Top Ten
In what shouldn't be a surpise to anyone, Ole Miss once again made the list of the top ten drinking schools. Apparently, though, we're taking lessons from University of Wisonsin, which landed the number one spot.
EDINBURG, Texas (AP) -- Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean argued Friday that Republicans will make immigrants the "scapegoats" in the next election.There a number of things that can be said about this but a few in particular jump out. First, the use of the word scapegoat is a bit too cynical (even for a bitter Democrat). Illegal immigration is a valid campaign issue. It's an issue reasonable minds can disagree on and it's an issue that one would expect the rival political parties to take seriously and offer plausible solutions to the problems it presents. If in Dean's mind the Republicans are scapegoating any time they try to run on an issue, then it would seem that Mr. Dean has little confidence in competing in the arena of ideas. Rather than counterpoint whatever approach the rival party may take to immigration, Dean tries to disqualify the GOP entirely--portraying them as mean brutes taking cruel advantage of a defenseless, underprivileged group of people. Were Dean a shrewd politician, he would offer ideas and not invectives. He would craft a Democratic approach to tackling the problem of illegal immigration that would put the Republicans on the defensive.
At a rally, Dean garnered the loudest applause when he said Republicans would make immigration a pivotal issue during upcoming elections, as they did gay marriage and affirmative action in previous elections.
"Do you know who the scapegoats are going to be? Immigrants," he said. "In Colorado, the chairman of the Republican Party endorsed Tom Tancredo for re-election. That is morally reprehensible. The governor of California, a supposed moderate Republican, invited the Minutemen to visit California. We do not need vigilante justice."
As the 60th anniversary of "the bomb" approaches, we've largely forgotten conditions in 1945. Our children get ideas about the war from books such as "Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes," an elementary school favorite about a young Hiroshima victim. They learn of the bomb's horrors but not why it was dropped.She goes on to note all the hundreds of thousands of American AND Asian lives that would have perished had we proceeded with a protracted invasion of Japan that, arguably, could have made the invasion of France look like a walk in the park. Read the whole thing.
Those who lived through the war, however, can still remind us.