The University of Tennessees Daily Beacon reports that the Kappa Alpha fraternity on campus is in danger of losing its charter and being thrown out of its house. But it wasnt the gambling and holding cock fights in the house basement, or even the weekly stripper they hired.
What sunk them was the frats boxing tournament featuring Knoxville winos. The frat boys would recruit homeless men, liquor them up, give them boxing gloves, and let them go to town. Chapter President Patrick Diener added that these events were tolerated in the past, but Kappa Alphas new national officers forbade them.
In television and radio ads currently running in five Midwestern states, President Bush appears to say: Theres something more important than politics, and thats to do our jobs. This line is delivered after the Democratic senator of each state is accused of being partisan in our time of national emergency.
The Bush administration, great believers in the hidden messages embedded in media emissions, may have been secretly communicating with its own terrorist operative. Ann Coulter, the irrepressible cavewoman of pundit TV, shortly thereafter exhorted the faithful at a conservative political convention in Northern Virginia: We need to execute people like John Walker in order to physically intimidate liberals, by making them realize that they can be killed, too. Otherwise they will turn out to be outright traitors..
What would Jesus deregulate? The electric utilities, possibly, but for a fee. Or so suggested Ralph Reed, erstwhile boy hero of Christian Coalition politicking, in a memo to the Enron Corporation leaked to the Washington Post.
Reed and his firm, Century Strategies, had worked for Enron in 1997 lobbying for deregulation legislation in Pennsylvania. In October 2000, Reed wrote to Enron proposing a $380,000 campaign that would enlist faith-based activists, conservative talk-show hosts, and even mainstream op-ed pages to beat the drum for deregulation.
In public policy, it matters less who has the best arguments and more who gets heardand by whom, Reed wrote in the memo. Elected officials and regulators will be predisposed to favor greater market-oriented solutions if they hear from business, civic and religious leaders in their communities.
Amen, brother. Heres how much itll cost you:
- Twenty facilitating letters, signed by a third party, to each of 17 members of the congressional commerce committees that handle deregulation: $170,000
- Guests booked on radio talk shows: $30,000
- Telemarketing campaign that patches pissed-off Christians through to congressional reps: $79,500.
- Op-eds signed by opinion leaders in major newspapers, which will then be blast-faxed to elected officials: $25,000.
Dave Mulcahey, formerly a managing editor of The Baffler, writes In These Times' monthly "Appallo-o-meter" feature.
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Appeared in the April 1, 2002 Issue
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