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Red State Diaries
Politics and sports with a Southern accent
Saturday, April 30, 2005
When humor becomes prescience
That sentence is notable for two reasons. First, it means I deserve some sort of speechwriting fee. Second, it suggests Moore, who's campaigning for governor even if he hasn't yet made it official, would have the audience believe he was a sort of martyr, the first public official ever with the courage to stand up to the evil, nebulous them and use the word "God" in public, consequences be damned. Ego check on aisle two.
One thing Moore did get right: He said the monument is "not a violation of the First Amendment," which is correct, because churches are free to have as many religious displays on their own property as they'd like.
See there? The Constitution isn't so bad after all.
posted by Alabamian at 3:30 PM
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Friday, April 29, 2005
Drop the shovel and stop digging the PR hole
So, um, yes, Roll Tide (© 2005 University of Alabama).
posted by Alabamian at 3:05 PM
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Meter reading #11
All right, enough chitchat. Here are some more ways people have gotten here since Friday, March 25:
Two Yahoo searches and a Google search for "Secretaries Day."
Technically, it's now called "Administrative Professionals Day," but that doesn't exactly roll off the tongue. It was Wednesday, which means I forgot to remind you of one obscure holiday this week. I won't make the same mistake with Arbor Day.
Google searches for "chimp attacks" and "retired 'chimp attacks.'"
Foolish mortal! Retired chimps can be just as lethal.
A Google search for "'gunslinging' '-Mingus' '-bird.'"
Why can't the bird and the Mingus play with firearms, too?
A Google search for "caribou Gmail."
Well, if he really wants an invitation, I'll give him one.
A Yahoo search for "Ted Sexton."
For a limited time, you can read this post for only 5 cents a word.
Four Yahoo searches for "paranoia, paranoia, everybody's coming to get me."
Four searches? Wow, why so edgy?
A Yahoo search for "scientific creationism social agenda."
Nah, that can't be it.
A Yahoo search for "Ultimate Warrior 2005."
Well, he's pretty scary, but you can't be that afraid of him.
A Yahoo search for "Roy Moore book signings."
OK, I see your point.
Visitors from spam blogs for Florida tourism, sports camps, motivational speakers, sneaker inserts, proms, home loans, and coffeemakers.
Now there's a memorable spring break.
A Yahoo search for "Locust Fork school approval ratings."
Yes, there's a school there. I approve. Anything else?
Three Google searches for "plausible deniability."
Who could possibly need that much public-relations cover?
A Yahoo search for "UA vs. Daniel Moore, Alabama."
Never mind.
A Google search for "Redding Pitt."
For the first time, the Redding-Twinkle showdown is deadlocked.
Visitors from Iowa and Wyoming.
The state total is up to 40, plus Washington, D.C. Surprisingly, Arkansas has yet to make an appearance.
Visitors from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, India, Indonesia, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, Philippines, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, and United Kingdom.
No Arubans this time, so you'll have to make do with Danes.
A Google search for "pixelate the morality police."
Sounds like we have a real activist on our hands.
posted by Alabamian at 4:00 AM
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Thursday, April 28, 2005
This won't stop being funny
Stark Zambia will see you now, ladies.
posted by Alabamian at 4:35 PM
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Just imagine if he were actually elected
The Alabama Education Association executive secretary, who has been hospitalized for the last two weeks after heart surgery, returned to the state capital on Wednesday to meet with key legislators. Within hours, the Senate's deadlock over the education budget ended, and the special session that looked almost certain just a few hours earlier suddenly became improbable. Gov. Bob Riley probably will veto the budget, which he calls irresponsible, but legislators plan to pass it in time to vote to override a veto.
Under the compromise, teachers will get a 6 percent raise, which is 1 percentage point less than what Hubbert originally wanted but 2 percentage points more than the amount for which Riley called. The deal's pledge of annual $18 million increases for higher education in the future was enough to persuade Sen. Jim Preuitt, D-Talladega, to end the stalling routine.
In other legislative news, the state Christian Coalition finally managed to kill the bill that would have forced it to disclose its donors. As The Huntsville Times observed, the measure "seemed an afterthought after the breakthrough of five weeks of filibustering." Which, of course, was the entire point.
posted by Alabamian at 3:55 PM
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The exodus ends
The chunk of granite that
Evidence that it's a small world after all: The son of the Gadsden church's pastor is Christopher Word, the man who lost his job at the Hoover Chamber of Commerce last year after wearing a Ten Commandments lapel pin to work and, according to the chamber's attorney, making pro-Moore statements at work.
