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Red State Diaries
Politics and sports with a Southern accent
Sunday, April 30, 2006
Finally, a reason to watch C-SPAN
First came the dual President Bushes, with the fake one speaking perfect English and the real one lampooning his frequent malapropisms, including a promise to promote his policies "globally and around the world, as well as internationally."
Then came comedian Stephen Colbert's tongue-in-cheek tribute to the Bush administration, including advice for the Beltway press: "Let's review the rules. Here's how it works. The president makes decisions; he's the decider. The press secretary announces those decisions, and you people of the press type those decisions down. Make, announce, type. Put them through a spell check and go home. Get to know your family again. Make love to your wife. Write that novel you got kicking around in your head. You know, the one about the intrepid Washington reporter with the courage to stand up to the administration. You know -- fiction."
I must see this.
posted by Alabamian at 4:50 PM
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At this rate, it may not even be interesting
Poll director Keith Nicholls noted that Riley didn't quite cross the 50 percent threshold versus Baxley and that no one knows how Siegelman will fare until his impending federal corruption trial unfolds. But the results bode well for neither candidate, especially Siegelman, with party primaries about a month away.
posted by Alabamian at 4:10 PM
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Your dreams have come true
posted by Alabamian at 3:50 PM
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Well, that and the million or so other voters
posted by Alabamian at 3:35 PM
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Saturday, April 29, 2006
Objects of their affection
Siegelman touted his alternative-energy ideas, and lots of others, Friday during a three-day bus tour of Alabama that included a stop in Tuscaloosa to mourn his old college fraternity house, slated for demolition next month. The 30-city bus tour will last only three days, because Siegelman will have some continuing daily federal obligations in Montgomery beginning Monday.
Meanwhile, Gov. Bob Riley had some travel plans of his own this week: a trip to Gadsden to strap on a bulletproof vest and join in a drug bust. I trust your mind to develop the appropriate visual.
posted by Alabamian at 6:30 AM
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Break out the confetti
I've mentioned that Parker wants to be chief justice, haven't I?
posted by Alabamian at 6:15 AM
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Goodbye, Nellie
Don't worry about Jackson, though. He has great retirement plans: "I aspire to be the shop steward of the international porch sitters union. I think that would be a noble profession and a timely one."
posted by Alabamian at 12:20 AM
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Friday, April 28, 2006
Another horse by committee
Thanks for that, guys.
posted by Alabamian at 10:15 PM
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Pay attention, East Carolina fans
Not with a generic name like that. Let's look at other possibilities:
Vulcan Bowl: A fitting tip of the hat to the city's giant iron mountaintop friend, but rife for abuse by overeager sports pundits who can't wait to unload with lame Star Trek jokes.
Magic City Bowl: Nice idea, but Nashville already cornered the "name your bowl game for the city's nickname" market. Besides, Harry Potter jokes are even lamer than Star Trek jokes.
All-American Bowl: Meet the new bowl, same as the old bowl. What ever happened to that game, anyway?
Yellowhammer Bowl: Somewhat logical, given that Alabama is the Yellowhammer State. Unfortunately, no one outside Alabama knows what a yellowhammer is, and even fewer care.
[Mercedes/eBay/Wachovia] Bowl: The "insert corporate sponsor name here" option, and the likeliest outcome. Pro: Extra money for bowl organizers. Con: Except for the Outback Bowl, which sounds innocuous enough that I can pretend it's a tribute to Australians, I despise all such bowl names.
Legion Bowl: A good way to memorialize the name of a stadium that may have a date with a wrecking ball in a few years. A little too apocalyptic for my taste, though.
Iron Bowl: Heresy. Heresy! Burn the witch! Burn!
Add your own suggestions in the comments.
posted by Alabamian at 9:40 PM
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A question for the Auburn folks
posted by Alabamian at 9:10 PM
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Unholy matrimony
posted by Alabamian at 8:30 PM
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Adventures in legal reasoning
As you might expect, these facts have resulted in wildly overcrowded state prisons with conditions that bring to mind words like dangerous and deplorable. Perhaps inevitably, the cramped conditions in Alabama's prisons have spilled over into the county jails that often serve as way stations for inmates on their way to the state corrections system. County sheriffs, unsurprisingly, aren't very happy about that, and they said as much in the form of a lawsuit.
But this isn't your garden-variety lawsuit. It's the kind that's still going strong after a decade and a half. It's the kind that gets a former state prison commissioner held in contempt. It's the kind that can leave lawyers wondering what exactly they saw in this "legal profession" in the first place.
