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News-Sentinel.com Your Town. Your Voice.

Politics and other nightmares

iPan, uPad,

Here comes City Clerk Sandra Kennedy, blazing a trail into 21st century technology with blinding speed:

Sandra Kennedy, who has held the city clerk's office since 1983, on Wednesday announced a plan to replace stacks of paper with tablet computers for council members; stream meetings live on the Web; and provide easier mobile access to agendas, ordinances and other council documents.

Expensive whim

Hey, when you play the Hoosier Lottery, you're not just wasting hard-earned money on a fool's dream of striking it rich. You're also investing in things all Hoosiers benefit from, like infrastructure and education and other vital services.

Oh, and this

:The Hoosier Lottery's new Meridian Street headquarters may not look like much from the outside, but inside, it's impressive.

Race to the . . . top?

Juxtaposition of the day. First up, Herman Cain:

Washington (CNN) - The one African-American running for the GOP presidential nomination said Wednesday the black community was 'brainwashed' for traditionally siding with liberal politicians.

Bad medicine

Stay outta here, hippie scum, and putcher maryjuaaana where the sun don't shine:

Indianapolis airport police say they'll destroy medical marijuana seized from a breast cancer patient from California who was boarding a flight.

[. . .]

We can't afford this

"Affordable" doesn't mean quite what it once did:

Researchers at Indiana and Cornell universities say that how the federal government defines "affordable" could leave millions of dependents of low and moderate income workers without reasonably priced insurance under the federal health care overhaul.

[. . .]

Toss of the coin

Every couple of years, some members of Congress get a sudden urge to replace the dollar bill with a dollar coin. The whims usually just lead to a few days or weeks or protest that fades away when people realize again nothing will be done because, well, so many people would be against it. Every time they try to shove a dollar coin down our pockets, we resist. Americans are no more ready for that, um, change than they are the metric system.

Who's in charge here?

Representative democracy? Oh, that's so messy and cumbersome. It takes forever to get anything done, and those darn "citizens" are such pesky louts.

What's that in the road, a head?

Gee, do ya think?

But Republicans have a competing argument. Instead of saving us from a Greater Depression, the Obama stimulus (together with his health-care plan and financial reforms) was a two-year waste of precious time and money that may actually have impeded economic growth.

[. . .]

Rats -- I hit what I aimed at!

Here's an odd one. It's common for legislators to not read proposals carefully enough to know exactly what they're passing (note, for example, the recent law that ordered noncompetitive races taken off the ballot, apparently to everyone's surprise). But here's a legislator dismayed to discover that a bill he authored resulted in exactly the kind of activity his bill made possible. The legislation in question is the law that allows Hoosiers to carry firearms in public locations such as parks, libraries and some municipal buildings, written by State Sen.

Wakey, wakey

The Charlie Brown Public is finally catching on to Government Lucy's pull-back-the-football trick. In a new Gallup poll, a record-high 81 percent of Americans are dissatisfied with the way the country is being governed. The news there is that there are still 19 percent who haven't figured out the Matrix we're in yet. Among the more interesting results:

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