Evidence that very little on this little blue planet is black and white: Word founded the state's first chapter of Alabama Students for Constitutional Reform while attending Samford University.
posted by Alabamian at 3:10 PM
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Wednesday, April 27, 2005
Accountability wins a round
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., pushed his Republican colleagues today to reverse GOP rules changes that had gridlocked the House Ethics Committee. Tonight, by an overwhelming 406-20 vote, the House deleted the provisions that would have forced the committee, composed of five Democrats and five Republicans, to dismiss cases that didn't receive a majority vote to proceed.
The changes came in January as part of a GOP effort to protect House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, who received three ethics admonishments last year and who has developed a real taste for warning judges about repercussions for their decisions. Now that the rules yet again forbid one party from blocking ethics investigations unilaterally, the committee's investigation of DeLay can proceed, as well as examinations of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other Democratic House members.
More accountability from elected officials can't be a bad thing.
posted by Alabamian at 11:55 PM
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Another day, another wasted dollar
Alabama senators went home early Tuesday after they failed to reach a quorum. All 10 Republican members boycotted because they were mad about the budgets. Several Democrats boycotted in a show of solidarity with Sen. Jim Preuitt, D-Talladega, and the unofficial movement to paint the Legislature red in 2006. Combined with a couple of Democratic members who were just running late, the motley crew managed to waste yet another business day and to make a special session a virtual certainty.
As Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley said, "The taxpayers got cheated today."
posted by Alabamian at 5:45 PM
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Tuesday, April 26, 2005
Never mind
posted by Alabamian at 6:40 PM
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Monday, April 25, 2005
How to dismantle a nuclear option
Under the proposed compromise, reported by The Associated Press today, Democratic senators would allow confirmation votes for two 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals nominees who were blocked during President Bush's first term. In return, Bush would offer a less controversial nominee for a third 6th Circuit vacancy, and Republican senators would withdraw their threats to eliminate the filibuster for judicial nominations.
The compromise sounds eminently reasonable, and most importantly, it would preserve the filibuster, a crucial procedural check on the majority that both parties have used to their benefit in recent years. Kudos to Bush, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., if they can make the compromise a reality.
posted by Alabamian at 9:50 PM
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A down-home humor site
posted by Alabamian at 5:30 PM
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Funny how this 'disclosure' business works
What China's Communist leaders probably haven't told the protesters is that the textbook in question is used in only 18 of Japan's 11,102 junior high schools and that Chinese history books also omit a few inconvenient details, such as the Tiananmen Square massacre and the 30 million deaths during Chairman Mao Zedong's Great Leap Forward.
Those revelations might spark a few protests, too -- just not the kind that Chinese leaders would like.
posted by Alabamian at 4:40 PM
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Fun with statistical aberrations
posted by Alabamian at 7:35 AM
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Sunday, April 24, 2005
There is no such thing as infighting
Several Republican members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee have begun to waver in their support of Bolton as more allegations about his past come to light. Some of the recent charges the committee has heard include an assertion that Bolton tried to orchestrate the firings of intelligence analysts who didn't change their findings to jibe with his views and a claim that he chased a woman through a hotel, threw things at her, and spread malicious rumors about her. In addition, former Secretary of State Colin Powell has expressed concerns about Bolton's ability to get along with others, The Washington Post reported Friday.
If the White House doesn't decide to withdraw Bolton's nomination, things could get ugly in a hurry within the GOP. Already, a conservative group is buying radio ads in Ohio to accuse U.S. Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, who voted to postpone the committee vote, of "stab[bing] the president and Republicans right in the back." Three other GOP committee members who are uneasy about Bolton -- Sens. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska -- may face similar attacks.
Can you still be a good Republican if you disagree with something that's very important to the Bush administration? The Bolton confirmation battle soon may answer that question.
posted by Alabamian at 3:40 AM
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Saturday, April 23, 2005
The recency effect
Among the notable Americans not on the list: James Madison, who was the Father of the Constitution; Woodrow Wilson, who led the United States to victory in World War I and planted the seeds for the modern United Nations; and Philo T. Farnsworth, who invented television when he was still a teenager.