It's also the kind that can lead to the advancement of some novel legal theories, like the ones Circuit Judge William Shashy heard Thursday as state officials unsuccessfully sought the case's dismissal. For example, new state prison commissioner Richard Allen argued that it's not so bad to keep almost 500 state inmates in county jails after the 30-day deadline to transfer them, because, after all, that's only about seven per county. (Besides, county jails aren't quite as jam-packed as state prisons, so shouldn't they just shut up and accept their fair share of overcrowding?)
Shashy also rejected several other dismissal arguments, including 1) "just leave it to the other branches of government," 2) "we're working on it," and 3) "it's just lasted so long, Your Honor." Shashy's response to No. 3: "You act like I like this thing going on. I don't know what you're saying there, but I find that bizarre."
He's not the only one.
In fairness, Gov. Bob Riley pushed several long-needed prison reforms through the Legislature this year, including voluntary sentencing guidelines aimed at restoring some sanity to the criminal justice process. Still, experts say it'll be years before we see any gains from those measures, and Alabama's prison system continues to be so overwhelmed that the state is outsourcing hundreds of inmates to out-of-state facilities. The picture may get prettier in a few years, but it won't stop being ugly any time soon.
So what's the long-term answer to Alabama's prison woes? Simple: Our leaders must stop overreacting and face reality. As The Huntsville Times editorialized last week: "Until the legislators muster the fortitude to stand up to the 'soft-on-crime' allegations by the demagogues who would ignore rationality and practicality for political purposes, not much is going to be accomplished."
Assuming, of course, that endlessly creative legal arguments and never-ending lawsuits count as "not much."
posted by Alabamian at 8:10 PM
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Wednesday, April 26, 2006
The power of oblivion
Scarier: Nine percent don't recognize Condoleezza Rice's name.
Scariest: Four percent of respondents claimed they don't know who Dick Cheney is, and some of them might not have been joking.
posted by Alabamian at 8:55 PM
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Even the Lions never did that
posted by Alabamian at 7:00 PM
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Great moments in education
posted by Alabamian at 6:35 PM
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The 'something new' I've learned today
posted by Alabamian at 2:10 AM
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The Pulitzer quest has to start somewhere
posted by Alabamian at 1:30 AM
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Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Yeah, that's really not happening
In case it wasn't enough that Darby hosted a speech by a Holocaust denier last year, The Tuscaloosa News reported last month that he personally thinks the Nazis killed no more than 70,000 Jews. And in case that wasn't enough, Darby also thinks the Supreme Court had no right to order school desegregation.
In an indication that few people are aware of Darby's views yet, recent polls show that he trails Mobile County District Attorney John Tyson, Jr., by a mere 9 points in the Democratic primary race. Fortunately, more than two-thirds of the voters are still undecided, which means Tyson should steamroll to victory once people start paying more attention to politics in a few weeks.
posted by Alabamian at 2:45 PM
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Bob + skeet = NRA endorsement
In related news, Riley's opponent in the GOP gubernatorial primary, Roy Moore, would like the world to know that he and his three sons are all armed.
posted by Alabamian at 1:40 PM
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When red is actually purple
I place limited stock in the survey, because its respondents' partisan breakdown is 46 percent Democrats and 43 percent Republicans. As a reflection of the whole state, that just doesn't ring true to me, nor does the suggestion that only 4 percent of voters identify as independents. If future surveys from a variety of pollsters show that lots of independent voters have moved to the Democratic camp, that'd be a different story, but it's not a story to accept as gospel based on one poll.
Still, other recent polling has shown that Bush's popularity is in freefall even in a state where he won re-election with 64 percent of the vote in 2004. The April installment of SurveyUSA's 50-state tracking poll shows Bush's approval rating down to 45 percent in Alabama, with 51 percent disapproving of his performance. That number is down 6 points from the previous month, and it's one more indicator of the fallacy of the idea that most voters can be painted immutably red or blue.
posted by Alabamian at 1:20 PM
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Monday, April 24, 2006
Hey, he said it...
posted by Alabamian at 1:30 AM
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So I won't even mention it
posted by Alabamian at 1:20 AM
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Another proud campaign trail moment
The real fun came at the speech's start, though, when Birdsong accidentally moved Huntsville about 170 miles to the southeast.
posted by Alabamian at 1:10 AM
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It's hard out here for a judge
To say the least, that number compares somewhat unfavorably to the output from the other new justices, Mike Bolin and Patty Smith, who have churned out 38 and 28 opinions, respectively. Parker's GOP primary opponent, Chief Justice Drayton Nabers, handled 24 cases in 2005, even though his caseload is halved due to his obligations as administrator of the state court system.
