A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Alabama needs its rebirth The Christian promise of Easter centers on resurrection, of hope overcoming despair. It says nothing of politics or ideological differences. It says everything about a new beginning for followers of Jesus Christ. That Easter weekend is closing out one of modern-day Alabama’s toughest weeks is impossible to ignore. Those who care about our state are worried about its future. Count us among the gravely concerned. There is so much our state must do better in education, equality, corrections and poverty, for instance. None of that addresses the ominous cloud lingering over the state’s head — House Speaker Mike Hubbard, who’s still in office despite his overwhelming legal troubles related to charges of corruption and abuse of power. But it is Robert Bentley, Alabama’s 73-year-old governor, whose alleged affair with his top female adviser is bringing Montgomery lewdness to a very tawdry, uncomfortable place. The entire state has heard the tape-recorded phone conversations between the governor and Rebekah Mason. We’re not sure what’s worse: the political shock or the human ickiness. Nevertheless, it is Easter weekend, a time of peace and joy and rebirth, especially for the state’s majority of Christian residents. Yet, we don’t know what will happen next week. Birmingham News – Hear more ‘sexy’ excerpts from Governor Robert Bentley’s phone calls Here’s the tale of the tape. Oops. I mean the tale of the digital recording. How many times did Gov. Robert Bentley say I love you in 45 minutes of recorded conversations with political advisor Rebekah Caldwell Mason? 14 “Well, I love you, I do. And ah, you know I just — I worry sometimes I love so you much.  I worry about loving you so much.” He used the word “love” another seven times, in reference to things he loved about Mason, or things he loved to do. Bentley calls her “baby” 12 times and “sweetheart” twice. He talks of kissing four times, including a “left ear,” a “sweet ear” and a “plain old ear.” Decatur Daily – Alabama’s humiliation continues Republicans stormed Montgomery in 2010, and it seemed an overdue siege. Democrats had held legislative power for 136 years, and the lack of relevant opposition had left them more accountable to special interests and old money than to the people. It was billed as more than just a partisan shift. Item 1 on the agenda was ethics reform. This new breed of politicians wasn’t just about family values, but about transparency and rigorous financial honesty. These were idealists, convinced that lean, accountable government would make Alabama a model for the nation’s conservative revolution. By retaining the governorship and taking the Legislature, the GOP would be unimpeded by Democrats who had become synonymous with back-room deals and moral failings that increasingly brought embarrassment to Alabamians. Even skeptics figured the GOP couldn’t do worse. But in just seven years, the GOP leaders have managed to confound both their fans and their skeptics. Dothan Eagle – A strange week in Montgomery Gov. Robert Bentley, whose package of tax hikes to address a gaping shortfall in the General Fund was largely disregarded by the legislature last year, told lawmakers this year that Medicaid needed an additional $100 million to maintain services. Any budget without that would be vetoed, he vowed. On Thursday, the Legislature passed a General Fund budget with a $15 million increase for Medicaid — $85 million below the line the governor drew in the sand. Bentley, as promised, said he planned to veto the budget. That may be too little, too late. Bentley earlier rejected a federal expansion of Medicaid that would have meant additional federal funding over the next several years and would have meant extending health care services to thousands of uninsured Alabamians. The Legislature’s failure to authorize a $100 million increase for the program could trigger the loss of additional federal funds. Bentley’s veto could force lawmakers to revisit the budget. However, bizarre things have happened this week that are sure to undermine the governor’s authority at best, and could lead to his downfall at worst. Enterprise Ledger – A little spring sports cleaning Here’s a little spring cleaning for tidbits around my desk: The NCAA Tournament is as exciting as ever, what with Wisconsin’s Bronson Koenig and his heroics beating Xavier and Notre Dame escaping Stephen F. Austin taking backseats to a comeback for the ages by Texas A&M against Northern Iowa – down 12 with about 36 seconds remaining in regulation only to win in double-overtime. All this after a half-court game-winner had Northern Iowa beating Texas in the first round. The Notre Dame win was questionable as officials seemed to have a case of “Fighting Irish” in their whistles in the closing minute. But, I can’t remember the last NCAA Tournament that did not have some kind of controversy. Too bad, but at least we don’t have to worry about any team from this state getting the short end of a call during March Madness. There’s no drama whatsoever with my bracket, which lost two of my Final Four selections by the second round – Michigan State in Round One and Kentucky in Round Two. I do have Kansas winning it all and A&M reaching Houston, but following Sunday’s action I am only in 510,082nd place on the CBS Sports bracket challenge, and that’s far better than the 10,730,404th place I currently stand on the ESPN bracket. TimesDaily – Annual training class for teachers is inappropriate solution A bill that would require Alabama teachers to take an hourlong training class on inappropriate interactions with students has cleared a Senate committee. And the sponsor of SB274, Sen. Cam Ward, R-Alabaster, is pushing for a floor vote before this week is over. Hopefully, Ward’s fellow senators won’t be swayed by the recent rash of teacher-student sex cases to vote for such foolish legislation. “The whole thing is absurd,” said Sen. Dick Brewbaker, who chairs the Education Policy Committee that cleared the

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Alabama and its potholes If they dare, homeowners can put off maintenance projects as long as they want. They can leave the gutters clogged, the AC on the fritz, the septic tank full and the roofing job ignored. It’s their house, their choice. But they know how it’ll turn out. The house will deteriorate. Small ailments will become big problems. And what used to be an attractive, middle-class two-story will become another person’s fixer-upper — or worse. That’s where Alabama’s infrastructure is today. It’s the house that needs a paint job and a new roof. But that takes money, which is one of the mains reasons why so many of the state’s roads and bridges are in disrepair. The state has put off the inevitable. It’s thrown pennies at transportation repairs that no longer can wait. Birmingham News – Bunny sex was original March madness Now that our clocks have sprung forward, the cherries and redbuds are in bloom, and I’m greeted by a melodious chorus of bird song each morning when I take out the dogs, it is unofficially spring. Official spring arrives at 11:30 tonight (Saturday, March 19th) when the earth’s orbit places the sun directly above the equator. That is pretty much the only straightforward and rational thing I can think of about this season. Certainly the cardinal that has been flinging himself against my bedroom window every morning for the last couple of weeks isn’t rational. My guess is that he thinks he is defending his territory by attacking that bold intruder which is actually his reflection in the window. But after a couple of weeks of hitting the same glass many times every day instead of another cardinal, you’d think he would get the message. Testosterone dementia, I call it. Decatur Daily – Republicans’ dangerous obstructionism The stubborn refusal of Senate Republicans to consider any Supreme Court nominee offered by President Barack Obama would be outrageous, regardless of whom the president selected to succeed Justice Antonin Scalia. But Obama’s announcement Wednesday that he will nominate Merrick Garland, a moderate federal appeals court judge who has won bipartisan praise during a long and distinguished legal career, puts the Republicans’ irresponsibility and cheap partisanship in even starker relief. Garland, 63, is the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, on which he served with Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who once said that “any time Judge Garland disagrees, you know you’re in a difficult area.” Incredibly, Obama and Garland barely had finished a Rose Garden news conference before prominent Republicans reiterated they would refuse to give Garland fair consideration. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., dusted off the specious argument that because Obama is in his final year as president, his exercise of his appointment power must be held hostage to the results of the November election. “Give the people a voice in the filling of this vacancy,” McConnell pleaded. This is a preposterous argument, and a cynical one to boot. The relevant vote of “the people” in this situation is their decision to support Barack Obama for president in 2008 and again in 2012. Perhaps sensing that his assertion was unconvincing, McConnell also cited a non-existent “Biden Rule,” which supposedly holds the Senate shouldn’t vote on Supreme Court nominations in a presidential election year. Dothan Eagle – Pay hikes insult voters – again In 2008, Alabama lawmakers passed a joint House-Senate resolution to increase their pay by a whopping 60 percent, including a provision that provides that their $3,850 monthly expense check be adjusted annually, based on the U.S. Department of Labor’s Consumer Price Index.. The move was widely criticized, and rightly so, particularly considering that pay increases for state employees, teachers and school support personnel are often politicized, and that the state is continually fighting budget battles. This year, the same sort of fast-and-loose salary machinations are taking place in the executive branch, and some lawmakers are having none of it. Last year, lawmakers passed a measure that abolished outdated salary caps on cabinet member compensation, and Gov. Robert Bentley took advantage of the change to put raises for cabinet members in the budget. Four members of his cabinet – Commissioners of Insurance and Revenue, the director of the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs, and the administrator of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board – would each receive pay increases of about $70,000 per year, from $91.014 to about $164,000 annually. Enterprise Ledger – Trust me, DO NOT pay attention to this column Fortunately, I haven’t had my judgment day just yet, because if Saint Peter had seen my tournament brackets of years past, he would just shake his head and send me to the basketball purgatory… you know, right alongside the programs at Alabama and Auburn. While they seem to have the right people leading their respective programs at the moment, the Tide and Tigers have only heard of this March Madness thing for much of the 21st century. This year will be no different. By the end of this weekend, I will be telling the last soul that will listen to me that I almost took so-and-so in an upset over so-and-so, and had scratched Team A off at the last minute to replace with Team B, only to realize that Team A was playing its non-scholarship water boy in the final minutes of a lopsided victory. I was 10-6 on Thursday, and that included picking 11th seed Wichita State to beat 6th-seeded Arizona, which it did.  Turns out, that was my par for the course as I went 10-6 again on Friday, and it also included picking an 11th seed, Northern Iowa, over Texas. There must be something about filling out a bracket because even non-sports fans get involved in the tournament and many don’t know the difference between the Green Bay Phoenix, which met Texas A&M in the first round, and the University

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Lawmakers who avoid the truth The only legitimate reason the Alabama Legislature has for not reforming payday lending laws is because lawmakers think it’s OK for lenders to stick it to customers with exorbitant, if not inhuman, interest rates. It can’t be because lawmakers are not aware of the problem. And it can’t be because they think the problem is blown out of proportion by do-gooders and overzealous critics. What other excuse could legislators have for not increasing regulations on a legal industry that has proven it has no problem taking advantage of thousands of low-income Alabamians? The hope in Montgomery this spring has been that the annual debate over predatory lending in Alabama would finally force the Legislature to act. It’s not as if the problem has diminished. Birmingham News – Fairfield is doomed; should Birmingham save it? Fairfield is done. Face it. The council meetings are the kind of things you see on news reports from the Eastern Bloc, where Roberts Rules of Order is overruled by those with the loudest voices. Or the strongest right hook. It is dead. Face it. Gone the way of U.S. Steel and of Larry Langford. Of the bingo halls that used to fill its coffers. Killed by time, and change, and ineptitude. And dependence on Walmart. Fairfield is in the death throes today. The city council held an emergency meeting to lay off the entire police department because, since the closing of U.S. Steel’s Fairfield Works and Walmart, the city is broker than a seven-dollar hooker. Decatur Daily – Shelby hearings a good sign When asked last month when he would break the logjam of banking nominees awaiting hearings before the Senate Banking Committee, its chairman was unusually candid. “My primary is Tuesday!” said Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Tuscaloosa. “We can talk about this later!” While Shelby’s power in Washington, D.C., had much to do with his overwhelming victory in the March 1 primary, he had used that power to obstruct efficient government as chairman of the banking committee. The committee had the dubious distinction of being the only Senate committee that had not acted on a single nominee in this Congress. Shelby’s refusal to even hold hearings on 16 nominees critical to the imposition of economic sanctions and to the work of the Federal Reserve and the Export-Import Bank may have been politically expedient, but it was harmful to the nation. In endorsing Shelby in the Republican primary, The Decatur Daily expressed hope the 81-year-old senator would embrace the freedom of what almost certainly will be his final term in office by ending his pandering to a base that still views President Barack Obama as an Africa-born Muslim, and instead applying his skills to the betterment of the state and nation. Dothan Eagle – States’ rights and refugees Last fall, President Barack Obama outlined a goal to welcome 10,000 Syrian refugees to the United States, where about 2,200 have been placed in the last four years. Members of Congress, including many Democrats, quickly moved to do whatever they could to create impediments to the plan. While Obama urged compassion for the fleeing Syrians, Congress acted in accordance with the feelings of their constituents who feared an influx of refugees from a Muslim country could harbor radicals intent on doing harm to our nation and way of life. In short order, Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley announced that the state would not accept Syrian refugees, despite a missive from the White House saying states did not have that option, and that failure to accept refugees would violate the Civil Rights Act of 1965, and that there would be repercussions for states refusing refugees. However, it appears that’s not the only law that could come into play in the matter. In January, Bentley filed suit against the federal government on behalf of Alabama, saying the federal government had not complied with the Refugee Act of 1980, which “specifically requires the federal government to consult with the state regarding the placement of refugees before those refugees are placed within its borders.” “That consultation with Alabama has not occurred,” Bentley stated. Enterprise Ledger – Are the Eighties really over for good? Nancy Reagan’s death on Sunday had me reminiscing about the Eighties all day, I guess because that’s when her husband, Ronald, was leading the country, and for all practical purposes, the world – “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” Yes, we had the space shuttle “Challenger” disaster, the worst recession since the Great Depression, and a handful of scandals during his time in office, but he also knocked “the evil empire” Soviet Union to its knees during his time at the Oval Office. All in all, he was among the most popular presidents in the 20th century. Originally a Democrat, Reagan eventually registered as a Republican (1962) although he had voted for Republican Dwight Eisenhower as president a decade earlier. Elected as U.S. President in November 1980, Reagan booted Jimmy Carter back to Plains, Georgia, following his four-year term. Ronald’s wife, Nancy, seemed to be a first-class First Lady until we learned that she was an avid Horoscope follower and often made decisions based on such readings. That brought a collective, “hmmm,” from most of us. TimesDaily – Lawmakers meddling in education again Stumped on how to manage their core responsibilities with a General Fund that is inadequate to maintain even minimal services, Alabama legislators increasingly are figuring out novel ways to spend money from the Education Trust Fund. Years ago they exceeded all reasonable limits on how to apply ETF money to expenditures only tangentially related to education, so now they are focusing their efforts on revamping the state’s education system. They may have the power to impose education policy, but they lack the training. And it’s not as if the state has a shortage of people with such experience. In addition to an elected state Board of Education, there is a fully staffed state education department, including