Greatest American debuts June 5. Feel free to suggest other deserving nominees and offer your top 10 list in the comments.
posted by Alabamian at 8:10 PM
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Time to make more babies
Federal voting rights laws ensure that Alabama's only black congressman, U.S. Rep. Artur Davis, D-Birmingham, will have a very safe seat. U.S. Reps. Jo Bonner, R-Mobile, and Terry Everett, R-Rehobeth, likely are also safe because they live so far away from any other incumbent. The free-for-all likely will come between two of the state's other four incumbents, assuming someone doesn't lose or retire before then.
Enjoy a map of the state's congressional districts here. Note that U.S. Reps. Robert Aderholt, R-Haleyville, and Spencer Bachus, R-Vestavia Hills, live perilously close to adjacent districts.
posted by Alabamian at 2:05 PM
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Can you work yourself stupid?
Maybe Tom DeLay was on to something after all.
posted by Alabamian at 1:35 AM
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Friday, April 22, 2005
At least he's employed
The hiring is a coup for Millsaps, which likely will pay DuBose much less than the Crimson Tide did to pace up and down the sidelines and clap at highly inappropriate times.
posted by Alabamian at 7:15 PM
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One step closer
Unless the judge is willing to endure indescribable levels of public outrage or unless the government botches its case in the penalty phase, Moussaoui has a lethal-injection appointment in his future.
posted by Alabamian at 5:05 PM
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Thursday, April 21, 2005
When slang goes mainstream
*Edited to preserve my tax-exempt "family blog" status.
posted by Alabamian at 4:00 PM
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He can't help it if they just show up
posted by Alabamian at 12:50 PM
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Wednesday, April 20, 2005
One more post on the new pope
1) Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was not a Nazi. He didn't sympathize with them. He did everything he possibly could to avoid being associated with them.
2) Despite those facts, some bloggers nonetheless tried to portray Ratzinger as a Nazi or a Nazi sympathizer. Those suggestions are unfair and unfounded, and I condemn them.
3) From a public-relations standpoint, Ratzinger's election was a bad move because it allows the church's opponents to distract from the pope's doctrinal teachings and to try to hurt the church's image by raising unfair, misleading questions about his teenage years in Nazi Germany. Still, if the cardinals believed Ratzinger was the right man for the job regardless of those concerns, then they made the right choice.
4) It's not unreasonable to suggest that Benedict XVI's reign will be a short one, especially since he told cardinals the same thing.
5) Benedict XVI said all the right things today about reaching out to other religions, which I hope is a sign of things to come. He deserves a chance to chart his own course as pope, and I think he has the ability to be a good one.
posted by Alabamian at 5:40 PM
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Six more days of inaction
Meanwhile, Gov. Bob Riley, a Republican, is resting easy as Montgomery businessman Winton Blount III spends his money on infomercials to place Riley above the fray.
posted by Alabamian at 9:55 AM
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Damn liberal Internet
Why? Well, it seems Kennedy occasionally glances at international laws -- and, even worse, he may be using the Internet.
posted by Alabamian at 9:40 AM
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Tuesday, April 19, 2005
Provisional pontiff
Pope John Paul II was a towering, charismatic figure, the public face of the Roman Catholic Church for 26 years, and perhaps the single most recognizable person on the planet at the time of his death. After his papacy, the Vatican was due for a breather.
That's what Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger's tenure as Pope Benedict XVI will provide. Ratzinger is 78, which means his stay in office likely will be far shorter than that of his predecessor. For the cardinals, the election of "God's Rottweiler" is a way to prevent any drastic doctrinal changes in the next few years as they debate the church's long-term direction after John Paul II's lengthy reign.
Many observers' complaints about Benedict XVI -- he's too socially conservative, too intolerant of dissent, too hostile toward other religions -- will be neutralized by his comparatively short tenure. The next pope, not this one, will determine the church's long-term future.
Some bloggers today have blasted Ratzinger's membership in the Hitler Youth as a German teenager, and those criticisms are understandable. However, it's unfair to label Ratzinger a Nazi sympathizer, considering that he only joined the group reluctantly when required by law to do so and that he risked execution by deserting in 1944. With that being said, the cardinals made a public-relations blunder by electing a pope whose history contains even the appearance of support for the Nazis.
Benedict XVI's doctrines certainly won't help the church rebuild bridges in the United States, where many lay Catholics disagree with the church's positions on contraceptives, female priests, and other social issues. The new pope could take a big step toward solidifying Western Catholics' support with a categorical apology for the church having turned a blind eye toward the pedophile priests in American parishes, but such a mea culpa is highly unlikely from the same church leaders who allowed Bernard Law to remain a cardinal after his cover-ups of sex abuse in Boston.