But Parker, who rode his buddy Roy Moore's Ten Commandments controversy to victory, can explain. You see, it took him a while to hire staffers and get this whole "judging" thing down pat, especially since he'd never been a judge before. Pay no attention to the fact that Justice Champ Lyons somehow wrote 33 opinions in his first year despite also never having been a judge before.
Unsurprisingly, Parker's fellow justices aren't pleased. One is known to have cursed him out this year, and the court is thinking of transferring some of his 73 cases to justices with a track record of writing more than one opinion a year.
posted by Alabamian at 12:30 AM
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Sunday, April 23, 2006
Sundays are for survey stories
1) Exactly where has Baxley been, anyway? Has anyone told her that the primary is about a month away and that she might want to start talking about some of her positions, or at least telling the public to check her website for them?
2) Will Siegelman's corruption trial be over by election day? Would Democratic voters hand him the nomination with a federal sword of Damocles still hanging precariously over his head? Any ideas where Alabamians can get a good deal on garden shears?
3) Will Gov. Bob Riley's 44-point lead over former Chief Justice Roy Moore on the Republican side prompt Democrats who otherwise would have crossed over to return to the party fold? And if so, does Siegelman have any chance whatsoever of winning a Democratic primary without large-scale white flight?
4) Will I ever come to accept the (Mobile) Press-Register's name change? Furthermore, should I?
posted by Alabamian at 11:50 PM
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Thursday, April 20, 2006
Political rule of thumb
posted by Alabamian at 9:05 PM
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In which the year's theme is reintroduced
Nine measures targeting illegal immigration died, including one that rightly would punish employers who regularly hire undocumented workers and another that punitively would permit officials to seize the vehicles and personal property of otherwise law-abiding illegal immigrants. The inaction leaves immigration available for lawmakers to use as a hot-button wedge issue in the fall, and even better for them, it allows them to blame the other side for not doing anything.
The state will issue "God Bless America" license plates beginning in October, giving people an alternative to the standard "Stars Fell on Alabama" and a way, at no extra cost, to sort the ultra-patriotic from the merely patriotic.
Alabama public schools won't teach a uniform elective Bible literacy class after the enabling legislation stalled. It might seem counterintuitive to chalk this one up to electoral mechinations, but the bill's failure protects incumbents on all fronts. Public schools still can offer Bible-related electives, the state can avoid a church-state lawsuit, and politicians can dodge the wrath of more conservative Christians who would have been mad that the bill didn't allow the teaching of the Bible as the literal truth.
And yes, in keeping with tradition, state employees got a pay raise in a year ending with an even number. The fact that the move was justifiable on policy grounds -- salaries have fallen behind the cost of living lately -- probably didn't hurt either, but history indicates it wasn't the dispositive factor.
posted by Alabamian at 9:00 PM
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Take a deep breath
And the advertising! If there exists a finer art form than the well-crafted television attack ad rooted in distortions and half-truths, then I have yet to see it, dear readers. But those who demand more of a back-to-basics approach should fear not: Your craving for a splash of color around every bend surely will be satisfied by the sundry campaign signs spreading across our beauteous roadsides like kudzu on steroids. By August, they actually should be in the roads, bestowing daily commutes with that special touch of Watkins Glen they've all been missing.
OK, back to the here and now. Legislators once again saved a lot of their work for the last minute -- the last day just wouldn't seem as special if they didn't -- and as always, bills running the gamut from great to bizarre wriggled their way out of Goat Hill.
Among the good: The Legislature will require children to ride in booster seats until they turn 6, a compromise version of a measure that originally extended to 12-year-olds. The state also will institute a statewide back-to-school tax holiday on the first weekend of every August, giving parents some needed relief on the costs of school clothes and supplies.
Among the bad: Legislators overrode Gov. Bob Riley's veto to create a new system of legislative pork allocations after the state Supreme Court struck down the old system as unconstitutional. They also failed to strike a deal on a proposed constitutional amendment to ban the use of eminent domain to benefit private owners, but being that Alabama already has a law barring such actions, the real-world legal fallout amounts to precisely zero.
Among the bizarre: Alabama now has an official state tree fruit. It's the peach, and it's not to be confused with the blackberry, which is the state's official non-tree fruit. The move is believed to be unrelated to the Legislature's designation of the black bear, which sometimes eats berries, as Alabama's official state mammal last month, though Stephen Colbert certainly should investigate.
posted by Alabamian at 6:00 PM
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Wednesday, April 19, 2006
'Roy never had much interest in the law'
Bear in mind two things while reading these comments: 1) Moore, Parker, and Woodall are all Republicans, so the remarks aren't motivated by partisanship, and 2) Woodall isn't running directly against either of them in the primary, so he isn't just jockeying for electoral position. Without further adieu, here are copious excerpts to whet your appetite.
