The breaking of the ground (all four inches of it) for the Bush Library this morning was interesting. One man made sure that the circled mound of earth remained smooth. Still another fella in a suit was assigned the duty to keep people from messing with the pristine dirt.
After the official ground was broken by the dignitaries with shovels, people took pictures of the spot where Former President George W. and Laura had dug.
While today’s George W. Bush Presidential Center groundbreaking at SMU drew protests from the anti-war left, critics on the right–like Gov. Rick Perry–have also ripped Bush 43 in recent weeks, mainly for his administration’s alleged “big-government overspending.” The tea-party types’ Exhibit A: the 2003 prescription-drug entitlement, which could cost taxpayers $550 billion over 10 years.
Bushies like former presidential counselor Karen Hughes, however, contend that Medicare Part D was long overdue–not evidence of profligate spending. During the 2000 campaign, Hughes said before today’s event, Bush listened to many stories about seniors having to choose between food and medicine; now, she said, you don’t hear those stories anymore. Besides that, she added, the reform had long been called for by Democrats and Republicans alike.
“I do think when Republicans controlled Congress, there was excessive spending added on to bills, so the president had to make some difficult [veto] decisions …” said Hughes (pictured in photo by Jeanne Prejean). “So that’s a good lesson for the next Congress. Republicans need to get serious [about spending]. I think it would be a healthy reform to get rid of earmarks. Government is too big, I have to agree. But I disagree about the [prescription-drug entitlement]. … It was a successful program, and everybody benefits.”
I don’t know. There was something austere and cold about the previous design that seemed to gel perfectly with many of the flight attendants I’ve encountered on American Airlines flights. This new design is going to take some getting used to.
I have terrible news for you, FrontBurner readers. It looks like you can no longer get tickets to see the small but mighty Al Pacino speak at the Winspear tonight. However, you can still get tickets to ABBA MANIA. So if you’re itching to hear “Fernando” performed live, you’re all set. The other 99.9% of you should jump to the next page for other options.
It’s strange. Normally to see a fight like this, you’ve got to go out to a sports bar or pony up $60 to order the pay-per-view at home. But the Dallas Morning News and UT Southwestern are giving us this one for free. If you haven’t been following along, let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up: the paper has been dogging Parkland and UT Southwestern over billing practices, a federal investigation, and, most recently, how much the paper should have to pay for open records requests. This past Sunday, the paper published two unflattering stories about patient care at Parkland. The stories further raised the hackles of Daniel Podolsky, the president of UT Southwestern Medical Center. He wrote an impassioned letter to the editor that is making the rounds and which I share below. You can read the entire thing, but here’s the crux of it:
In an effort to uncover problems — and with a strikingly absent concern for context — Dallas Morning News reporters have been publicly seeking via their blog to hear from Parkland patients who experienced complications in their care. If the reporters were to ask the opposite question, I have no doubt that they would have been inundated with stories from grateful patients whose lives were saved and transformed by the care they received at Parkland from UT Southwestern faculty working with trainees and students. The Dallas Morning News is not delivering to the people of Dallas the quality of journalism they deserve by looking for exceptions and using them to cast aspersions on the overriding quality of medical care available at Parkland from UT Southwestern attending and resident physicians and all other Parkland employees.
Right now, there are people over at DISD who are saying, “Amen!”
Listen, the paper is doing its job. But it’s only doing half of its job. Podolsky is right. With a huge organization like Parkland, if you go looking for horrific, ugly stories, you’ll find them. If you file enough open records requests, you’ll find something nasty to write about. And you should write about it. That’s how a good newspaper with a strong investigative team fulfills its mission.
But that’s only part of the mission. Because if you treat large public institutions like Parkland and DISD as only an investigative beat, your hard-working investigators will, as a matter of course, make those institutions look corrupt and incompetent. So in addition to doing the necessary investigative work, you also have to explain to your readers what’s really happening on a larger scale. That’s the context Podolsky is talking about. Giving context, though, that’s not as sexy as telling stories about operations gone awry.
Yeah, yeah. I live in a glass house. But this online goof had a certain poetry to it.

1. The Bush library groundbreaking is happening right now. That’s why I waited so late to do this.
2. The Mavs gave the New Orleans Hornets their first loss of the season. LET’S! GO! MAVS!
3. So Plano ISD decided to stop writing the script for its version of Footloose. Or a better joke.
4. Rest safe, Fort Worth. Apparently Jimmy McNulty from The Wire is on the FWPD now.
5. The Texas Lottery needs to tighten up its game.