Amazing Stupidity Syndrome in Texas
Sunday 28 November 2010
by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
Good grief, it's spreading!
Another Texas politician has come down with the tragic disease known as "Amazing Stupidity Syndrome." A.S.S. attacks the lobe of the brain that controls one's ethical behavior, apparently causing the moral synapses in that region to go on the fritz, thus allowing the stupidity hormone to seep in and take charge. The main symptom is that afflicted legislators develop sticky fingers, causing then to double-bill for airline tickets, rooms at luxury resorts, lavish meals, etc.
It starts with a story about the guy who keeps putting the "goober" in gubernatorial: Rick Perry, the splendidly coiffed Republican governor of Texas. Then, add the huge corporate entity of AT&T, which bought 700 copies of Perry's new book. But that's only the start of the story, which is really about how corporations, corporate-funded right-wing organizations and corporate-backed politicians happily hum "Kumbaya" together.
In December, Perry gave another of his political rants against Washington and its governmental powers. Ironically, his speech was in Washington -- delivered to an appreciative audience of lobbyists and other Washington powers. Perry thinks irony is a country near Iran, so he missed the absurdity of it all.
AT&T, which sponsored the luncheon where the guv held forth, has beaucoup business before the Texas state government and is a half-million-dollar donor to Perry's gubernatorial campaigns. They're tight. So tight that the corporation shelled out $13,000 to buy 700 copies of the governor's book, giving them to every luncheon attendee.
Perry donated his share of the sale to the Texas Public Policy Foundation. What's that? A virulently far-right corporate front that develops much of Perry's agenda -- and, in turn, backs him.
Then there's the American Legislative Exchange Council, the group that invited Perry to do his shtick about the horrors of inside-Washington elites. ALEC is richly funded by such extremist laissez-fair corporate barons as the mulitbillionaire Koch brothers, who're among the most elite players in Washington.
So, let's recap: A corporate front group has a meeting in Washington, inviting the ambitious corporate-cozy Texas governor to strut his stuff at a lobbyist-infested lunch sponsored by his favor-seeking AT&T pals, who buy a bunch of his books, the proceeds of which go to another corporate front that backs Perry in exchange for him carrying their agenda. Everybody's back gets scratched -- and it's all done in the guise of fighting power-hungry elites.
But it's not just the corporate-hugging governor of Texas who suffers from Amazing Stupidity Syndrome.
Last October, Texas Rep. Joe Driver was diagnosed with A.S.S. after a news report revealed that for years he'd been billing both the taxpayers and his political fund for the same travel expenses.
Joe, a Republican Texas lawmaker for 20 years, defended himself by asserting that he didn't know it was wrong to be reimbursed twice. Didn't know? That's when we knew that poor Joe was eaten up with A.S.S.
And now, yet another Texas legislator, Rep. Dan Flynn, has been stricken. Another Republican, he's a former bank examiner who claims to be an expert in -- get this -- financial management. But Dan claims that he's been too busy traveling to account for a rash of double-billing since 2006 for stays at swank hotels from Boston to San Francisco.
You'll be glad to know, however, that Texas legislative leaders are now at work on a cure for A.S.S.
Jail time, you ask? No, no -- they intend "to design a form (to) make it more transparent" to members that double-billing is an ethical boo-boo that should be avoided. Both Joe and Dan say that they will be fully supportive of the form reform.
Let's hope that it's ready soon so we can make it available to other states experiencing outbreaks of Amazing Stupidity Syndrome among their lawmakers. Perhaps we need an A.S.S. telethon to prevent a pandemic of this tragic disease.
National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.
Copyright 2010 Creators.com
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.



Comments
This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.
Too LATE, they're ALL
Wed, 12/29/2010 - 10:42 — Vic Anderson (not verified)Too LATE, they're ALL Ass-souled OUT!
That is only the smallest,
Wed, 12/29/2010 - 19:58 — Anonymous (not verified)That is only the smallest, least offensive way in which they are morally bankrupt - er, challenged. The Republican party and their enablers are a big bunch of socio-paths with no remorse and total indifference to the suffering their behavior causes others. If they weren't both rich and well-connected, they would be in jail where they belong.
Can you imagine a young African American saying "I didn't know it was wrong" and getting away with it?
In their defense, however, they really have no sense that anything they do is wrong. If they want it, to h@@l with ethics, morality and things like laws. Those concerns are only for the masses.
I live in Texas and these
Wed, 12/29/2010 - 21:13 — Anonymous (not verified)I live in Texas and these goobers just won again in elections because there's oil and gas money and all the Republicans are taking it. Lobbyists are in all their pockets. Perry is the typical good ol boy and the epitome of a true GOOBER -- his cologne is gasoline based.
We'll keep having to tolerate big corporate backed goobers until the people of Texas wake up and protest in the streets, march on Austin and stop voting them into office. There's too much complacency in Texas politics and way too much oil and gas corruption. They're fracking our water to poison, causing earthquakes, burning toxic waste and making political decisions that have bankrupted our state government. Welcome to Texas corruption ya'll.
All good Texans need to
Thu, 12/30/2010 - 02:52 — Skinny Dog (not verified)All good Texans need to stand up and say Frack You! to these ass hats.
I vote in Texas elections.
Thu, 12/30/2010 - 17:37 — Harry Thomas (not verified)I vote in Texas elections. We use Diebold voting machines in my county. I have to wonder if the results going in are the same as those going out. Does it make any difference if we vote to "throw the bums out" if they can electronically manipulate the election results to their liking?
Tom DeLay has to be smacking himself in the head, thinking, "Why wasn't this around when I was still an elected official? I wouldn't have had to gerrymander all those districts!"
Well there's the answer to
Fri, 12/31/2010 - 12:21 — Anonymous (not verified)Well there's the answer to all our economic woes! Go shopping, buy everything you can. Then return it for double refunds. Do it as often as you need to so you can pay off your bills, pay your house payment and send your kids to college.
Anybody who is so "stupid" not to know you don't get to make money that way wouldn't be worth a burger flipping job. How did they figure they were going to sell the idea of being stupid as an excuse?
Hogan Uomo 2013
Mon, 01/21/2013 - 12:36 — Hogan Uomo 2013 (not verified)http://www.zhgutov.com/index.php/component/k2/item/31-тест123/31-тест123?start=1600