Sarah in 2012?
Sarah Palin is a great conservative, but she may not be the
best choice for President:
The biggest problem with Palin is that she left office at the height of post-election pressure on her, and that spoke to whether or not she could handle the pressures of the presidency. The press has been especially unfair to Sarah Palin's family, and never seemed to understand that her very American family was the attraction to so many people. Those kinds of pressures, however, were going to be brought to bear on a family like the Palins, and it is something that just goes with the territory of being both a State and a national figure.
Labels: Conservatism, Elections, News Media, Political correctness, Presidential Election, Republican Party, Tennessee politics
Prescription?
Cold medicine
by prescription only?:
There is another proposal, however, to make all sales of pseudoephedrine products prescription purchases, something supported by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. The problem with this idea is that while the ingredients in these cold medications are indeed used in the production of meth, the medicines themselves are otherwise inexpensive cold and flu remedies. Prescription medicines are often far more expensive than their non-prescription counterparts, even if there is a non-prescription dose of the same product.
Labels: Conservatism, Local politics, Tennessee politics
A Clash Over Layoffs?
Will Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam and the General Assembly face off over
State employee layoffs?:
While a strong Republican majority in the Tennessee General Assembly is likely to maintain insistence on budgetary and fiscal discipline, a legislative session that goes beyond early May will still be prone to produce a budget that might feature some of the less desirable elements of what we might refer to as political sausage-making. Many Republican candidates ran on platforms of streamlining State government and scrapping unnecessary State bureaucracies and the bureaucrats that go with them. Yet Governor Haslam continues to insist that he doesn't intend to cut any State jobs this year.
Labels: Conservatism, Local politics, Tennessee politics
Unconstitutional
The judicial fight over the health care law has an
impact on every Tennessean:
The so-called "Obamacare" Health Care law is flawed for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that in the end it will undo many of the changes that have been made in Tennessee to TennCare to make it more cost-effective and save the State budget from TennCare causing it to collapse on itself. The legislation mandates greater coverage for the poor, elderly, and disabled, but it does nothing to address health care costs within the bounds of the federal Constitution, and that will lead to the truly helpless receiving rationed care, and even encouraged in the so-called "right to die."
Labels: Conservatism, Federal Courts, Political correctness, Tennessee politics
Keep and Bear
The Tennessee Constitution both re-enforces the right to keep and bear arms and allows the
wearing of arms to be regulated:
In 1796, Tennessee was still not only a rural place, but along with States like Kentucky and Ohio, formed part of the country's western frontier. Carrying a gun wasn't just good for protection, but was vital to survival. Why would these frontier people give the government the explicit ability to regulate it? It may be because dueling was also very common in those days (see Jackson, Andrew and Sevier, John-Gay Street-Kingston Pike confrontation and duel), as was taking the law into one's own hands-often because the nearest law could literally be days away from you, and that is how Tennessee's system of rural constables developed.
Labels: Conservatism, Tennessee politics