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Current Affairs

Rick in the race?

Is Texas Gov. Rick Perry going to be the new Mitch Daniels, taunting us mercilessly with a "maybe I will, maybe I won't" tease on a possible presidential run?

The Perry camp is still telegraphing the notion that the default position is not to run, but it's safe to say they have cracked the door open, at least a little bit, over the last week. Specific wording matters — a lot — in these speculative political matters

O, brother!

I made it all the way to today -- the day after Oprah's last show -- in keeping my vow to myself not to comment. I mean, saying something snide about the insipid queen of gush and how she epitomizes the banality of popular culture, we're talking fish-in-a-barrel time. But, really, this just sent me over the edge:

Another fine mess

Only the federal government would spend millions to save thousands. A pilot program in five Americann cities will provide some federal government workers with plug-in cars. In San Diego, there will be 116 of the electric vehicles:

The purchases announced Tuesday are expected to cut gas usage by almost 29,000 gallons a year, saving taxpayer an estimated $116,000 and reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 257 metric tons, said GSA administrator Martha Johnson.

Ant

For all their tough talk about cracking down on illegal immigration, Indiana legislators actually passed only two pretty weak measures, one denying in-state tuition at state-supported universities and the other revoking some tax credits for businesses that hire illegal immigrants. That doesn't mean the critics have been silenced or mollified:

The ACLU of Indiana is filing a lawsuit on behalf of foreign-born people Wednesday over immigration laws Gov. Mitch Daniels recently signed.

Pink and white

We don't have to turn our pork chops into rubber anymore:

Finally, the government agrees that pig should be pink. On the inside, at least.

New guidelines released Tuesday by the USDA

Tough year ahead

As an NFL fan, guess that makes me a ticking time bomb just ready to explode into a crime spree:

Ravens star Ray Lewis issues a stern warning. He says if there is no football, crime will increase across the country.

[. . .]

Lewis painted a grim picture across America of people without jobs and nothing to do on Sundays.

Third way

The Muncie Star Press states the problem:

Daniels is not the first to forego a run for higher public office because of family concerns, and he won't be the last.

But it's an indictment on the presidential selection process when good candidates refuse to run because of concerns over the attention given their family. It's akin to the lack of civility that plagues this nation, and that former Rep. Lee Hamilton spoke about last week in Muncie.

Loud talk, no stick

Not on their best day in their wildest dreams:

President Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron kick off two days of diplomacy this morning by pledging to work against repressive regimes in the Middle East -- by force if necessary.

 

Skip a year

Whenever I visit my brother in Hill Country, I catch up on Texas politics. One thing that's always amazed me is that its legislature meets only every two years. Only three other states -- Montana, North Dakota and Nevada -- still have biennial legislative sessions. States began opting for the biennial system in the 19th century when travel as more difficult, and as recently as 1940, only four states had legislatures that met every year.

The end is near

Omigod, has anyone told Harold Camping yet? We could certainly use his guidance and spiritual counseling:

A pair of astronomers say inabout 1 billion years the output of our Sun will go up enough to evaporate the oceans and rivers into water vapor.

Oh, wait, that's "billion," not "million." I shouldn't have been so quick to become flabbergasted. Never mind.

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