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – An Alabama court that can’t stop itself The events Friday at the Alabama Supreme Court illustrate the twists and turns that legal opponents of same-sex marriage too often make. First, though, a reminder: This is the court that stopped same-sex marriages in Alabama last year. And the court led by Chief Justice Roy Moore, who has urged county probate judges to defy a U.S. Supreme Court ruling and refuse to issue licenses to same-sex couples. So Friday, the state Supreme Court ruled appropriately by dismissing motions and petitions in a lawsuit that would stop gay marriage in Alabama. Given the U.S. Supreme Court ruling of last summer, it was the Alabama court’s smart and obvious play. But our state Supreme Court is overwhelmingly conservative, Republican and anti-gay marriage. So, instead of issuing its ruling Friday with an appropriate response, the court filed 170 pages of opinion that said (a.) the motions and petitions were denied and (b.) the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which removed bans on same-sex unions throughout the United States, remained a blight on our nation. Birmingham News – Our national security depends on energy independence After decades of effort, American energy independence is finally within our reach. But President Obama is doing everything he can to make sure we remain dependent on foreign oil and gas. Thanks to an increase in domestic production, especially here in Alabama, foreign energy imports have declined dramatically in recent years. This reduction has helped increase U.S. energy security for three straight years, according to a new report from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Yet the Obama administration just imposed rules limiting domestic energy development on federal lands. And in February, the president called for a new tax on oil. Already, the oil and natural gas industry faces an uphill battle to maintain these security gains in a market awash with cheap energy. The White House’s plans jeopardize America’s progress towards energy independence — and hurt Alabama’s economy in the process. The Chamber’s report evaluates energy security by assessing 37 different metrics. These range from oil price volatility to energy efficiency to the amount of money spent on energy-related research and development. After pooling all this data, the Chamber comes up with a figure called the “Energy Security Risk Index.” The lower the number, the safer the United States. Decatur Daily – Americans now must show wisdom The establishment is a hated and feared entity in America. While different people define it in different ways, most Americans conceive of “the establishment” as a political structure that deprives the people of their ability to control their own government. Their fear is not irrational. Corporate interests, both acknowledged and anonymous, pour billions of dollars into the U.S. political system each election cycle. They have immense control over the actions of successful candidates. Maybe more pernicious is the control they exert through the parties in limiting the choice of candidates. The result has been a deep cynicism among the American people. Those who are most in need of a candidate who can effect change are also those who are convinced that their voice no longer matters. Like a boxer who punches a brick wall to test his strength, Americans simultaneously are demonstrating their influence and damaging themselves. The news from Super Tuesday was both good and bad. Good because the people proved corporate interests have not completely corrupted the system. The establishment did not win Tuesday. Dothan Eagle – Ballot mystery muddies DA’s race When voters in the Republican primary in Henry and Houston counties looked to their ballots to select a new district attorney on Tuesday, they found four names from which to choose: Patrick Jones, Gary Maxwell, Will Matthews, and Arthur Medley. However, only Jones, Maxwell, and Medley were candidates; Matthews qualified to run on Nov. 5, but soon changed his mind; on Nov. 23, he announced he was dropping out of the race, more than three months before the March 1 primary. Before the primary, election officials suggested the presence of Matthews’ name on the ballot was irrelevant, that any votes he drew in the election wouldn’t count. As the dust settles, it seems that’s not exactly true. It’s likely that the 1,061 voters who cast a ballot for Matthews would have voted for one of the other three had his name not appeared. And that could have altered the outcome of the contest. There was no clear winner in Tuesday’s race. Jones led opponents by a long shot, but even with 8,233 votes – 37.4 percent — didn’t cross the threshold of victory. Even if he had pulled all the votes that went to Matthews, Jones would still face one of the others in a runoff, and that’s where the “what ifs” really begin. Enterprise Ledger – Train ride to Elba, now that was cool We were discussing “cool” a week ago but didn’t even mention what prompted the topic: a half-full bottle of English Leather aftershave lotion. Since “cool” descended on the House of Adams circa 1962, there’s been a bottle of English Leather in stock; the first bottle held cologne, not aftershave. Both varieties came from the store in wooden boxes from, we sorta believed, well, England. Long before aftershave replaced cologne, other Britishcoolities had come our way. Chief among them was James Bond, Ian Fleming’s creation, who brought to our attention how cool a dude could be wearing a trench coat, carrying a black umbrella and, presumably, leaving a trail of English Leather or British Sterling smell-goods as he moved hither and yon. It quickly came to our attention the fact any double-naught spy caught wearing any glorified raincoat not carrying the London Fog label was anything but cool. TimesDaily – Voters has shown their power, now it’s time to show wisdom The establishment is a hated and feared entity in America. While different people define it in different ways, most Americans conceive of “the establishment” as

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Keeping track of our data online In the summer of 2013, a statement from an associate dean at the University of Wisconsin highlighted the epidemic of cyber attacks at U.S. colleges and universities. “We get 90,000 to 100,000 attempts per day, from China alone, to penetrate our system,” Wisconsin’s Bill Mellon told The New York Times. Three years later, reports of nearly 100,000 attempts per day — at a single university — remain an unimaginable statistic. They also make this week’s breach of Jacksonville State University’s computer system seem small in comparison. But make no mistake: the theft of student and faculty information from JSU computers is no small-time crime. The university, local law enforcement and the FBI are right to treat this case with the seriousness it deserves. The situation at Jacksonville brings home a terrible lesson about the depths computer hosts — businesses, schools, government agencies, banks, hospitals, etc. — must endure to ward off hackers. A 17-year-old student has been arrested for the JSU hack, and from the hacker’s apparent online postings, the intent seems to be more about proving the weakness of JSU’s network security than anything else. If that proves to be the case, JSU and its students are truly fortunate. Birmingham News – Rep. Mo Brooks: Ted Cruz has the best plan for economic growth Many candidates have made their mark focusing on the Obama administration’s past mistakes, and there are a lot of them. But now it’s time to look to the future. As this campaign goes on, voters will begin to focus on who has the best plan for dramatic economic growth. It’s clear that Ted Cruz’s pro-growth policies are the best to increase employment and wages for Americans. The Obama administration likes to tout an unemployment rate hovering above 5 percent, but this ignores the startling 94 million Americans who are out of the workforce. People in this group who have stopped looking for work don’t get counted by the government as “unemployed,” so the very real peril of unemployment gets ignored. This only hurts regular Americans. But better paying jobs don’t just appear because a billionaire commands them to. They’re created when the economy grows. And the economy grows when the government stops overtaxing individuals and businesses, overregulating industry, and stops enabling foreign labor to take American jobs. Out of all the candidates, Ted Cruz solves every side of this problem. Decatur Daily – Shelby, Crumpton best options for US Senate The Issue Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby’s clout in Congress often has helped Alabama, and losing his seniority would be a blow to the state. Neither Democratic candidate has the experience needed to be an effective senator, but Ron Crumpton has at least dabbled in state legislative issues. The rhetoric of U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby, the 81-year-old incumbent fending off several Republican challengers in