I'm not Catholic, but I know several of my readers are or once were. I welcome your thoughts on today's events.
posted by Alabamian at 5:45 PM
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Habemus papam
posted by Alabamian at 11:05 AM
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How telling
Whether the plan is good public policy seems to be irrelevant.
posted by Alabamian at 9:50 AM
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Meter reading #10
Nine Google searches for "Blount Countian."
I also received searches for "Blount Banner," "'Blount County' blog Alabama," "'Blount County' 'Southern Democrat,'" "Blount 'Inland Lake,'" and "Blount County Water Authority." Just imagine the traffic I'd get if I actually wrote about things that occurred there on a semi-regular basis.
Three Google searches involving "Guntersville."
Looks like I'll need to expand my virtual coverage area.
A Google search for "Magic City Democrats Birmingham."
OK, enough already. I can't cover the entire state for free.
A Google search for "Emanuel Cleaver controversies."
I was only aware of one, actually.
A Google search for "'body paint' 'Washington Redskins.'"
Sorry, sir, not even your bare chest can lure back Steve Spurrier.
A Google search for "Eufaula Auburn national champion."
Hey, don't forget the Peoples National Championship. Oh, and one-third of the inaugural RSD Memorial Football Trophy, which I just inaugurated, and which doesn't actually exist.
A Google search for "Auburn dean administrative leave."
Do I have to give him a national championship, too?
An All the Internet search for "video arcade Jefferson County Alabama 2005."
I'm required by law to report this incident, as well as any involving an armadillo or a houseplant, to Alabama Attorney General Troy King. Thank you for your understanding.
A Google search for "hotty toddy gosh almighty."
Who in the hell are you? Flim flam?!? Bim bam?!? That's it; I'm reporting you to Troy, too.
A Google search for "Bhutan King Jigme Singye Wangchuk."
Yes, I did write about him once. No, I won't apologize. And yes, that's his real name.
A Dogpile search for "chimp attacks."
Seriously, do not mess with these things.
A Yahoo search for "Bevill Heflin."
Two men who did good things for Alabama.
Five Google searches for "Gerald Allen."
One man who's doing terrible things in Alabama.
Three Technorati searches for "Dobson."
One man who fears gay sponges and liberal activist Klan judges.
A Yahoo search for "punji stake infections."
Get off the Internet and seek immediate medical attention.
A Yahoo search for "red state male."
Hey, baby. What do you want to know?
A Yahoo search for "red state stereotypes."
Well, see, it depends on which ones really interest you...
A Yahoo search for "militaryescortm4m."
This conversation is over.
Two Google searches for "Twinkle Andress."
Your new score: Twinkle 3, Redding 2.
Visitors from Montana and New Hampshire.
My constitutional amendment! My... my precious!
Visitors from Aruba, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Estonia, France, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, Portugal, Singapore, Sweden, Taiwan, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, and United Kingdom.
Don't worry; I stopped reading after Aruba, too.
A Yahoo search for "War Diaries of Homosexual boys."
OK, it's definitely time for this installment to end. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
posted by Alabamian at 2:20 AM
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Monday, April 18, 2005
C'est la vie
Special sessions cost this cash-strapped state about $500,000 apiece, which seems like a lot until you realize that legislators so consistently fail to do their jobs that special sessions are pretty much an annual occurrence. These days, it's just business as usual.
posted by Alabamian at 2:05 PM
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I can't hear you...
posted by Alabamian at 1:25 AM
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Sunday, April 17, 2005
Can anyone justify this?
posted by Alabamian at 10:40 PM
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Saturday, April 16, 2005
I must have missed that verse
That'll be the undercurrent at "Justice Sunday," an event in Kentucky where organizers will suggest that Senate Democrats who threaten to filibuster a handful of Bush's nominees will do so because they are "against people of faith." Among the scheduled speakers are Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, who said some judges are mighty similar to Klansmen, and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., who presumably wants nothing more than to eliminate the filibuster for judicial nominees.
The filibuster has existed in some form for almost 200 years, because it's the main device to ensure the Senate remains the "cooler head" that prevents a bare majority from forcing its whole agenda down the throats of an unwilling minority. Both parties have taken full advantage of the filibuster in past decades, as they had the right to do. At least one GOP senator, John McCain of Arizona, has said he would vote to save the device; I hope he can persuade others to join him.
