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This is a double column, sort of a theme week on rampant stupidity.  I’ll
be traveling next week doing college shows and book signings and simply
will not have any time to write.  Thanks for understanding.

Speaking of the book, Steal This Book And Get Life Without Parole is now
available and can be ordered at a 25% discount directly from
http://www.commoncouragepress.com.

Thanks!

bh





THE SCOOP for August 23, 1999
___________________________

The GOP Iowa Poll Winner May Have Had Prior Experience With Straws
And Other Various Stupidity
© 1999 Bob Harris
http://www.bobharris.com
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



At first glance, it seems that George W. Bush could have turned the
cocaine issue on its head, winning millions of votes, simply by uttering
one simple sentence:

"Yes, when I was younger, I did try cocaine.  But I didn’t inhale."

In one stroke, the issue would be confronted with Tim Allen-style
directness and turned into a reminder of Bill Clinton’s evasiveness.

Instead, the man the GOP hopes will make voters forget Bill Clinton has
issued his own series of half-tweaked semi-denials, strongly implying but
refusing to confront his widely-rumored past abuse of cocaine.

And this from the leader of the party which claims a monopoly on personal
responsibility.

By way of defense, Bush campaign prefers us to consider such issues as
strictly personal, and therefore outside the bounds of public debate.

To our credit, that’s how millions of Americans would like to perceive the
issue.  In a recent survey, roughly half said they think Bush should come
clean with his whole story, but an equal number said that past cocaine use
wouldn’t affect their opinion of his candidacy.

Which isn’t surprising: as the nation merely shrugs at the knowledge that
Al Gore smoked marijuana repeatedly and Newt Gingrich spent the last few
years Renewing America with a congressional aide 23 years his junior, most
sane people realize that, save the odd felony, the citizenry cares more
about public policy than private peccadilloes.

And so the question of Bush’s possible drug use is debated as roughly
equal to Bill Clinton’s sex life: both are framed as personal issues that
may or may not have public implications, and the debate therefore centers
largely over whether or not questions on such issues are even valid.

There is a difference, however.

And it’s not about honesty or integrity or any similarly rare conceit
among politicians.  Both Bush and Clinton, in this example, have
demonstrated a disturbing inability to look America in the eye and say
what they did and didn’t do.  Both have tried to present this inability as
a strength of character, refusing to bow to such rude levels of inquiry.
And for both, the ploy has plainly failed.

Here’s the difference:

Oral sex is not a felony.  (That’s not quite true, actually: in a dozen
states, it is; however, the laws are rarely prosecuted.  And thank God.
Almost everyone I know would be in prison.)

Cocaine possession is.

The state of Texas alone – where George W. Bush is Governor -- locks up
about 15,000 people each year for drug offenses.

One recent study by the Texas Justice Policy Council found that 64%
percent of those convicted of cocaine possession in Texas were holding
less than *half a gram.*

For those of you unfamiliar with drugs: in terms of amount, that’s very
roughly comparable to sending someone to prison for a single marijuana
joint.

Leaving aside here any debate over legalization, sentencing fairness, or
other specific aspects of drug policy, and merely looking at the question
of intellectual consistency, let’s just look at the amazing position the
leading campaign fundraiser in American history now asks us to accept:

Do the math, and George Bush, in his term as Governor of the state of
Texas, has presided over the felony imprisonment of roughly 10,000 people
for precisely the same activity that he is now increasingly hinting he
engaged in himself.

This is the frame in which the current debate should be properly set.

If indeed, as now seems likely, Bush eventually concedes earlier casual
cocaine abuse, a stronger argument for either

a) George W. Bush’s unfitness for office,
b) the insanity of current drug laws, or, arguably,
c) both

could not possibly be made.

___________________________

President Clinton is proud of the 1996 Welfare Reform law.  The number of
recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) has fallen by
half, and the number of welfare recipients is down by over 5 million.

But does that mean Welfare Reform has worked?  Not necessarily.

