Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Top 10 ways the House of Representatives’ environmental spending bill would ruin your summer
While millions of Americans are relaxing and
unwinding at parks, on beaches, and in backyards across the country this
summer, the House Appropriations Committee is launching a massive assault on
their public health and summer vacations. The Fiscal Year 2014 Interior and
Environment Appropriations Bill is full of provisions to block the enforcement
of clean-air and water safeguards, eliminate protection for America’s public
lands, and make it easier for Big Oil and coal companies to pollute.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Steve Flowers: Inside the Statehouse: Will Ivey and Strange return in 2014?
Last week we handicapped the 2014 governor’s race
but it is definitely not the only race on the ballot next year. In fact, all
constitutional offices are up for election as well as all 140 seats in the
legislature and all 67 sheriffs. Indeed, this is the big election year in
Alabama.
Monday, July 29, 2013
Charles C. Haynes: A right for the religious is a right for the nonreligious
Government in America must be neutral among
religions and neutral between religion and non-religion – at least that’s how
the U.S. Supreme Court interprets the establishment clause of the First
Amendment.
But escalating conflicts involving government
treatment of the nonreligious – atheists and humanists – reveal that far too
many government officials are confused and conflicted about the meaning of
“neutrality.”
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Michael Josephson: The dangers of absolutism
The world of ethics spreads from the borders of the
absolutists, who think every moral question has a clear and single answer, to
the coast of the relativists, who believe ethics is a matter of personal
opinion or regional custom.
In distinguishing right from wrong, absolutists
don’t see much of a difference between mathematical calculation and moral
reasoning. They’re extraordinarily confident about their ethical judgments,
which can range from uncompromising commitment to truth, responsibility, and
authority of law to ideas about religious beliefs, abortion, premarital sex,
protecting whales, and even body piercing and breastfeeding. Although
absolutism is often associated with conservatism, radical liberals can be just
as rigid.
Friday, July 26, 2013
Gene Policinski: Rolling Stone cover offers exercise of free speech for everyone
Don’t like the latest Rolling Stone magazine,
featuring “glam, rock-star” photo treatment on the cover of accused Boston
Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev?
Don’t buy the magazine.
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Katherine Robertson: The evolution of mandatory minimums
Mandatory minimums, when assigned to a crime in the
penal code, set the lowest available punishment that a judge may sentence an
offender to for a specified crime. Typically a defined term of imprisonment,
mandatory minimums have been in place and utilized by our national and state
criminal justice systems since the early days of the United States.
The very first mandatory minimum terms of
imprisonment were enacted by Congress in 1798 as part of the Sedition Act and
imposed a minimum sentence of six months for “opposing or impeding a federal
officer by means of insurrection, riot, or unlawful assembly.”
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
David A. Bergeron: The bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act would protect our students
This week the Senate will vote on the Bipartisan
Student Loan Certainty Act, a bill written by Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), chairman
of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, or HELP, Committee. Sen.
Harkin worked with Sens. Dick Durbin (D-IL), Joe Manchin (D-WV), Tom Carper
(D-DE), Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Richard Burr (R-NC), Angus King (I-ME), and Tom
Coburn (R-OK) to develop this bipartisan compromise, which would lower interest
rates for the 11 million student-loan borrowers who either have taken out or
will take out a new federal student loan after July 1, 2013.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Steve Flowers: Inside the Statehouse: Ticking down to 2014
Whether you realize it or not the 2014 election is
upon us. The call to arms began in June which is when campaign fundraising can
officially begin.
Under Alabama law, candidates can begin raising
money exactly one year prior to the elections. That has been interpreted to
mean one year prior to the primaries. The primary next year is in early June.
That is proper and fitting since we are now a one party state. Winning the
Republican Primary next June in any statewide race is tantamount to election in
the Heart of Dixie. The November election will be a formality or coronation.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Michael Josephson: Acting on principle and good intentions
I once heard a story about an emergency medical
technician I’ll call Jake who was summoned to help an unconscious woman. When
he arrived, she had no pulse. From her color and dilated eyes, he could tell
she’d suffered serious brain damage.
Still, he did his job exceptionally well, trying
over and over to restart her heart. She finally regained consciousness.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Gene Policinski: Fear after violent incidents imperils our core liberties
At various times, every American likely has wished
for less of some things that the First Amendment protects. Less hateful speech.
One less noisy protest group. Or maybe even the swift departure of a media
outlet or personality whose stance or voice is just grating on a personal
level.
But for the most part, those wishes come and go – or
the targets do, as media fortunes or political trends wax and wane.
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