The emerging theocratic spin on the filibuster debate is both unsurprising and disgusting. Politicians who would paint those who disagree with their policies as anti-Christian are disingenuous slime, plain and simple. As U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said, "No party has a monopoly on faith."
Amen.
posted by Alabamian at 11:55 PM
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Friday, April 15, 2005
Interstate love song
But that won't stop highway officials from designating the corridor as Interstate 22 on Monday. The "interstate," which abruptly ends in bucolic Walker County right now, eventually will replace U.S. 78 as the main Birmingham-to-Memphis thoroughfare at a cost of a mere $1 billion and counting just for the portion in Alabama. It'll be convenient when it's finally finished, assuming it ever is.
posted by Alabamian at 12:00 PM
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Should have stayed in the pocket
I laugh. Ron Mexico, a Michigan auto parts supplier who does exist, is somewhat less amused.
posted by Alabamian at 4:15 AM
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Clearing up a misconception
From a legal standpoint, marriage is very much a fundamental liberty. Several U.S. Supreme Court opinions, including Loving v. Virginia (struck down interracial marriage ban) and Turner v. Safley (struck down regulation barring prisoners from marrying without superintendent's approval) have made it clear that marriage falls within the zone of privacy protected by constitutional guarantees against government intrusion.
The Court has yet to rule if the preservation of the traditional male-female nature of marriage is sufficient grounds for states to ban gay marriage, and it's unlikely to do so in the near future, for reasons I've already mentioned. But it's safe to say that even if the justices upheld a ban, they wouldn't do so by finding that marriage is nothing more than a privilege subject to arbitrary limitations.
So just how many legal rights does marriage affect? Hundreds, ranging from child custody to inheritance to testimonial immunities. You can find a summary here and a full roster here.
posted by Alabamian at 2:10 AM
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That was odd
posted by Alabamian at 12:15 AM
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Thursday, April 14, 2005
Pound puppy
posted by Alabamian at 7:15 PM
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The slow march of history
Until then, society will encounter a lot of "firsts" along the way. One of those firsts will come in a matter of days, when Connecticut Gov. Jodi Rell, a Republican, signs a measure to allow civil unions for same-sex couples. The state House passed the bill Wednesday, 85-63, and state senators, who already approved an earlier version, will OK the new bill next week. Connecticut will be the first state to establish civil unions without a court order.
The precedent will be a powerful one. Gay-marriage opponents no longer will be able to portray the issue purely as a battle between activist judges and the "tyrannized" majority. Once Connecticut lawmakers, of their own free will, approve same-sex civil unions, opponents' blanket assertion that most Americans everywhere oppose marriage rights for gay people will be eviscerated.
States' rights advocates will be in a tough position: Do they support a state's right to govern marital benefits as it sees fit, or do they abdicate their core values and call for federal intervention to prevent an undesirable outcome? Regardless, it seems the only way that a constitutional amendment against gay marriage will escape Congress is if the U.S. Supreme Court strikes down the Defense of Marriage Act or a state gay-marriage ban in the next few years. Because the justices realize what the political fallout from such a decision would be, they almost certainly won't touch the issue any time soon.
In the next couple of decades, many more states likely will permit civil unions as a matter of basic fairness. As they do, the public will get a chance to see that civil unions won't drive up divorce rates or otherwise "harm" traditional marriages. Everyday life will belie doomsayers' warnings that gay marriage will lead society into irreversible moral decay.
After Americans hear, year after year, gay people casually referring to their unions as "marriages" and their partners as "spouses," the distinction between "marriage" and "civil union" gradually will fade and eventually will become impossible for most people to justify. Somewhere along the way, once anti-gay forces have lost the power and influence they now wield, the Supreme Court probably will extend constitutional protection to gay people's right to obtain the benefits of marriage.
The result, decades from now, will be that society either 1) applies the word "marriage" to both heterosexual and homosexual unions or 2) calls both kinds of unions "civil unions" and gets the government out of the marriage business altogether. Either way, gay people will receive equal protection under the law, and thanks to the First Amendment, religious leaders will remain free to decide which unions they will or won't recognize.
And history, as it always does, will march on unabated.
posted by Alabamian at 6:25 PM
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Wednesday, April 13, 2005
I couldn't make this stuff up
"I'm a radical! I'm a real extremist," Schwartz said last week at a Washington conference on "judicial tyranny" and liberal activists and other such topics. "I don't want to impeach judges. I want to impale them!"
