a Liberal, quotes a 1936 election campaign speech by Franklin Roosevelt. Krugman reminds us that "FDR let the malefactors of great wealth have it with both barrels."

"We now know that Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mobs. Never before in all our history have these forces been so united against one candidate as they stand today. They are unanimous in their hate for me -- and I welcome their hatred."
In Edwards, one hears a distant echo of FDR. The echo may not be loud enough for Edwards to achieve FDR's stature. But we do know this. FDR did not win by making nice with his political enemies. The Republican victories of the last generation were not won by making nice with Democrats. And the 2008 Democratic candidate won't win by making nice with the Republicans who themselves will pull no punches in their effort to stretch their hold on the White House for another four years.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Hagel/Bloomberg; Judge Jerry Buchmeyer

The Nightly Build...

Hagel/Bloomberg?

Dallas Blog's Scott Bennett drums up interest in third parties by reporting on a gathering planned for Oklahoma City on January 7. Attending will be Chuck Hagel, Michael Bloomberg and a host of former GOP and Democratic office holders.

Bennett likens Hillary Clinton to Richard Nixon in drag. And Rudi Giuliani to Richard Nixon occasionally in drag. He calls Barack Obama and John Edwards lightweights. He dismisses anyone except McCain on the GOP side as a loser, and Huckabee comical. That leaves an independent as Scott Bennett's only hope and Hagel/Bloomberg the most promising saviors. He scripts a scenario that has Ron Paul splitting from the GOP, Mike Huckabee, too, and even Gov Arnold Schwarzenegger of California throwing his weight behind the independent ticket. Bennett doesn't say how likely this scenario is, but he does say it it serious business.

I hate to rain on Scott Bennett's parade, but even if this whole string of unlikely events happened, an independent ticket winning the White House would still be near impossible. As Benett himself says, a split vote would most likely throw the election into the House of Representives. Last time I looked, Democrats and Republicans had a near lock on seats there. Independents need not apply.


Buchmeyer Did a Lot of Good for Dallas

U.S. District Judge Jerry Buchmeyer announced plans to retire. Buchmeyer was instrumental in ending unconstitutional discrimination against African-Americans in public housing in Dallas. He also ended the unconstitutional electoral system that discriminated against African-American voters in Dallas City Council representation. Buchmeyer did a lot of good for Dallas. He will be missed.

But not for Tom Pauken. Pauken repeats the usual right-wing whine against judicial activism. Pauken was happy as long as the unconstitutionally gerrymandered city council continued to vote in favor of Pauken's interests and in favor of continued discrimination against African-Americans. Beware of wingers decrying judicial activism. It usually means some judge is finally applying the Constitution.