Tuesday’s primary, often is disturbing. In his ubiquitous campaign ads, he panders to our least-rational fears. He recognizes our trepidation about people who look or sound different than us, and he plays it to maximum political advantage. The Republican from Tuscaloosa fights President Barack Obama — who has been made the icon of our xenophobia — “every hour of every day,” according to a commercial he is running with some of his millions in campaign contributions. And there’s some truth to that. On issues where the Obama administration has stated a position, according to a recent study by Congressional Quarterly, Shelby voted against the White House 63.9 percent of the time. He leads the Senate in that statistic. His opposition to a U.S. Supreme Court nominee that Obama has not even selected is a recent example of his blind opposition to the president. It may be a politically savvy strategy, but it interferes with the efficient workings of government. Dothan Eagle – Hug a utility worker Stormy weather that rolled through the Wiregrass area late Tuesday and early Wednesday left scattered damage affecting several homes and knocked down many trees, utility poles and signs. There were fatalities in other parts of the South, but in our corner of the world, the storm brought some structural damage and a whole lot of inconvenience. In Dothan, about 3,000 utility customers lost power, and it wasn’t until Thursday afternoon that electricity was restored everywhere. While it surely caused problems for those left in the dark for more than 24 hours, something unexpected happened on social media, where people are often quick to complain about virtually anything. Instead of diatribes, posts about the power outage took a more insightful view, as commenters – plugged in via smart phone, apparently, at least as long as the batteries hold – spoke of the unexpected value of blackout with regard to quality time with the family. That’s refreshing, particularly considering the plight of scores of utility workers, who have put in long hours in adverse conditions for the last couple of days to ensure that customers’ utility service was restored as quickly as possible. As we enjoy our restored electricity, along with our televisions, refrigerators and freezers, and heating and cooling (and we need both this time of year), it’s important that we remember that the service didn’t magically heal itself. Enterprise Ledger – Betters ways people could have passed the time My good friend and scribe associate, Ricky Adams, called last week all distraught over what was taking up all of the once precious airspace on his television set. It was not over a political agenda, he quickly noted, rather the agenda all of the talking heads/pundits were discussing. “I’ll leave the political writing to you,” Adams said, wisely choosing to stay out of that crossfire. “But, what gets me is what would these people be doing if Justice (Antonin) Scalia hadn’t died? What would they be talking about? And, couldn’t they wait until the coroner has pronounced him dead before making his death such a talking point. I just hope all

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Nelle Harper Lee, 1926-2016 “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view … until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” — “Before I can live with other folks, I’ve got to live with myself. The one thing that doesn’t abide by majority rule is a person’s conscience.” — “Real courage is when you know you’re licked before you begin, but you begin anyway and see it through no matter what.” — “Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than the whisky bottle in the hand of (another) … There are just some kind of men who — who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one.” — “I think there’s one kind of folks. Folks.” Birmingham News – I can’t believe I’m actually sticking up for Donald Trump It’s not often I can side with Donald Trump. Frankly, most of his conduct disgusts me and his proposal to deport 12 million illegal immigrants would be absurdly impossible to execute. It’s equally unusual for me to criticize Pope Francis. As a life-long Catholic, I believe he is one of the best and most effective popes God has ever blessed us with since Jesus Himself walked this earth. Yet, in a classic “man bites dog” scenario, the Holy Father apparently hasn’t thought through his comment this week about Trump’s proposed wall to keep illegal immigrants from crossing our southern border. After visiting the U.S.-Mexican border, Pope Francis said this about Trump: “A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not of building bridges, is not Christian. This is not the gospel.” Decatur Daily – GOP misguided on Scalia replacement The Issue The prevailing GOP position on the replacement of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia is a reminder that opposition to President Barack Obama is blind, not reasoned. It also suggests GOP politicians are so obsessed with short-term political goals that they are making unwise strategic decisions. In 2009, fresh off the new president’s overwhelming victory, Rush Limbaugh famously proclaimed, “I hope Obama fails.” His comment set the tone for the seven years that have followed. A Republican Party that once prided itself on having well-reasoned theories for effective governance has in the last seven years devolved into a party that only consistently stands for one thing: opposing Obama. This strategy of blind opposition has not been effective in strengthening the Republican Party. Obama won again in 2012. A party once known for the inspirational rhetoric and grand ideas of Ronald Reagan and even Abraham Lincoln, GOP politicians increasingly are recognized by the public as obstructionists. By defining itself as “the party of no,” the GOP has cobbled together a constituency that has little in common but for opposition to a single president. Dothan Eagle – Location information enhances police response A standoff between federal law enforcement officials and Apple CEO Tim Cook emerged this week after the feds asked the tech giant to develop software that would essentially create a bypass to the iPhone’s touted privacy features. Left with a locked iPhone belonging to one of the gunmen in December’s San Bernardino terrorist shootings, the government asked the company to help breach a function that would erase all data from the device following a number of unsuccessful attempts to log in. Cook and Apple have taken the stance that to create such software would be detrimental to the privacy and security of millions of American iPhone users, and millions more worldwide. As technological advances emerge, there will likely be more clashes between privacy advocates and law enforcement. However, police have also benefitted from new technology in other ways that will vastly improve service to the public. Enterprise Ledger – It’s February, but SEC jabs still connecting The jabs never cease. A recent phone conversation with a “friend” went as follows: “Hey Luke. What’s up?” “Just trying to make it home through these 162 national championship banners Alabama is now claiming.” “Oh really, well come down for a few days and we’ll talk about it, or we can talk about Auburn football over a cup of coffee.” My cousin is an avid LSU fan, growing up smack dab in the middle of Duck Dynasty territory. Each fall I get under his skin with another remark about an LSU fall out. And by each year, I mean every year since most of us could pronounce “underachievement.” But I digress. TimesDaily – Ambitious sentencing reform was needed The Issue In Alabama, we’re torn between the desire to be tough on crime and the reluctance to pay the price for an adequate corrections system. Sentencing reform legislation that took effect recently was an implicit recognition the state can’t afford the penalties it wants to impose. On Jan. 30, major sentencing reform legislation took effect in the state. It was one of the most ambitious laws passed by the state Legislature in recent years, and its passage may have owed much to its complexity. The public did not understand the law well enough to oppose it. The law’s net effect, and its goal, was to ease the penalties on nonviolent crimes. Sen. Cam Ward, R-Alabaster, shepherded the legislation through the Statehouse, and he’s taking a beating now that district attorneys and the public understand what it does. While the Legislature may need to tweak the law, Ward should not be painted as a villain. What he accomplished was long overdue. Gadsden Times – Socialism sounds good, but isn’t sustainable  A lot has been written about socialism with the emergence of Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., as a serious candidate for president. Socialism has a nice ring to it and many people think it simply means taking care of all the needs of the population by the federal government. But socialism by definition is the theory or system of ownership of the means of