Just in time for the law’s third anniversary, a new study from the Center
on Budget and Policy Priority looks at income changes for single parent
households – accounting for 90 percent of AFDC payments – and finds that
Welfare Reform has hardly been a rousing success.

In the two years prior to Welfare Reform, disposable income among the
poorest fifth of households was actually rising; in the years since, it is
falling.  The poorest are now becoming even poorer.

In addition, while the number of poor children has fallen since 1996, the
number of child food stamp and AFDC recipients has decreased much more
sharply, indicating that many thousands of children who remain in need
have been pushed off the federal rolls.

But in the mainstream view, Welfare Reform has marvelously reduced the
burden that support for the needy places on the federal budget.

And indeed it has -- in much the same way cutting off the oxygen supply
eventually reduces the burden astronauts place on a spacecraft.

___________________________

In the state of Kansas, evolution is no longer considered part of science.

But that’s OK.  In turn, science no longer considers Kansas part of
evolution.

If you haven’t heard, by a vote of 6 to 4 – assuming, of course, that math
is still a science, and not some dangerous liberal conspiracy – the Kansas
state school board has decreed that evolution should be eliminated as a
basic principle of biology and other sciences.

This doesn’t mean that individual schools can’t teach evolution.  They
can, although they’ll have to face mobs of angry villagers waving pointed
sticks and fire.  What this does mean is that evolution can’t be part of
state sanctioned tests.  Which includes most of the important exams.

Which means that pre-med students from Seattle and New York will enter
Harvard Med School knowing about random genetic mutation, natural
selection, the adaptation of species, and survival of the fittest.

Pre-meds from Topeka will arrive knowing about the Sixth Day.

The presidents of all six Kansas public universities signed a letter
saying the new standards, quote, "set Kansas back a century."  Which seems
entirely the point.

Although let’s hope they don’t go much further back in time.  Somehow I
don’t think the Kansas school board would like meeting some of their more
ancient ancestors.

___________________________

The Gulfport, Mississippi school board has banned a teenage student from
wearing the Star of David… because they say it’s a gang symbol.

Excuse me?  That’s one hell of a big gang they’re trying to get rid of.

Last week, a 15-year old Jewish boy named Ryan Green was actually told he
wasn’t allowed to wear a small six-pointed pin.  In the wake of Columbine,
his school is trying to crack down on potentially violent gang activity,
and so teachers are on the lookout for strange symbols worn to display
solidarity among members of a secretive group.

In other words, apparently: Jews.

And gee, I can’t think of anything more frightening than a gang of 15-year
old Jewish boys.  If you’re not careful, they might surround you and
*read.*

Then again, that *would* frighten some people in Mississippi.

So is the ban on the Star of David the result of latent anti-Semitism?
Oh, possibly.  Notably, nobody’s trying to get rid of the crucifix as a
gang symbol, even though burning crosses have been used by a fairly
prominent Mississippi gang for well over a century.

As it happens, the school superintendent openly admitted that he actually
didn’t know of any gangs using the Star Of David.  And that’s because
there aren’t any.  A check with the anti-hate group Southern Poverty Law
Center finds no record of a single gang in the entire state of Mississippi
that has ever used the Star of David as a gang logo even once.

In fact, there’s only one such group in the whole country, the Black
Hebrew Israelites of New York -- who sound more confused than anything, if
you ask me -- and no one is trying to claim that Ryan Green is leading a
group of Black Hebrew Israelites marauding around Gulfport.

Even if he was, it sure sounds like Gulfport could certainly use the
diversity.

So the ACLU, which can handle a case like this the way Mark McGwire can
handle T-ball, has filed suit, trying to ensure that a Jewish kid will be
allowed to be visibly Jewish.  Even in Mississippi.

If the Star of David is a gang symbol… then the motion I’m making with my
hand right now is a gesture of love.

___________________________

SOMETHING ODD I JUST HAD TO SHARE

These are actual headlines I came across this week while reading the
Reuters newswire:

Reaching 100 Reflects A Healthy Life
Stretch Longer For Better Flexibility
Impaired Ability To Swim Likely Cause Of Drowning

Dateline: Planet Duh.

