This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf. Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist. This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write. I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf. The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie. And it is where you want to be on a golf course.
Remember, this is one of four departments I run with a free hand to do as I wish as director.
The others are the Department of Pet Peeves, the Department of “Just Saying,” and the Department of Inquiring Minds.
So, here are good quotes. And, it is noteworthy that I kept the list to three when there is so much more to quote.
FROM ATLANTIC MAGAZINE: “To our shame, we have too often let those kinds of arguments (that ones that minimize the hush money charges) define the Trump legal saga.
“If Trump is brought to trial on the far more serious charge of attempting to strong-arm Georgia election officials, his defenders will claim that that indictment, too, is just local huckstering. They will find other excuses in the event that he somehow must answer for his role in trying to overturn our constitutional processes.
“And once again, even after looking at Trump’s own behavior, including his phone call to the Georgia secretary of state and the exhortation to the mob on January 6, too many Americans will focus on whether he committed an actual crime instead of coming to their senses and realizing that in any functional and healthy democracy, someone like Trump would have been shamed and forced into political and social exile years ago.
“Trump, like the Republican opportunists who cling to him like remoras under a shark, doesn’t care about shame — he cares about getting away with it. Indeed, rather than leaving the public arena, Trump has reveled in it all, rolling around in the garbage of his own life and grunting happily about how the rules don’t apply to the real elites like him.”
COMMENT: Trump, ever the victim, turns any issue – yes, ANY issue – into one from which he tries to profit.
FROM THE WASHINGTON POST: “A few aspects of the case (the hush money case) are worth underscoring:
“1. The hue and cry has gone up that this is a ticky-tacky indictment. The complaint here seems to be that because Trump is under investigation for important federal crimes, the state cannot enforce its own laws when he violates them. But the rule of law does not require that someone under investigation for serious felonies not be arrested for, say, drunken driving or shoplifting. No suspect can avoid consequences for lesser crimes pending indictment for more serious ones.
“2. Trump has already started threatening and demonizing Bragg. He has mused about death and destruction and summoned his shock troops to take back their country, just as he did in the run-up to the Capitol riot of January 6, 2021.
“Any attempt to thwart our legal system with violence and chaos cannot be tolerated. The assigned New York judge should use the full array of judicial power, including a gag order, to prevent threats to the district attorney, court staff and jurors. (If Trump is trying to lay the groundwork for a defense of “selective prosecution,” he’ll most likely fail.
“3. This is probably not the last indictment. Trump attorney Evan Corcoran has been compelled to testify in the Mar-a-Lago espionage and obstruction case. And former vice president Mike Pence has been ordered to testify before a grand jury in the January 6 investigation.
“Trump is being prosecuted, not because he is a former president, but because his status as a former president does not shield him from the law.”
COMMENT: Nothing more needs to be written.
FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: “The latest in the long onslaught of storms that began in December has pushed California’s snowpack to its highest level on record. This week’s storm dumped another one to two feet in the Sierra Nevada helping this season eclipse 1982-83, the previous record-holder.
“The water stored in the state’s snowpack is 235 per cent of normal, according to the California Department of Water Resources, surpassing 234 per cent in 1982-83.
“By far, the central and southern Sierra have seen the most unusual amounts of snow, with their snow water content 233 per cent and 298 per cent of normal, respectively.
“The enormous snowpack has accumulated mostly because of 17 atmospheric rivers — or potent jets of subtropical moisture — which have bombarded the state since December.
COMMENT: So, to repeat a point in a blog a day or so ago, why doesn’t the government of California take steps to save rainwater and snow melt as hedge against drought?
Sounds obvious. But state officials have showed no interest in this intriguing idea. They are too busy doing other stuff.