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Don’t mess with football, governor And we thought we had it bad in Alabama. In 2015, Montgomery lawmakers spent months dealing with an expected General Fund budget shortfall of at least $250 million. State parks closed or reduced hours and state services were trimmed. It took three legislative sessions to produce a budget Gov. Robert Bentley would sign. And still more shortfalls are expected this year. Well, down in Louisiana, that state is facing a $943 million budget deficit and has a June 30 deadline to solve it. Thursday night, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards’ budget chief said the state was stopping payments into TOPS, Louisiana’s college scholarship program that assists 47,000 students, and that virtually all parts of the state’s public colleges and universities would be affected by the drastic cutbacks. That includes LSU football, some feared. Birmingham News – Valentine’s Day is tomorrow and you still need ideas. Yes, it’s that time of year. We’ve literally created a national calendar reminder to express our love for our spouses and significant others. If you’re reading this while standing in line at a drugstore, I feel compelled to again remind you that our national day of love and romance traces its origins to Lupercalia. The ancient Roman festival began with men sacrificing goats and a dog, the hides of which they would use to whip nearby women in an effort to promote fertility. How romantic… Yes, deer season just ended, but striking women with dead animal skins is widely frowned upon these days regardless of your intentions. Last year, I suggested a few gifts that aren’t as great as you think they are. That still stands. Red roses, assorted chocolates, perfume and signed cards lack inspiration. For the husbands out there just realizing Valentine’s Day is tomorrow, here are five gift ideas that might ring the bell with your lady luck: Decatur Daily – State lawmakers not acting like conservatives A fundamental principle of conservatism is that power should flow to that government which is closest to the people. Under this theory, the federal government, being most remote from the people, should wield the least power. Indeed, many of our precious state tax dollars pay for litigation defending this principle. Our conservative lawmakers are determined that state government, being closer to the people, should trump federal government. True conservatives, of course, do not limit this principle to differentiating between state and federal government. Local governmental entities are closer to the people than is state government. While this is true geographically — Decatur residents are closer to City Hall than they are to Montgomery — it also is true politically. Conservatives focus on the accountability of officials to the citizens they serve. State government is more directly accountable than federal government, and local government is more accountable than state government. Dothan Eagle – Low turnout insults candidates Congratulations, Commissioner Crutchfield Congratulations are in order for David Crutchfield, who was elected Tuesday to the Dothan City Commission to fill the unexpired term of former District 6 Commissioner Hamp Baxley. We also thank Steve McCarroll, former president of BBVA Compass Bank, who has served as interim commissioner for several weeks following the resignation of Baxley, who stepped down in November after having moved to a new residence outside District 6. Crutchfield has a steep learning curve ahead, with the city facing challenges related to sewerage debt and a controversial landfill expansion, which has generated an EPA complaint from neighboring residents. These are issues that both Crutchfield and his opponent for the vacant seat, Gary Roney, were fully aware of when they chose to seek the position. Both men deserve commendation for their willingness to step into the daunting role, and we commend each for running clean, vigorous campaigns. However, the turnout for the election signals perhaps a lack of appreciation on the part of the District 6 constituency. Only 1,023 of the district’s 8,140 registered voters turned out to cast a ballot on Tuesday. That’s dismal, slightly more than 12 percent. Enterprise Ledger – Super Sunday turned out to be a super dud Well, nothing could have topped the Arizona-Green Bay overtime game in the first round of the NFL playoffs, but what a pathetic Super Bowl. Even the commercials are getting next to no response, which is not a good thing for those businesses that spent the millions during the breaks. Peyton Manning, one of the best to ever lace them up, proved it is high time he take off the helmet for good. I don’t know if Manning could rattle a set of tea glasses from 15 yards. To say his body has seen its better days is like saying Joe Namath isn’t quite the athlete he was during his days at Alabama. That said, I still believe that 50 years from now Manning will be among those mentioned in the first sentence when discussing the greatest quarterbacks to ever play the game. What we saw Sunday was not his prime, but during it no one could put a ball on the perfect spot for a receiver better. NO ONE. The best player on the field, certainly this day, was Von Miller. I can’t remember a more deserving Super Bowl MVP. It was also nice to see DeMarcus Ware, the former high school wide receiver from Auburn turned defensive monster at Troy, play so well. TimesDaily – Bill focusing on temps and incentives has merits At least one Alabama lawmaker believes companies that benefit for state-granted tax breaks should not be relying so heavily on temporary workers to fill out the workforce. Sen. Bobby Singleton, D-Greensboro, filed a bill that would remove the tax breaks and incentives for three years from companies whose workforces are more than 5 percent temporary workers. It’s not clear the extent of companies’ use of temporary workers, but the subject is worth exploring. Singleton said recently he has been told the state’s automobile manufacturers in some cases have high numbers of temporary

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – A true need for Alabama’s schools Schools operated on the cheap fail their first obligation: to properly educate the students sitting in their classrooms. In previous generations, “cheap” meant using old textbooks and outdated equipment and refusing to update antiquated facilities. Today, it often revolves around technology, which has changed so fast in the last decade that schools once on the cutting edge can be outdated overnight. Montgomery lawmakers heard just that this week from Kathy Johnson, the director of the state’s Office of Broadband Development. Her pitch: Alabama’s schools must have broadband Internet access. Without it, students won’t get what they deserve out of the state’s public schools. Susan Poling, technology coordinator for Shelby County Schools, put it this way: “This is not a technology need, this is an instructional need.” Birmingham News – Bentley’s moonshot will require bold leadership in Montgomery Governor Bentley on Tuesday called on Alabamians to shoot for the moon. In a surprisingly progressive speech, the governor outlined his ambitious “Great State 2019 Plan” which would transform Alabama’s schools, prisons, workforce, technology and infrastructure. The ideas were bold and we were especially encouraged to see his leadership in the criminal justice arena; but these bold ideas require more than words, they will require a coalition of bold leadership. Since his reelection, Gov. Bentley has consistently surprised us. Last year, he decisively removed the Confederate flag from the Capitol grounds he tried, in vain, to persuade the state to buy into a huge tax reform proposal of as much as $700 million; and he welcomed corporate leaders such as Google to our state. And he isn’t alone in his bold pursuits, Senate President Pro Tem Del Marsh has pushed several proposals that had been previously unpopular with his party, including a massive casino and lottery bill late last year. Decatur Daily – Shooting of north Alabama deputy reminder of risk Law enforcement is a hazardous profession. Every day the men and women of our police and sheriff’s departments pin on their badges, they know there’s a chance they could encounter a potentially dangerous situation. As they protect and serve the communities where they live, these officers face risks that range from volatile domestic disturbances, to undercover drug stings, to unsuspected attacks by those who find themselves on the opposite side of the law. Such was the case Wednesday night when Lauderdale County Deputy Randall McCrary attempted to serve a mental commitment paper at a residence in north Florence. Details of what unfolded remain sketchy, but McCrary and the man being served were both injured during an exchange of gunfire. “This is absolutely the worst fear anyone in law enforcement can have,” Florence Police Chief Ron Tyler said of the shooting. “Someone out here, serving our county, our citizens, trying to keep them safe, and this happens. Unfortunate is not a strong enough word for this. It’s senseless.” Senseless, yes. Uncommon, no. The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s