Report critiques Congressional payments to family members

A new report out from CREW critiques payments and other perks given to Congressional family members through campaigns and/or PACS.

I caught the beginning of an interview on NPR this morning. I was listening via Sirius so I wasn’t familiar with the host or program but I think it may have been Talk of the Nation.
According to the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington the actions of Congress members were legal, but the watchdog group questions whether they should be.

“CREW has rarely been able to verify the qualifications of relatives on the campaign payroll, but the legitimacy of at least some payments — those made to children, for example — appears dubious,” the 149-page report says. “It is also legal for the close relatives of members to lobby, yet the unique access offered to these lobbyists creates a situation ripe for abuse.”
The group examined current members of Congress who are chairs or ranking members of House committees and subcommittees, and only looked at the 2002, 2004 and 2006 election cycles. Many of its findings have been previously disclosed in news media including The Plain Dealer.

44 Democrats and 53 Republicans were cited in the report.
The report names seven Texas congressmen, including our very own Rep. Joe Barton, R-Ennis/Arlington.
The report says the Barton campaign paid Barton’s wife $57,000 during the 2006 campaign and his son and daughter have received over $17,000 over the last few campaign cycles. The Barton Campaign also made a contribution to his mother. She only received $7,000 for the purchase of a car for the campaign.
Also cited from Texas are Henry Cuellar (D-TX), Louie Gohmert (R-TX), Ralph Hall (R-TX), Randy Neugebauer (R-TX), Silvestre Reyes (D-TX) and 2008 presidential candidate, Ron Paul, R-Lake Jackson/Galveston/Victoria.
During the 2006 campaign, the Ron Paul Campaign paid his daughter $36,000 in salary and Ron Paul’s PAC paid her $20,000 in salary. She’s listed as the treasurer of the PAC from 2002-2006.
During the 2004 campaign, the campaign paid Ron Paul’s daughter $53,000 in salary and the PAC paid her $3,000.
During the 2002 campaign, the campaign paid her $48,000 in salary.
The Ron Paul campaign has also paid the mother and father-in-law of another daughter, that same daughter and a grandson.

It may be legal, but I don’t like the looks of it. The lady being interviewed on NPR this morning said, “The real scandal in Washington isn’t all the things that are illegally going on, its the legal things that are going on.”

Read the full report
Read a summary
Download a quick overview chart

Fighting crime with the sound of music

Safer Dallas Better Dallas is hoping to fight crime in the Big D with the sound of music.
Their website, www.saferdallas.net, features “We’re in the Fight Together,” Words and Music By Spencer Michlin and Johnny Marshall.
I’m not sure how it’s supposed to change the crime stats in Dallas but maybe it will drive all the criminals away if they hear it enough.
Who knows?
Apparently the song will be featured in PSA’s online.
Together we can win…

We will win (for our families)
We will win (for us all)
We will win (for Dallas)
We will win!

I don’t know if it would have the same catch, but maybe Ellis County Police Departments can adopt the song with a few changes.

The mission of Safer Dallas Better Dallas is:

The mission of Safer Dallas Better Dallas is to be a communicator and direct conduit to assist the Dallas Police Department (DPD) by:

  • Acquiring new equipment for the DPD
  • Improving recruiting results of the DPD
  • Motivating the Dallas City Council to provide more resources toward crime prevention by offering matching resources
  • Lowering the rate of recidivism of parolees

Inspiring Public Safety Personnel and Dallas citizens to embrace the basic concept that a safer life for any individual is a better life for that individual, and hence a Safer Dallas will be a Better Dallas.

Red Oak News

News from Red Oak is that the city council fired the city manager and city attorney last night.
They fired the police chief a couple months ago after an alleged ticket quota system.
It’s also rumored that the mayor of Red Oak resigned today as well.
Sounds like the Red Oak fire chief may be the most powerful man in the city right now.

Chet Edwards to challenge Cornyn

Right of Texas has heard word that Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Waco, is possibly planning to challenge Republican Sen. John Cornyn in 2008.
Edwards was the U.S. Rep for the Belton, Temple, Killeen area as well before the Republicans took their shot at redistricting in 2004.
Edwards is a nice guy and tries real hard to play the moderate card most of the time.
I’ve met him a couple times but our associate editor in Belton always said Edwards only came to Belton if it involved Fort Hood somehow. Otherwise he didn’t care about the city or area.
In other Cornyn news, Capital Annex is joining other progressive Democrat blogs and hoping to encourage Texas State Rep. Rick Noriega, D-Houston, to run for Cornyn’s seat.
Should be interesting to see who all the Democratic challenges end up being.

What does America (your country) mean to you?

Got a questionnaire from a local media outlet. Figured I’d pass the questions along to my readers as well.
Feel free to answer one or all of them.

1. What makes you proud of your country?
2. What does patriotism mean to you?
3. What does the Flag mean to you?
4. What are your thoughts on national service (e.g., elected officials, Military men and women, Peace Corps/Americorps volunteers, etc.)?
5. If you could say one thing about the United States, what would it be?

Moral implications over Ruth Graham’s death

You may or may not have noticed this, but during several of the AP’s stories, it was reported that Ruth Graham, had requested her feeding tube be removed during the last several days of her life.
Jeffrey Weiss has a great piece in the DMN today about the situation. He’s also blogged additional quotes that didn’t fit the print version of the paper.
Why is it that no one is upset that Ruth Graham, or even Pope John Paul II requested their feeding tubes be removed before death yet outcry is heard everywhere over the Terri Schiavo case?
From the DMN:

The dignified, semi-public passing of Ruth Graham showed a family struggling with end-of-life issues that affect many American families: private home, hospital or nursing home? Aggressive treatment to the end or comfort care? When is it time to let go?
Mrs. Graham, who died Thursday, was not merely the wife of a famous person. Her husband, Billy, is among the best-known religious leaders in the world, and Mrs. Graham carried her own moral and religious reputation. Who she was drew particular attention to the moral decisions associated with the end of her life.

Weiss offers additional quotes on the DMN Religion blog:

Dr. Art Caplan, quoted in the story, is one of the world’s best known medical ethicists. He offered an interesting observation that I had no room for there:
Ironically for all the protest that took place around the removal of a feeding tube from Terri Schiavo by those such as Tom Delay and the current Pope who said food and water cannot ever be stopped no one has said a word about what was done in the Ruth Graham case. This strikes me as more then a bit hypocritical even though I think what happened in her case was ethical and in accordance with her express wishes.
Dr. Tom Mayo, of SMU and the UT Southwestern med school is another top medical ethicist — famous far beyond local zip codes. Among his thoughts that did not make the story: That sometimes for the dying, food or water can actually kill them faster and/or make them uncomfortable. As the body shuts down in the days or hours before death, it stops being able to deal with nutrition and even water. The effects can even be rather gruesome, as he explained in some medical detail I will not share. So those who would insist on feeding — even tube feeding — may not be offering any blessing. Depends on the case, though. And if you’re really interested in how ethicists such as Dr. Mayo explore these sorts of broad questions, Google up “trolley problem” and “ethics” and “double effect.”

In the end, the idea of a feeding tube or life sustaining machines may have a lot more to do with the patient’s wishes and their consent, along with the wisdom and sincerity of their physician.
In the Schiavo case, there was no living will, no confirmed writings or thoughts of Schiavo as to her wishes. It was simply a case of he-said, she-said.
In the Graham case, it was apparent from the family spokesman that it was Ruth’s wishes and eventually the family decided to follow those wishes.
Either way – it’s an interesting moral comparison between the two individuals.