Saturday, June 2, 2007
Friday, June 1, 2007
All y'all Texans crack me up.
JK will be in Houston today signing This Moment on Earth - apparently to the sounds of copious squee.
The Houstinist posted a pic of very young JK testifying in front of - what else? The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, which I guess explains the line, "John Kerry is still handsome and a bit hunky and in Houston! Pinch yourself and us while you're at it."
Awesome. And I hope someday the TMOE travels will take the senator to Dallas, for more book signings and maybe even a little Prius-racing with J.R.
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
"We are not, at the federal level, seeing this administration keep faith with those who've served."
If you spent Memorial Day as I did, outside, enjoying a three-day weekend and wearing white trousers for the first time this year, you may have missed a really important NPR story about veterans and small business.
I didn't transcribe the whole thing (why steal what you can link to?), but I did type up the segments in which Senator Kerry was interviewed. Here are his comments - and if they don't make too much sense, you really ought to listen to the whole story. This is important stuff.
"In 2005, the Defense Department awarded only .499% of contracts to service-disabled firms. It's very hard for anybody to believe that less than one-half of one percent of all the contracts is that maximum practical opportunity - which is the language of the bill - that they can fulfill….
I mean, you've got some, over 20,000 people or so, who've been wounded over the course of these two wars, Afghanistan and Iraq. You would want the defense department to have the best record of any agency in the entire government. And it ought to be a natural for them to be able to say to their future recruits, "Look at what we do if you serve your country….
We are not, at the federal level, seeing this administration keep faith with those who've served. It's not keeping the promise to your veterans, and on Memorial Day particularly, I think it's important for people not just to put a flag in a cemetery, not just to remember, but to make certain that we're going to live up to those promises."