latest statistics on law enforcement officers killed and assaulted reveal that 48,315 officers were assaulted in 2014 while performing their duties. The rate of officer assaults was 9 assaults for every 100 sworn officers in the 11,151 agencies participating in the survey. Dothan Eagle – NIMBY: Neighboring residents file federal complaint over landfill expansion This week, a group of residents asked the Environmental Protection Agency to investigate the Alabama Department of Environmental Management’ approval of the City of Dothan’s request for a permit to expand its existing landfill. Their strategy is a civil rights complaint, citing an EPA regulation that prohibit any entities it financially assists from administering programs which “have the effect of subjecting individuals to discrimination …”. It’s just the latest chapter in the city’s beleaguered attempt to create a place to put the trash and garbage generated by Dothan’s more than 60,000 residents. However, it’s disappointing that the saga has taken such a turn. It’s reasonable to assume that anyone would take the NIMBY approach – “Not In My Back Yard.” No one relishes the idea of having a landfill nearby. They can be noisy and smelly, they attract flies, rodents, buzzards and other nuisance animals, and there’s always a fear that something vile may be leaching into the ground, regardless of regulatory requirements meant to ensure that doesn’t happen. However, trash and garbage has to go somewhere, and the proposed expansion would take place adjacent to the existing landfill, which has been in operation in the same area for many years. In other words, an expansion wouldn’t be expected to generate anything objectionable that isn’t already there. The Enterprise Ledger – State well represented at Super Bowl There will be 24 former SEC players on the rosters of the Carolina Panthers and Denver Broncos for Super Bowl 50, most notably quarterbacks Cam Newton (Auburn and Florida) and Peyton Manning (Tennessee). Guess that ‘SEC doesn’t have quality quarterbacks’ talk gets debunked, yet again. The Big Ten is second with six fewer players. Guess that ‘SEC is overrated’ talk gets debunked, yet again. Incidentally, the NFL broke with tradition and chose not to use Roman numerals this year, so it is Super Bowl 50 and not Super Bowl L. There will be three former members of the Alabama Crimson Tide and an equal number of former Auburn Tigers, as well as two former Troy Trojans. No bad considering there is only one from LSU, the same amount of players from Morningside College and Assumption College. (Without the help of Google, can you name where those two football powerhouses are located?) Auburn’s Super Bowl representatives are all with Carolina, beginning with Newton, former running back Cameron Artis-Payne, and injured guard Tyronne Green. Also, former Tiger Reese Dismukes is on the Panthers’ practice squad. TimesDaily – Bentley offered no funding plans for grandiose ideas What has happened to Alabama? Where have we gone wrong? We live in an incredible state. It has a rich history. It’s natural beauty is remarkable. We are

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: Anniston Star – Star’s front-page editorials over the years carry a similar theme The Star’s Sunday front page offered an editorial that encouraged Anniston residents to begin thinking about the 2016 election for city school board. Election day is Aug. 23. “Now — about seven months before Election Day — is the time to begin thinking about the priorities for the next Anniston city school board and who should serve on it,” the editorial began. “The upcoming four years are some of the most challenging Anniston’s schools will face in their history.” On Aug. 21, 2014, we offered a similar front-page editorial encouragement ahead of the 2016 school board election. “Anniston’s future, as well as the future of its students, depends on quality public schools that produce an attractive workforce and lure businesses to the city,” it read. The point is that the people best positioned to create change in our community are those who call it home. In a busy election year where the race for president will draw more attention than it deserves, it falls to this newspaper to shine a light on an election that will set the course for public schooling in our region. Birmingham News – What exactly is a pro-life Democrat? Recently, I offered a harsh critique of GOP leadership in Alabama and made a plea to the Alabama Democratic Party to open their doors and acknowledge the pro-life movement. The comments were none too pleasant, to say the least. And though I didn’t anticipate an outpouring of support, I did see a significant lack of understanding about what constitutes a “Pro-Life Democrat”. So let me explain. First and foremost, though we don’t hold the majority, we are actually significant in number. In a 2011 Gallup poll, 31% of people surveyed identified as both pro-life and Democrat. Secondly, though many make the opposite assumption, we differ significantly from our GOP counterparts. As pro-life Democrats, we are governed by the Whole Life Ethic, which states that human life, at every stage, is precious and sacred and worthy of protection and sustainment. So while we are actively anti-abortion, we are also fervently opposed to anything that does not sustain life. Decatur Daily – Lawmakers can heal an unhealthy state Interstate signs welcoming people to Alabama should have a warning attached: “Living in Alabama can be hazardous to your health.” The residents of only two states, Mississippi and West Virginia, have lower life expectancies than in Alabama. Stated differently, the average Alabamian, with a life expectancy of 75.4, is deprived of more than three years of life compared to the U.S. average. The average black Alabamian lives to 72.9, almost six fewer years than the national average. Black Alabamians have a life expectancy about the same as that in Cambodia, and shorter than the life expectancy in Iran. And it’s no wonder. According to the Alabama Department of Public Health, 35 of 55 rural Alabama counties lack labor and delivery services, and eight do not have hospitals. In the rural counties that do have hospitals, there are roughly 25 beds for every 10,000 residents, compared to 45 beds per 10,000 residents in urban communities. Getting sick or having an accident in rural Alabama can be a death sentence. Alabama’s infant mortality rate is 8.7 per 1,000 live births, worse than every state but Mississippi. Alabama’s infant mortality rate almost is twice that of most developed nations with universal healthcare. The infant mortality for black Alabamians is 14.6 per 1,000 live births, about the same as Syria and Colombia. About 11 percent of Alabamians have diabetes, second only to Mississippi. Dothan Eagle – A new approach to teaching in Webb Administrators and teachers at Webb Elementary School have made some changes in how students are taught in the county school east of Dothan. And in a time when many schools are struggling to meet the academic needs of students, the youngsters at Webb Elementary seem to be thriving under the changes. School officials report gains in student achievement and better performance on standardized tests. Recently, Webb Elementary was named as a CLAS Banner School in recognition of its academic performance – one of only 14 chosen from among 178 Alabama schools. The changes include a move to standards-based curriculum, establishing specific teachers for reading and math, and using tutors, all of which helps identify students who are having trouble before further academic difficulties take hold. While there is plenty of controversy in education circles surrounding the differences between curriculum-based instruction and standards-based instruction – and who sets those standards – there’s little doubt that the changes set in place at Webb Elementary have produced positive results. Enterprise Ledger – Shall I point out towns where gripes are merited? I know it’s the nature of the beast. Being a politician sprouts gripes from the public regardless of whether it’s justified or not. Depending on what biased cable channel you choose, Barack Obama is either a villain or a hero, Hillary Clinton is either a pathological liar or just being picked on because she’s a woman (hello, Mrs. Palin), and Donald Trump is either a nut or a…, well, from Fox News to the Peacock network, most agree he’s a nut, even those who would rather he be moving to the Oval Office next year. In Alabama, there are actually those that still support Speaker of the House Mike Hubbard, despite evidence that shows he has used, or at least tried to use his position for personal gain. He has more ethics violations charges than you can count using all of your fingers and toes. People’s pride in refusing to admit they’ve been a sucker for believing in a political misfit is tough, and until that situation is resolved, Alabama and its Republican Party will continue to suffer. But I digress… TimesDaily – For leaders, we need pragmatists, not ideologues It would be convenient if all of our problems could be solved by a single ideology. On the

