Waddoups looked a bit bewildered in Buttars fiasco

Published: Sunday, March 1, 2009 12:00 p.m. MST
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When you write opinions for a living, events and issues can swirl through the air like leaves in a windstorm. The best thing to do is jump in and get your hands on as many as possible. So here goes:

Regardless of how you feel about state Sen. Chris Buttars and his recent statement comparing the gay-rights movement to Islamic fundamentalists, it's hard not to view the performance of Senate President Michael Waddoups, at a televised press conference on the matter, as a disaster. Waddoups looked bothered, distracted and generally more interested in studying his watch than in explaining why he removed Buttars from not only the chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee, but from the committee all together. Incredibly, Waddoups insisted this was not a punishment. Then he said he didn't agree with everything Buttars said, but he refused to elaborate. Well, gee, president. You brought it up.

My guess is if viewers didn't distrust lawmakers before, they definitely would after seeing this. A "straight-talk express" it wasn't.

Story continues below

George W. Bush often was bashed for lowering taxes and increasing spending. Mathematically, his detractors said, it didn't add up, and the result had to be higher deficits. So what are we to think when Barack Obama signs a $787 billion stimulus, outlines plans for government loan programs, a massive health-care reform bill and mortgage bailouts, then says more will have to be done to help credit flow again, and then says he wants to cut the deficit in half during his first term?

I'm no math expert, but even when he talks about raising $634 billion by taxing "the rich," it doesn't even come close to adding up.

Does 10-digit dialing scare you? Apparently, many of you are answering "Yes," and I can't figure that out. All the objections I've heard so far are ridiculous. In case you haven't noticed, there are a lot more phones out there than there used to be. You may even have one or more in your pocket. The 801 area code is running out of numbers, and the best approach is to let everyone keep the number they currently have and give new phones the 385 area code.

And yes, you'll have to dial 10 digits just to reach your next door neighbor — starting today. My advice? Don't limit the human brain. If you could learn seven digits, I think you can master 10. If not, just program your neighbor into your phone and use one-digit dialing. Maybe you can handle that.

Recent comments

Waddoups is the vilian in this story if you ask me.

Buttars just...

Waddoups is the vilian | March 2, 2009 at 2:56 p.m.

There are some mighty fine writers at the Dnews. Jay is one of them....

Dale | March 2, 2009 at 10:54 a.m.

The disingenuous ambivalence of Waddoups, or snaky shifting around to...

ambivalence ubiquitous | March 2, 2009 at 9:08 a.m.

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