AUSTIN, Texas -- Gosh, the most balloons EVER! I bet all you slackers out
there who weren't watching are sorry now.
Just a few hints to Gov. George W. Bush's speechwriter: When you go into
the riff about "I want to change the tone of Washington to one of civility
and respect," try putting it more than two paragraphs away from your last
attempt to stick a shiv in the Democrats.
If it had come just a few grafs later, we might already have forgotten the
seven paragraphs of jabs at Al Gore, including the one that worked, "He now
leads the party of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, but the only thing he has to
offer is fear itself."
See? Just a little more separation, and you can have your cake and eat it,
too. You can trash the D's and still call for "civility and respect" without
being accused of hypocrisy.
Item Two: For eight years, the R's have been attacking Bill Clinton with a
focus that often bordered on the maniacal. It is simply an obsession. And it
has never worked.
For eight years, we have watched Clinton-hatred boomerang. The man drives
R's so batty that they do stuff like shut down the government and issue the
Starr Report, which just hacks everybody off.
For heaven's sake, drop it. You are not running against Clinton, and if you
were, you'd be in a lot more trouble.
If I were you, I wouldn't stir up Ol' Slick -- he's a better politician
than your man.
Item Three: You've got another problem with trying to have your cake and
eat it. You can't warn people off the record in Texas ("Don't Mess With
Texas") and then selectively brag on it yourself.
You can't whine, "They do nothing but attack" when people point out that
Texas has a miserable record on the environment, health insurance, social
services, housing, kindergarten, the death penalty, gun control, colonias,
mental health, indigent defense, social justice, etc., and then brag that
our schools are getting better.
(And in the name of reality, thank you so much for finally having George W.
acknowledge that he does not deserve ALL the credit for the improvement of
the schools. The two generations of Texans who did the hard work appreciate
that.)
Also in having-cake-eating-too, you might want to rethink having Bush, who
was quite a late bloomer (40, by his account), lecture the nation on
"responsibility." Quite a few of us "grew up" a long time before he did. If
I had ever once heard him acknowledge the extent to which he himself is the
product of discrimination in his favor, I'd think more of his
"responsibility" theme.
Because Bush's record is so dim, you have to be verrry careful not just
about what you claim but what you propose as well. For example, one of his
biggest applause lines Thursday night was: "We must help protect our
children, in our schools and streets, by (finally) strictly enforcing our
nation's gun laws."
Unfortunately, the Texas record in this category is, once again, dismal.
Texas has more than 600 unprosecuted cases related to people seeking
licenses to carry concealed weapons.
According to The Wall Street Journal (citing data that the Houston
Chronicle had covered previously), "of the 2,658 applicants denied in the
program's first three years, 590 were denied as 'convicted felons' and
another 181 for what appeared to be felony-related reasons. Yet, to that
time, NONE (emphasis added) of those were referred to prosecutors, despite
the potential that felons illegally had firearms -- they are needed for the
gun-training course -- or had perjured themselves on the application."
Bush became governor by promising to sign a concealed-weapons law.
According to incomplete statistics from the Department of Public Safety, as
of May this year, 889 licensed carriers had been arrested for felony
violations ranging from 27 cases of murder, attempted murder or manslaughter
to promotion of child pornography. Another 2,790 were arrested for
misdemeanors and 960 for civil crimes like violation of a protective order.
Item Four: The trouble with W. Bush's vision for using "faith-based
institutions" (what a curious euphemism) to replace government social
services with private volunteers is that sooner or later, someone is bound
to remember this was his daddy's Thousand Points of Light program. And it
didn't work then, either.
Item Five: I liked the religious cadence of the "I believe ... " section,
and I thought the bit about Americans being "on the sunrise side of the
mountain" was a nice Reaganesque touch.
To the stage managers: Next time, watch out for that going-overboard-on-the
diversity stuff. Although the stage looked like a Motown reunion, when the
cameras panned around the hall, it was "American Gothic" on Maalox. Contrast
too painful.
My favorite line of the whole convention: During the roll call, Utah began
the recitation of its manifold excellences with: "Utah, the only state that
begins with U."
P.S.: Bob Bullock, the Texas lite guv who died last year, was not "crusty."
Try blunt, profane, irreverent, irascible and ornery.
Molly Ivins is a columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. To find out
more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
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