So says this Star-Telegram blog. I love Fort Worth, I really do. And I think America needs high-speed trains, I really do. But how many people travel from Fort Worth to San Antonio and Tulsa every day?
The drinking age was raised to 21 nation-wide by Congress in 1984 (and signed by the sainted Ronald Reagan, which goes to prove that he wasn’t infallible). The law forced compliance by the states by threatening to withhold transportation dollars from those that didn’t tow toe the line. In 1996 when I looked at the data, the evidence was sparse one way or the other, but leant enough to the pro-21 side to suggest the law, even if wrongly conceived, might be effective in saving teenage lives. It isn’t, as Forbes reports today. Key paragraph:
The results are striking. Virtually all the life-saving impact of the MLDA21 comes from the few early-adopting states, not from the larger number that resulted from federal pressure. Further, any life-saving effect in those states that first raised the drinking age was only temporary, occurring largely in the first year or two after switching to the MLDA21.
The major implication of these results is that the drinking age does not produce its main claimed benefit. Moreover, it plausibly generates side effects, like binge drinking and disrespect for the law…
So instead of passing a toothless resolution on the 10th Amendment, the Legislature and the Guv could show some actual grit. Lower the drinking age back to 18, and let the Federal Government sue . Grandstanding is one thing. Taking on the fight is something else entirely. (And yes, the Supreme Court ruled that Congress was within its rights. But that was then, and this is now — and federalism is one of this Court’s hallmarks.)
Joseph Duggan is a former speechwriter for the first President Bush (now there’s a challenge) who is a visiting professor at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico City. He was kind enough to send me his interview with ex-president Vicente Fox, published today by the American Spectator, and added a thought: If the Guv wants Texas to secede from the U.S., there’s another country that may like to have us:
I would estimate that about 5 percent of Mexican citizens live in Texas already (as many as 15 percent of Mexican citizens live somewhere in the USA). Since we love limited government, there could be a rotating presidency as in Switzerland. For six months the “canton” of Texas could have the presidency, another six months, the Bajio region of Mexico, then the Yucatan peninsula, and so forth.
Dumb idea? It’s true that in the realm of dumb ideas, Rick Perry is usually the master*. But if we’re going to start entertaining them, we might as well include them all.
* I do have to admit that I like Perry’s support of the 10th Amendment. Just because it’s dead as a doornail, doesn’t mean it always has to be. That said, there are a few problems with Perry’s new-found Constitutional purity. Like, why didn’t he bring it up when W was president?
Sure, chicken sounds okay. But you know what I could REALLY go for? Some delicious — things.
Josh Hixson got Larry North to comment. North says it’s personal.
That’s what a FBvian just asked me, referring to a new pro-convention center hotel site, adding “I think the hotel’s supporters have taken the gloves off.” You be the judge. Here is the site in question.
UPDATE: For the record, nothing on R.I.P. Dallas is as bizarre as John Wiley Price somehow conflating the hotel with Jim Crow laws. Now THAT is taking the gloves off.
A person inside the Morning News described this news to me as a “bombshell.” As the News merges functions with AHC, some big changes are going down. Jump for the full memo from Moroney, but Evelyn Miller (executive VP finance), Laura Gordon (senior VP marketing), and Darryl Thornton (VP human resources) are soon to leave the building.
The kids at the Hillcrest High School Cyclone started a blog earlier this month. I’m not sure why I enjoy it so much, but I do. Thanks to the alert FrontBurnervian who sent me the link and sent me down that rabbit hole.
If you’ve never heard of Thrillist, think DailyCandy for guys. Less shoes and spas. More beer and bawdy. As in, here’s the preamble to their announcement that they’re launching a Dallas outpost in the next couple of weeks:
Even in a city as aggressive about leisure as Dallas, the most intrepid men can get caught in a rut, drinking the same booze, rubbing the same elbows, and passing out in the same apartment courtyard hot tub that once seemed so full of promise, but now bubbles with shame.
I don’t know who the Dallas editor will be, but a couple weeks back, I had a chat with Adam Rich, the founder of Thrillist, about some folks who I thought might be right for the job. My favorite part of the conversation was where he described the editor’s duties, and I unintentionally insulted him by saying it didn’t sound like a 40-hour-a-week job.
Again, Adam, I’m sorry. You have my résumé. If I can send you some clips, just let me know.
It should be business as usual at the local malls owned or managed by General Growth Properties, which just filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, mainly because of a credit-market problem. But still, the filing can’t be good news for the Chicago company’s DFW properties like the Galleria and Stonebriar Centre. At the same time, the picture’s not all gloom and doom at malls here. One case in point is locally owned NorthPark Center, where insiders say sales actually rose in 2008 over the previous year.
And that’s enough reason to post the video that’s made me cry like a baby the past two days. The unemployed 47-year-old Boyle lives in West Lothian, Scotland, sister city to Grapevine. (Perhaps she’ll play Glass Cactus? No? Bad idea?) If you haven’t seen her sing on the British version of American Idol America’s Got Talent (Britain’s Got Talent), block off about seven minutes. And grab a tissue or two.
1. The global economic crisis is finally seriously kicking Southwest Airlines in the jeans. It lost $91 million in the first quarter, its third quarterly loss in a row. All it has gained is a buyout package and wage/hiring freezes. It’s all relative, I guess: AMR Corp. (American’s parent) reported a loss of $375 million. Which is the long way of saying there are worse industries to be in than journalism right now.
2. So suddenly it’s okay for Gov. Rick Perry to speak passionately at tax day anti-spending rallies in Arlington and Fort Worth? The timing seems…odd. Or convenient. Maybe that’s the word I’m looking for.
3. Things that happened last night at the AAC: Dirk Nowtizki scored 30 points, extending his streak of games over 20 points to 25; Jason Kidd had a triple double; the Mavs won 50 games for the ninth straight time; and they clinched the sixth seed in the Western Conference playoffs and a first round date with their longtime archenemy, the San Antonio Spurs. The first game is Saturday at 7 p.m. I’m sure Bob Sturm (aka Sports Sturm, aka the Sturminator, aka Bobby Digital) will have something to say about all that over at the Corner. (UPDATE: He does.)