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: The Anniston Star – From Flint, a message to heed Government matters, from the smallest of city halls to’ the wings of the White House. If you scoff at that notion, then consider what’s going on in Flint, Mich. Since 2014, Flint residents have suffered because government has failed them. The water that flows into their homes and businesses is brown and contaminated with lead. City Hall, which switched Flint’s water supplier as a cost-saving measure, virtually ignored their initial complaints. What actions government did take — telling residents to boil water before using it, for instance — didn’t solve the problem, it only prolonged it. Now this majority-minority city with a large population of low-income residents is in full-on disaster mode. Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican heavily criticized for his slow response, has apologized and issued a state of emergency for Flint’s county. President Barack Obama has sent $5 million in federal aid and the National Guard to help distribute bottled water. Lawsuits have been filed. Residents, meanwhile, want answers and accountability as much as the clean water they used to have. The Birmingham News – A modest proposal to fix health care: Use fake medicine Before I go about solving the financial problems of America’s health care system, it’s only fair to give a shout-out to Dr. Elisha Perkins, who should probably get the real credit.  Dr. Perkins invented the famous “Perkins Tractors,” which he patented after years of research in 1796. Retailing for $25 per pair (equivalent to about $700 today), his original tractors were a pair of 3-inch pointed metal rods, which when passed over painful body parts relieved pain and inflammation by drawing off “noxious electrical fluid,” whatever that is. Dr. Perkins attributed their effectiveness to the combination of exotic metal alloys he used. Personal testimonies of the Tractors’ ability to relieve the pain of arthritis, gout, and headaches poured in.  The Tractors attracted some high profile clients, including President George Washington, and their popularity soon spread to England. However, before long, some humorless British doctors started doing their own experiments, finding that wooden rods painted to look like Tractors or iron nails coated with sealing wax were just as effective at relieving pain, so long as the patients thought they were the real thing. Presto! The placebo effect was discovered.  The placebo effect, of course, is the ability of fake therapies, sugar pills or colored water, for instance, to have a medical benefit if the patient thinks they are real medicine. The Decatur Daily – Reading is still fundamental No one disputes reading is important; one might even say fundamental. So when test scores show students lagging in reading, educators and parents worry. Everyone should worry; students who can’t read at their grade level are likely to graduate — if they do graduate — at a significant disadvantage. There is no shortage of ideas for how to improve reading, but there is a shortage of funding, and not all ideas are created equal, anyway. When the state Legislature cut funding to local school systems, many of those systems cut reading specialists upon whom they relied to help boost reading scores. Cedar Ridge Middle School, however, has instituted a program that costs nothing, at least in terms of money. Each morning at 9:30, students — as well as teachers, counselors and administrators — drop everything else and spend the next 20 minutes reading. It’s largely self-directed. Students can read pretty much whatever they like, be it a book, magazine or newspaper. All the school does is provide the dedicated time. It may not seem like a big deal, but it is. Students have lots of things competing for their time: homework, sports and extracurricular activities. That’s just what school demands of them. It doesn’t take into account video games, movies, TV, spending time with friends and family, household chores and all the other demands on a busy student’s life. Heaven help the student who also takes piano lessons or dance classes. With so many things vying for kids’ time and so much of that time structured, a block of time where the only requirement is to read must seem like a calm in the storm for many students. Dothan Eagle – Cat videos and criminal investigation The Internet – social media in particular – is certainly a fount of cute animal videos and aggravating political vitriol, but it’s clear that the depth of its potential hasn’t been reached. For instance, we imagine Mark Zuckerberg hadn’t considered the myriad uses of his software when he developed a program to connect fellow students at Harvard any more than the creator of the wheel imagined how it would alter the trajectory of mankind. But in Dothan in recent weeks, Facebook has become a crime-fighting tool that has led to arrests and, possibly, prevented some crimes. Facebook users who live in neighborhoods in the loosely defined northwest Dothan area called the Garden District established a Facebook group some time ago, and for a while, it was primarily used as a bulletin board for lost pets. However, parts of the area have been plagued with vehicle and home burglaries in recent weeks, and the online group has become a real-time message board for the neighborhood watch. Police officers monitor the group, which gives them a good picture of what sort of criminal activity is going on and where, and the forum can suggest patterns that may be useful in investigation. Several arrests have been made. This week, one local business owner posted a short video taken from their store’s surveillance system showing a customer putting on a shirt and jacket in the store and sauntering off. The owner said Eagle Eye Outfitters had been victimized by shoplifters and asked for help identifying the person in the video. Within a week, the clip had been viewed 135,000 times and shared by almost 2,000 Facebook users, leading to the identification and arrest of two Blountstown,

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A roundup of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: The Anniston Star – Getting under Trump’s skin For politicians, the press is an easy target because its defense is the truth and the First Amendment, not bluster and ego. That’s especially the case for aspiring politicians like Donald Trump, who’d rather rough up a reporter’s reputation than deal in facts. As Trump marches toward the Republican presidential primary season, he’s repeatedly shown how he’d deal with people outside his control who don’t follow his script. The press — particularly national reporters covering his campaign — have only one job: fair political coverage. Portraying Trump as he’d prefer isn’t part of the deal. On Friday, a reporter for the New York Times was kicked out of an Iowa campaign event for the New York billionaire and reality-TV star. The reporter, Trip Gabriel, was one of a number of reporters there. Gabriel, however, had written a story the day before that detailed the inner troubles of Trump’s Iowa team. The Times put it on the front page. Trump, apparently, didn’t like it. Thus, Gabriel was shown the door. Gabriel was told it was a private, invitation-only event. The other journalists remained. This is how Trump operates, which is fine; it’s his prerogative to act petulantly. It’s important to note, as well, that Friday wasn’t Trump’s first rodeo with a wayward media outlet during this campaign. Gabriel’s account of his trouble in Iowa included the fact that reporters from the Des Moines Register had been barred from Trump events after that newspaper’s editorial board called for Trump to suspend his campaign. The Birmingham News – 100,000 reasons Mike Hubbard won’t resign as AL House Speaker Mike Hubbard has at least 100,000 reasons not to step down as Speaker of the Alabama House of Representatives. With his every action and word scrutinized, Hubbard will use all available legal means to defend himself, and that likely requires him to remain in his powerful post. Hubbard is entitled to his day in court to face the charges against him, and we all know that private legal defense is expensive. Under Alabama law, Hubbard is able to use his campaign funds to pay for legal expenses, and he’d have to be crazy—or independently wealthy—not to do exactly that. The Speaker’s annual campaign finance report tells the story.  Hubbard’s largest 2015 campaign expenditures were paying off a $50,000 personal loan he made to the campaign and his legal expenses totaling almost $40,000. More significantly, Speaker Hubbard raised almost $90,000 in a year where he’snot facing election after he was indicted. That was permissible because he had campaign debt (to himself) to repay after his reelection. The Speaker of the House is, by many accounts, the most powerful political office in Alabama. Anyone who wants legislation to move is wise to stay on the Speaker’s good side. That’s a clear fundraising advantage unique to the office.  