It was my first foray into the frenzy of college
football. Neyland Stadium is fairly overwhelming, especially for a child.
Wrapped up in the excitement of the game day atmosphere only SEC rivalry games
can provide, I was nonetheless stuck between a crimson rock and a big orange
hard place. Third Saturday of October - if you don’t know what it really means,
you clearly ain’t from around here.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Monday, May 20, 2013
Charles C. Haynes: Graduation prayer, fighting over a lost cause
School officials in Lake City, Arkansas have come up
with a novel solution to the fight over prayer at graduation:
No prayer, no graduation.
On May 6, the school board voted to cancel
sixth-grade graduation at Lake City’s two elementary schools. The action came
soon after the district received a complaint letter from the Freedom From
Religion Foundation (FFRF) objecting to prayers at previous graduations.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Cameron Smith: For Obama the buck stops "There, there"
When the Great and Powerful Wizard of Oz is
confronted for breaking his promises and found to be a mere mortal, he utters
one of the most memorable lines in cinema history: "Pay no attention to
that man behind the curtain!"
With the numerous "scandals" facing the
Obama administration, Americans have little doubt that we, like Dorothy and
Toto, are certainly no longer in Kansas. The State Department's response to the
Benghazi attacks, the IRS's targeting of conservative groups, and the
Department of Justice spying on Associated Press reporters have piled up at the
front door of the White House.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Ilya Shambat: The Constitutional Pharisees
There have been many Republican and Libertarian
politicians claiming that the Democrats have been violating American
Constitution. Because so many people are saying this, this claim must be
answered.
As any student of Christianity knows, far more
important than obeying the letter of the Bible is obeying its spirit. The
people who obeyed the letter and not the spirit were known as Pharisees. These
people followed the Biblical law, but they did it for wrong reasons. They did
it for social climbing and holier-than-thou one-upmanship and not for the love
of God.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
The Real scandal in Libya: A security vacuum and new terrorist threats
President Barack Obama’s political opponents are
trying once again to manufacture a scandal out of the tragic deaths of four
American government personnel at a U.S. facility in Benghazi, Libya, last
September. Among those killed was the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Christopher
Stevens. The current political and media feeding frenzy surrounding the
Benghazi attacks is no more than a parsing of interagency debates on post-attack
talking points, and it is based on what former Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates called “cartoonish” views of U.S. military capabilities.
Edwin J. Feulner: The Recurring debt-limit drama
Get ready for a little deja vu from Washington. The
federal government is about to hit the debt ceiling, now set at a whopping
$16.8 trillion. Yes, again. It’s like the Bill Murray movie “Groundhog Day” —
only this time, unfortunately, no one is laughing.
Time and again, Congress bumps up against the debt
ceiling amid talk of finally getting spending under control. Time and again,
they raise the ceiling, but only after a sufficient dose of political theater.
How’s this for a punch line: The gross debt breaks down to more than $140,000
per American household. Still not laughing?
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Steve Flowers: Inside the Statehouse: Behind the Senate curtain
We are at the end of the third regular legislative
session of this quadrennium. They are closing in on the culmination of their
four-year terms.
This is the first Republican majority legislature in
modern Alabama history. The Republicans not only have a majority, they sport a
super majority. That means that the remaining Democratic minority is incapable
of stopping or even slowing down any GOP initiatives or budgets in either the
House or Senate. Republicans own a commanding 66 to 39 advantage in the House.
They have an even more lordly control of the House of Lords. They have an
omnipotent 24 to 11 ownership of the Senate.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Michael Josephson: A Call for more civility
When George Washington was 16, he discovered a
booklet of 110 maxims describing how a well-mannered person should behave. He
was so convinced that these maxims would help him become a better person that
he set out to incorporate them into his daily living. Among Washington’s many
virtues, his commitment to civility marked him as a gentleman and helped him
become a universally respected and enormously effective leader.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Are you connected?
Fresh photos from today's Harriott II cruise on our Facebook page! Don't forget to 'like' us: https://www.facebook.com/CapCityFreePress. We like to get our tweet on, too: https://twitter.com/TheCCFP. Happy Mother's Day!
Saturday, May 11, 2013
9 Reasons why progress on stronger gun laws is within reach
In the weeks that followed the tragic shooting at
Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, this past December,
advocates for stronger gun laws focused their efforts on a proposal to require
background checks for most gun sales between unlicensed buyers and sellers to
prevent criminals and other dangerous people from easily buying guns with no
questions asked. Three weeks ago, however, the Senate came six votes short of
the 60 votes required to advance this legislation, known as the Manchin-Toomey
amendment, that would have expanded gun background checks to all gun shows,
online purchases, and advertised sales.
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