Cousin Vlad would be proud. Coburn, an obstetrician who touts the death penalty for abortion doctors despite having performed two abortions himself, probably won't complain much either.
But no overview of wild-eyed overreaction would be complete without Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, who alerted us a few months ago to the latent homosexual dangers of a cartoon sponge. Now Dobson wants to warn us about another enemy: those homosexual-enabling liberal activist judges, most of whom are both liberal and activist. I'll let him explain:
"I heard a minister the other day talking about the great injustice and evil of the men in white robes, the Ku Klux Klan, that roamed the country in the South, and they did great wrongs to civil rights and to morality. And now we have black-robed men, and that's what you're talking about."
Any explanations? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
posted by Alabamian at 5:55 PM
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Death for the 'death tax'?
If you've listened to a few of President Bush's speeches, you may have come to know the tax as the "death tax," an emotionally charged term designed to appeal to listeners' fundamental senses of fairness and justice. Many prominent Republicans have decried the estate tax for forcing inheritors to sell their small businesses and family farms to pay an overwhelming tax bill assessed by greedy bureaucrats who laugh malevolently as they ruin lives.
What estate-tax opponents de-emphasize is that the tax is assessed against only about 2 percent of all estates, according to the Internal Revenue Service. The tax, which due to a legislative quirk will disappear entirely in 2010 before returning the next year, applies only to individual estates worth more than $1.5 million or couples' estates worth more than $3 million. By 2009, those exemptions will rise to $3.5 million and $7 million, respectively.
Were the drive to abolish the estate tax truly motivated by a desire to protect family farms and small businesses, Congress could create additional estate-tax exemptions for such assets or permanently exempt the first $8 million or $10 million of an individual estate to ensure the long-term security of small farms and businesses. But when 51 senators in 2001 voted against legislation that would have increased the individual exemption to $100 million -- far above the amount needed to secure a small farm or business -- they revealed themselves to be concerned not with the little guy but with pure ideology.
A debate over whether inheritances should be taxed at all is a debate worth having. But GOP leaders' assertion that the abolition of the estate tax is the only way to protect family farms and small businesses is a fallacious argument that distracts from the real issues at hand.
posted by Alabamian at 4:55 PM
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It'd be funny if it weren't real
Sounds pretty immoral to me. So where's the state Christian Coalition? Oh, that's right: fighting to retain segregation-era language in the constitution.
posted by Alabamian at 9:40 AM
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Tuesday, April 12, 2005
Yee-haw, y'all
Some days are better than others.
posted by Alabamian at 9:55 AM
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Monday, April 11, 2005
Programming note
Long-time Bus driver W.C.G. plans to relaunch his blog, described by one knowledgeable reviewer as "a thought-provoking laugh riot," on May 18. A link is available in the right-hand column if you wish to acquaint yourself with his work before the big day.
posted by Alabamian at 11:15 AM
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What hath judge-bashing wrought?
Stalin's full quote, as The Washington Post notes: "Death solves all problems; no man, no problem."
Why law enforcement didn't immediately visit Vieira after he made a comment like that is beyond me. Vieira ostensibly was referring to the ridiculous idea that federal judges who make a decision or two with which he disagrees should be impeached, but considering the recent spate of violence against judges and their families, his ill-considered remark easily could send a mentally unstable person over the edge.
Also on the conference's guest list: everyone's favorite granite lover, former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore. Surprise!
posted by Alabamian at 2:10 AM
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Sunday, April 10, 2005
Time to dispel another rumor
"Lots of people, especially from up North, think of us down here as illiterate, barefoot, and pregnant. Not everybody is barefoot and pregnant, though I have been both at the same time."
posted by Alabamian at 5:25 PM
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The Southern equivalent of Howard Stern
Yes, we do like college football here. Why do you ask?
posted by Alabamian at 5:05 PM
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Saturday, April 09, 2005
Simply breathtaking
"[C]onceding that the world is better off without Saddam Hussein is a far cry from endorsing the foreign policy of our own government that led to the regime change. ... The real question ought to be: 'Are we better off with a foreign policy that promotes regime change while justifying war with false information?' ...
"But there's another question that is equally important: 'Are the American people better off because of the Iraq war?'
"One thing for sure, the 1,500-plus dead American soldiers aren't better off. The nearly 20,000 severely injured or sickened American troops are not better off. The families, the wives, the husbands, children, parents, and friends of those who lost so much are not better off.
"The families and the 40,000 troops who were forced to re-enlist against their will -- a de facto draft -- are not feeling better off. ...
