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Wednesday Evening News Roundup

Wednesday Evening News Roundup

Been extremely busy the last 48-72 hours. I thought the trauma season was supposed to end when the cold weather begins to creep on in. Not.

There was a time, in the not-too-distant past, when politicians were actually relatively thoughtful. They didn’t say ridiculously stupid things out in public. Freshman Representative Roger Rivard stated, “some girls, the rape so easy.” You know, it doesn’t matter in what context you say something this stupid. It should never be said in public.

Syria appears to be in a world of trouble. Turkish fighter jets forced down a Syrian airliner that left Moscow heading towards Damascus. This is starting to get ugly, really ugly.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform had what some would call a hearing, but others recall a knockdown drag-out, partisan fight that resembled something from WWE. At the center of the finger-pointing was the attack on our embassy in Benghazi. Republicans have accused the Obama administration of not providing enough security. Hell, an argument erupted over whether a particular photo was classified or not. In my opinion, shouldn’t the State Department know whether a photo they have is classified? If they don’t know, they should be fired. The bottom line – I don’t know what the protocol is for security at an outpost like Benghazi, Libya. After a day of finger-pointing, I don’t think they were any closer to understanding what happened in Benghazi and whether the security was adequate or inadequate, nor whether the embassy asked for more security or not.

According to the US Court of Appeals for the DC circuit, the South Carolina voter ID law does not discriminate against African-Americans. Yet, they have stated that the ID law cannot go into effect until 2013.

Get out your Etch-a-Sketch, Mitt Romney has significantly changed his positions on multiple issues including taxes, immigration, healthcare and even education. Are you surprised?

 

By |2012-10-12T11:59:49-04:00October 10th, 2012|Domestic Issues|Comments Off on Wednesday Evening News Roundup

Newt Gingrich is not a serious candidate

When this whole presidential hoopla started, more than a year ago, I was surprised when Newt Gingrich announced that he was running for president. I figured that his time had passed. He had been out of Washington for more than a decade, during which time he started multiple enterprises. All of his enterprises seem to be tied into his former political life as a US Congressman and Speaker of the House. Upon further reflection, all of these enterprises seem to require rich businessmen handing money over to Newt Gingrich, because, and this is important, he still had access to power. These enterprises seem to require that Newt Gingrich is still important in Washington. Therefore, I concluded that he really wasn’t running for president, but was running so that he could prove to his benefactors that he was still extremely important person.

Over the first several months of his campaign, my theory held up. He never really spent money on infrastructure or campaign personnel. Instead, Newt Gingrich seemed to go from city to city selling books. He had a lot of early upheaval with turnover in his extremely small campaign staff, but this did not seem to faze him. Then, somewhere in Iowa, it seemed that he began to believe the press. It seemed that he was beginning to become serious about running for president. In South Carolina, his stop seemed to be more about campaigning and less about selling books or any of his other products. Newt Gingrich was serious.

Now, Newt Gingrich was a front runner. I don’t know whether he lost his mojo or whether he did not know what to do with his front-runner status, but Newt Gingrich seemed to lose focus. He is in the middle of a knock-down, drag-out fight with Mitt Romney. He needed to sharpen his message. How is he going to improve the country? How is he a better Republican candidate then Mitt Romney? How could he turn the economy around? Can someone explain to me how a “major” Republican candidate in the middle of a tight primary can even suggest America going to the moon? He said it with a straight face. Did he just say this to please a Florida space crowd? Did he think through this lunar colony?

I think that this is yet another example of how Newt is not a serious candidate. This isn’t the 1970s, where the sky was the limit. Our economy is struggling to make jobs. Europe is on the brink of implosion as Greek debt seems to be an unsolvable problem. Yet, Newt is talking about spending billions of dollars not just to go to the moon but to build a colony. Wow. I can’t wrap my mind around how irresponsible a statement that was.

By |2012-01-27T20:25:34-04:00January 27th, 2012|Elections, NASA|Comments Off on Newt Gingrich is not a serious candidate
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