___________________________

The following story was recently emailed here by a good friend in the
entertainment industry whose voice you would almost certainly recognize.
She also sent photographs and has witnesses to back up the story, so I
personally buy it.  Besides which, I *like* believing it.  And really,
isn’t that what politics is (all too often) ultimately all about?

Last fall, Bill Clinton and his entourage attended a Democratic fundraiser
held at a private home at the end of a narrow and winding street in the
mountains above Beverly Hills.

My friend, who apparently isn’t quite yet in the economic class to snag an
invite to such a shindig, nonetheless wanted to greet Mr. Clinton as his
motorcade passed her home, which is further down the street.  And so for
the occasion, she fashioned a discreet, hand-made sign carrying the
encouraging message:

SHOW
US YOUR
WEENIE
WILLY

I think my friend’s support for Clinton through his difficult emotional
troubles could not have been clearer or more elegantly understated.

However, due to prior personal commitments, she was unable to personally
greet the President with this message.  So, not wishing her sentiments to
pass unnoticed, she decided to leave her cordial message for Mr. Clinton
on her front lawn, propped up against a lamp post.  And while she and her
husband were gone, the President’s motorcade came and went, presumably
passing their house, and the large black-and-white sign, twice.

When they returned that evening, the power was off in their house.  Every
other house up and down both sides of the street still had electricity.

And theirs remained the only house in the neighborhood with no electricity
until morning.

I don’t know how that could be arranged, and maybe it’s just a
coincidence.  Oh, heck, probably.  Sure.  Stuff like that just happens all
the time, right?

Still.

That’s just kinda cool.

___________________________

And finally: the L.A. Times reports that after his attack on a suburban
day care center, white supremacist Buford Furrow went to Hollywood to look
for a prostitute, couldn’t find one, and then caught a cab to Las Vegas.

Wait a minute.  The guy couldn’t find a hooker… in *Hollywood?*

That’s like not finding ice in the arctic.  There’s a burger joint on
Sunset where if you order a sandwich and a drink, you can get Supersized
by a transvestite for just 99¢.

And this guy calls himself a part of the master race…

___________________________

Bob Harris is a stand-up comedian, political writer, and syndicated radio
humorist. His new book, Steal This Book And Get Life Without Parole, is
now available from http://www.commoncouragepress.com.

To receive a free email subscription to The Scoop, just send a blank email
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___________________________

Bob's Big Plug-O-Rama™ (updated 8/9/99):

Steal This Book And Get Life Without Parole has arrived from the printer
and can be ordered directly from http://www.commoncouragepress.com at 25%
off the retail price.  The book includes cartoons by Tom Tomorrow and a
foreword by Paul Krassner, who edited Lenny Bruce's autobiography, How to
Talk Dirty and Influence People.

I’ll be doing readings at bookstores around the country during my fall
college tour. So far, the book has already received hugely kind praise
from Michael Moore, Jim Hightower, Jeff Cohen, and lots of other cool
people. This is way exciting.

Http://www.bobharris.com now includes streaming stand-up comedy clips,
radio commentaries, and lots of other stuff like early writing samples
from National Lampoon, my first published cartoons, and other such whatnot.

Syndication of "This Is Bob Harris," the daily radio feature, is rolling
along: 75 stations and counting. Call your favorite station and ask for
the feature. They pay attention, honest.

The radio stuff is also broadcast up to four times a day in over 140
countries by Armed Forces Radio – including during the 3rd commercial
break of the Rush Limbaugh program! This is balance: he gets an hour, Jim
Hightower and I each get a minute.

You can also hear an audio version of my commentaries at Soapbox,
http://www.webactive.com/webactive/soapbox/monday.html.

Some columns are reprinted in the current print editions of Dollars &
Sense, Extra!, and the Funny Times.  The Scoop now has readers in 42
countries.

Finally, Mother Jones online (http://www.motherjones.com) now carries The
Scoop almost every week. I am honored to be associated with these people.
They rule.


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