"The American taxpayers are not better off having spent over $200 billion to pursue this war, with billions yet to be spent. ...
"We have lost our way by rejecting the beliefs that made our country great. We no longer trust in trade, friendship, peace, the Constitution, and the principle of neutrality while avoiding entangling alliances with the rest of the world. Spreading the message of hope and freedom by setting an example for the world has been replaced by a belief that use of armed might is the only practical tool to influence the world -- and we have accepted, as the only superpower, the principle of initiating war against others."
Remember, these words didn't come from an angry Democrat or an embittered liberal; they came from a member of Bush's own party from Bush's home state. Read the whole speech and see if you still can back this administration's foreign policy afterward.
posted by Alabamian at 5:55 PM
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Friday, April 08, 2005
Justice at last
posted by Alabamian at 5:00 PM
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Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow...
Seriously, folks, stop passing ineffectual laws and start doing stuff that has a meaningful, positive impact on people's lives, like stabilizing our education funding sources, or easing the burden on our overcrowded prisons, or naming an official state groundhog.
I nominate Birmingham Bill.
posted by Alabamian at 11:40 AM
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Thursday, April 07, 2005
So this is why it's free
posted by Alabamian at 10:05 PM
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Democracy inaction
Legislators who support rental companies and lawmakers who sympathize more with renters have yet again hit a stalemate over competing versions of the law. Not surprisingly, the most notable disagreement is over whether tenants should ever be allowed to withhold rent. Landlords want a blanket ban on withholding rent, while renters' advocates call for allowing renters to withhold up to a half month's rent if landlords don't fix problems after notice.
The rental companies are correct that renters shouldn't be able to hold landlords over a barrel with repeated complaints about the sorts of minor imperfections inherent in any residence. But an absolute bar on withholding rent would practically eviscerate enforcement of a landlord-tenant law.
If the law barred tenants from ever withholding rent, no matter how deplorable the living conditions, I don't see what, other than market pressure or aggressive government enforcement of health and safety regulations, could motivate landlords to keep their rental property in habitable condition. That problem would be worse in smaller towns and rural areas with few rental options.
Compromise would be the logical solution, but don't get your hopes up. After all, we're talking about Alabama legislators and the cash-rich lobbyists who
posted by Alabamian at 4:15 PM
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Wednesday, April 06, 2005
Plausible deniability
Courtesy of loyal blog reader J.B.G., who provided the update in the comments on a previous post, we learn that Brian Darling, legal counsel to U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., admitted today that he drafted the document. Martinez immediately accepted Darling's resignation, The Washington Post reported.
Martinez, a freshman senator from Schiavo's home state, asserted that he never read the memo, that he doesn't know how he obtained it, and that he passed it on inadvertently to U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. If that CYA theory doesn't do the trick for you, you can go with Harkin's account, in which Martinez handed him the memo and referred to it as "talking points -- something that we're working on here."
Though this story further confirms the Schiavo memo's existence and authorship by a Republican staffer, it leaves unanswered a more disturbing question: Is this memo an aberration, or does it reflect how GOP congressional leaders think?
posted by Alabamian at 11:55 PM
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But I thought you liked accountability
Last week you were talking about how "arrogant and out-of-control" judges should be held accountable for their decisions. But now that The New York Times has revealed that your political action and campaign committees have paid your wife and daughter more than $500,000 since 2001 -- multiple times what other congressional relatives have received for similar campaign work -- you want to blame your behavior on the Damn Liberal Media (© 2005, Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy, all rights reserved).
Oh, and then there's the question of whether you violated U.S. House ethics rules by accepting free trips to Russia and South Korea and the United Kingdom that just so happened to be indirectly funded by foreign agents and registered lobbyists. But hey, a question like that is "just another seedy attempt by the liberal media to embarrass" you, right?
With these concerns added to his past run-ins with House ethics rules and the ongoing criminal probe of his associates in Texas, DeLay has become a huge political liability for the Republican Party. Despite DeLay's formidable prowess as a fundraiser, it seems it will be only a matter of time before party leaders decide to cut their losses and force him out as House majority leader.
The writing is on the wall for DeLay, and judging from his recent behavior, I don't think he likes what he's reading.
posted by Alabamian at 4:40 PM
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Ah, priorities
Also, we apparently have an official state "renaissance faire," spelled with an extra, unnecessary letter just to fuel your craving for wanton, medieval violence.
posted by Alabamian at 11:40 AM
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Tuesday, April 05, 2005
What's in the water on Capitol Hill?