At the same time he made his annual campaign filing, Hubbard also submitted a “major contribution” report for a $100,000 loan he made to his campaign in January of 2016. Think of it as a type of bridge loan. The Decatur Daily – Hits and misses Decatur police deserve credit It’s a rough time to be a police officer. Around the nation, attention increasingly has focused on the use of force by policemen. Sometimes fairly and sometimes not, police have been called out for the use of excessive force. In the midst of the resulting hostility, police still have to go about their jobs: protecting the public and solving crimes. A recent Decatur Daily story profiled the two detectives who bore the brunt of handling Decatur’s five 2015 homicides. As Detective Mike Burleson pointed out, real life detective work bears little resemblance to the TV shows. “There’s no supercomputer with everybody’s fingerprints, DNA, all the girlfriends a person’s ever had and their cellphone records,” Burleson said. “We rely mostly on witnesses and people telling us what they know or saw. It’s nothing like what you see on TV.” It’s high-pressure work that is emotionally and physically draining, and even quick results usually are too slow for an anxious public used to an arrest in one hour, minus commercial breaks. And especially at the Decatur Police Department, it’s work that does not pay well. Sgt. George Silvestri explained why it is worth the effort. “The look on those families’ face and the light in their eyes when we tell them ‘We got ’em’ is why I do this job,” Silvestri said. Staying focused on the job is tough when hostility toward police is running high and Monday morning quarterbacking of split-second decisions is the norm. Kudos to Burleson, Silvestri and their colleagues for their success. Dothan Eagle – No. 16 and its big payoff for Alabama If there’s anything to be said about the University of Alabama’s football team, it’s that the Crimson Tide is a winner. Even many dyed-in-the-wool Auburn fans will admit that there’s something about the team from the other side of the state that exudes success. Perhaps it’s the legacy of Bear Bryant, the iconic coach who led the team to the pinnacle time and again, or the uncanny ability of Nick Saban to set a trajectory that may ultimately set him above the Bear in the annals of the Capstone’s gridiron history. Whatever the logic, it had many people in our state convinced that there was no way on earth that Alabama’s team, even with its loss to Ole Miss on its 2015 record, would travel to Glendale, Arizona, to face an undefeated Clemson team and return without a 16th national championship trophy. They were right: the game was a nail-biter; the Alabama squad prevailed; and the people back home were frenzied. Many would argue that college athletics are irrelevant to life, that academics get short shrift in the shadow of athletic powerhouse schools, and on and on. And while there may be some truth to those arguments, the game reverberates throughout the nation, and the beneficiaries

A round-up of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers

Newspaper editorials

A round-up of Sunday editorials from Alabama’s leading newspapers: The Anniston Star – Sheriff Amerson’s views on gun laws In this era of hyperbole and panic over the Second Amendment in America, calm is rare whenever gun rights are mentioned. It’s Pavlovian: mention firearms and gun owners fear the worst. That’s been the case this week after President Barack Obama issued his executive order that, among other things, called for stronger background checks on gun sales. Obama has been pilloried by Republicans. His plan has been scoffed at by the National Rifle Association. Obama’s supporters — those in the Democratic Party and those who back stronger gun laws, regardless of politics — have had a hard time keeping up. Nevertheless, this was said Thursday night in Anniston: “The good news is, I didn’t see anything that keeps people from access to guns. We have a lot of freedom and still do.” Those two sentences belong to Calhoun County Sheriff Larry Amerson, who this week held another of his popular gun-safety classes at the Anniston City Meeting Center. (An overflow crowd attended.) It may sound odd — a conservative, Southern sheriff skipping an opportunity to bash the president’s efforts to strengthen America’s gun laws. But, really, it isn’t. The Birmingham News – Let’s move New Year’s Day to March 1 Now that Christmas and New Year’s Eve/Day are safely behind us and life is beginning to return to normal, it’s time to think about which of those two holidays needs to be moved. I vote for New Year.   It’s always puzzled me why we should cram two of our major raucously celebratory holidays so close together, particularly since both of them unlike, say, July 4, are on arbitrarily-chosen days. Their proximity during the darkest days of what used to be winter not only leads to Zombie week, the week between the holidays when you pretend to be alive at work, it also wastes a major celebration when you have barely recovered from the previous one.  If we spread them out a bit, there would be one fewer large gaps between our raucously celebratory holidays. No one knows on what day or month or, for that matter, year, Jesus was born. We celebrate Christmas on December 25th because the Roman Emperor Constantine decided nearly 1700 years ago that a time near the winter solstice, when the days are just beginning to lengthen once again, was appropriate. Besides, he thought he might also be able to co-opt for Christianity a couple of pre-existing Roman feast days honoring other gods which were celebrated around that date.  The Decatur Daily – Roy Moore brings disgrace, again Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore on Wednesday issued an administrative order prohibiting probate judges from issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. He did not issue the order as part of a pending case — a single justice lacks such power — but pursuant to his duty as administrative head of the Unified Judicial System of Alabama to “alleviate any condition or situation adversely affecting the administration of justice.” Alabama’s judicial system is adversely affected, he explained, because of “confusion and uncertainty” stemming from a conflict between two court decisions. One of those decisions, issued in March, was by the Alabama Supreme Court. In that case, the court upheld two Alabama laws banning same-sex marriage. The other decision, rendered in June, was by the U.S. Supreme Court. Based on this conflict, Moore concluded probate judges in Alabama had no clear direction. That direction could only come when the Alabama Supreme Court again weighs in on the issue, he said, and his administrative order was to clarify the duties of probate courts during the interim. “Until further decision by the Alabama Supreme Court, the existing orders … that Alabama probate judges have a ministerial duty not to issue any marriage license contrary to the Alabama Sanctity of Marriage Amendment or the Alabama Marriage Protection Act remain in full force and effect,” Moore wrote. Moore’s administrative order is a farce. There is no confusion whatsoever about the obligations of Alabama’s probate courts. Lawyers not positioning themselves for future elections or speaker fees get this. Dothan Eagle – The invisible homeless Almost a decade ago, a man was found badly beaten near a vacant building downtown, and he died later from his injuries. The victim lived on the streets – homeless, some would say, although the man’s family members said he lived the way he wanted. The tragedy was an epiphany for many local residents, people who, if asked, might have said there were few homeless people in our city. They’d be wrong, as volunteers with several local organizations could tell them. There are more people living on the streets of Dothan than one might guess, although it’s difficult to know an exact number, as many homeless people are transient. Local groups that offer support and assistance hope to get a better idea of the scope of homelessness in our area by conducting a headcount later this month. Those who are interested in doing something now have an opportunity. Volunteers are needed to carry out the initiative, Point in Time Count, conducted by the Southeast Coalition for the Homeless. The study is part of a national effort by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and will provide valuable data to homeless service groups in efforts to secure funding. The Enterprise Ledger – Just a few of my preferences I’d like to share Please refrain from using your cell phone at a movie theater. I think you should be escorted from the premises if you choose to text and perhaps even shoved out if you choose to talk on one during the movie… or even during the previews for that matter. Please drive the speed limit if you’re in the left lane or move over to the right lane. Some people need to get from Point A to Point B in a timely manner. Remember, if you take a shot at one university because of their