On Parker's newspaper column condemning the other justices for following a U.S. Supreme Court precedent that Parker didn't like: "I think I was the only (justice) who actually called Parker to cuss him out, but we were all mad. It was cowardly and deceitful, and a whole lot of other words that I guess I won't say here."
On Moore's approach to church-state issues: "Roy never had much interest in the law. I'd say he has an average legal mind. ... I sometimes think (Moore) has said it so much he's starting to believe it, but it's all gibberish."
On Parker's efficiency: "He doesn't handle his cases; he just lets them pile up. He's apparently so busy conspiring against the rest of the court that he doesn't have time to be a judge."
On Moore's gubernatorial run: "I think it would set the state back 40 or 50 years ... if Moore becomes governor."
On the changing definition of conservatism: "I had always thought following the law was conservative, but apparently not."
posted by Alabamian at 9:55 PM
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Tuesday, April 18, 2006
The price you pay to play the game
There was a reason I liked this idea, right?
posted by Alabamian at 11:35 AM
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Sunday, April 16, 2006
Happy Easter, everyone
posted by Alabamian at 11:50 PM
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(Roy) Moore is less
Yes, (out-of-state) readers, you read the previous sentence correctly. Nicholls (again) with a conclusion: "It's hard to imagine what might happen to bring Moore back to competitiveness. Bottom line is that the fat lady may not have sung for Roy Moore, but she's warming up."
And yes, this (probably) is the last Press-Register wisecrack.
posted by Alabamian at 11:35 PM
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Ah, the power of posterboard
posted by Alabamian at 11:15 PM
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Friday, April 14, 2006
Bowled over
Don't worry; there'll be enough seats for everyone.
posted by Alabamian at 4:55 PM
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Wednesday, April 12, 2006
Now give me a talk show
posted by Alabamian at 6:45 PM
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Things I just don't get
- Why the Mobile Register changed its name to the (Mobile) Press-Register without retaining the name of its hometown in the masthead, forcing people to do things like place "Mobile" in parentheses in front of its name.
- Why former Gov. Jim Folsom, Jr., waited until the last second to enter the lieutenant governor's race as the Democratic nominee last week when one of his potential GOP opponents has saturated the airwaves with ads for weeks and another arguably has even greater name recognition than Folsom does.
- Where exactly a video that curses at Bush administration officials would fit into an eighth-grade science curriculum.
- How anyone could do what was done to former Alabama football booster Logan Young.
posted by Alabamian at 5:35 PM
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Tuesday, April 11, 2006
'Twas a fine time for some time off
- History's most famous hunting accident.
- A season's worth of episodes of Wide World of Ports.
- The former House majority leader's decision to become a former congressman.
- The acceleration of religious strife and violence in Iraq.
- Disclosure of the White House's leaks of discredited information to try to discredit an Iraq war critic.
- A retired Marine lieutenant general's public condemnation of the Iraq war planning.
- The decline of the Bush administration's approval ratings.
- The misplaced assignment of blame to the media and/or liberals for all of the above.
- A former GOP House speaker's call for Iraq withdrawal.
- Hundreds of thousands of peaceful Hispanic protesters in the streets.
- Hundreds of thousands of not entirely peaceful French protesters in the streets.
- Iran playing chicken with a country with lots of nukes.
- Italy playing bouncer with a PM with lots of media outlets.
- The deaths of a great athlete and a wretched murderer.
- The al-Qaeda guy's apparent death wish.
- South Dakota's decision to force rape victims to carry any resulting, non-life-threatening pregnancy to term.
- A Georgia congresswoman's decision to hit a policeman.
- The next step in the rebirth of Ma Bell.
- A couple of humdrum international sports extravaganzas that got less American attention than a singing contest.
- Yet another guy from the Birmingham area excelling in the aforementioned singing contest.
- Tony Soprano getting a taste of his own fictional medicine.
- Arnold Vinick getting a taste of narrow fictional defeat.
- Denny Crane's worst fictional nightmare arriving -- for real
-- in the Yellowhammer State. - Poor Alabama workers finally catching a tax break.
- Poor Alabama renters finally getting a landlord-tenant law.
- Poor Alabama hogs and dogs finally ending their rodeos.
- The Brody Bill faring a bit better than the Tim Tebow Bill.
- Gators and Blazers and Founding Fathers, oh, my.
... what did I miss?
posted by Alabamian at 5:05 PM
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