Not that he endorses such violence. No rational person could.
posted by Alabamian at 6:10 PM
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I issue no fictional endorsement
The pollster adjusted its results for political affiliation, so there's really only one explanation: Ladies love Jimmy Smits.
posted by Alabamian at 5:40 PM
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Monday, April 04, 2005
You may read this blog for a small fee
Sexton's new policy is contrary to a state attorney general's opinion that public documents can be inspected for free. It also flies in the face of the spirit, and perhaps the letter, of the Open Records Act. The sheriff's intransigence is certain to waste even more public money and even more judicial resources on a matter that should be common sense.
It's a sad day when a designated law enforcer openly flouts a court order. Voters should remember this plan during the next election.
posted by Alabamian at 11:10 AM
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Yes, I am a history nerd
Am I the only one who's amused that a bunch of conservative lawyers who believe in strict constructionism named their group after the original proponents of loose constructionism?
posted by Alabamian at 10:40 AM
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Sunday, April 03, 2005
Who's next at the Vatican?
If you'd like a list of papal contenders presented in an objective, straightforward manner, CNN has you covered. (Scroll down and click on "More potential successors.") And if you'd prefer a list offered with a little bit of attitude, Slate.com has what you need. The early favorite, though by no means a lock: Dionigi Tettamanzi, archbishop of Milan, Italy.
posted by Alabamian at 9:20 PM
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Saturday, April 02, 2005
Godspeed, pontiff
posted by Alabamian at 10:30 PM
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It's time for DeLay to go
"The time will come for the men responsible for this to answer for their behavior," said DeLay, who wouldn't mind if you'd forget all about his ethics brouhahas and the criminal indictments of his associates. He also whined about "an arrogant and out-of-control judiciary that thumbs its nose at Congress and the president" and spoke in vague terms about impeachment proceedings against the judges involved in the case.
(I wonder if he'll call for the ouster of the entire U.S. Supreme Court, which declined at least five times to hear appeals in the case? Or maybe he's just talking about Florida Circuit Judge George Greer, an extreme liberal leftist purveyor of... Oh, never mind, he's a Republican and a Southern Baptist.)
U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., rebuked DeLay, noting that "at a time when emotions are running high, Mr. DeLay needs to make clear that he is not advocating violence against anyone." Standing alone, DeLay's rhetoric would have been reckless in a country where we've recently seen the murders of a judge's family and of a judge in his own courtroom. Those ill-considered words begin to border on incitement when you consider that a man has already been arrested for plotting the murders of Greer and Schiavo's husband, Michael, and that a Michigan militia leader was ready to storm Schiavo's hospice at a moment's notice.
I've long suspected that some in the GOP were using the Schiavo situation as a test case to see just how much public resentment they could stir up against the courts. Now, with DeLay calling for a Judiciary Committee investigation of "the failure of the judiciary on the federal level," it appears that theory may hold some water. However, considering that 82 percent of the public opposed politicians' intervention in the Schiavo case, any attempt to tinker with the courts based on that situation will face very long odds. The Republicans' best political strategy at this point would be never to talk about the Schiavo case again.
The GOP also would benefit from reining in its No. 2 man in the House. DeLay has received three admonishments from the House Ethics Committee. Three of his associates have been indicted on money-laundering charges. Now he wants to put political pressure on the judiciary because judges didn't do what he wanted.
For the good of his party, for the good of his countrymen, and for the good of the Constitution, DeLay should resign as House majority leader.
posted by Alabamian at 3:05 AM
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Friday, April 01, 2005
Irrefutable science
OK, fine, roll your eyes if you will, but we'll see who's laughing when the warnings within an Islamic scholar's groundbreaking research spring to life in the form of a giant, vengeful wall of water that consumes every American man, woman, child, dog, cat, and aardvark in its hyperextended path. Further inquiry is necessary to determine if giraffes, which truly don't affect geopolitics outside of running into the occasional power line, shall be immune from the unstoppable, awe-inspiring liquid judgment.
posted by Alabamian at 4:30 AM
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About Me
- Name: Alabamian
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I'm an independent. I'm for the little guy. I'm against illogic. And I love the Crimson Tide. The views I share on this site are my own, and I express them solely in my personal capacity. My views shared here don't necessarily represent those of my family, friends, employer, or anyone else in the entire world. Welcome aboard, and Roll Tide.
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