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GIVING UP TOO MUCH

It is hardly reassuring that State Senator Marsha Blackburn of Williamson County has now issued a formal statement of approval concerning the Sundquist administration’s proposed TennCare changes. This is the same Marsha Blackburn, after all, who wrote the infamous emails asking for “troops” that initiated the crowd disturbances at the Capitol on the night of July 12th.

As a dedicated spokesperson for the poshest suburban communities adjoining Nashville, Blackburn has never wasted any tears on the less properous and fortunate. And what she finds so commendable in the suggested new TennCare regulations — offered by the governor as a concession on behalf of tax reform — is the very premise that we find so lamentable in them.

What Sundquist has done to accommodate his critics on the right is bow to their demands to “fix” TennCare by pruning away large numbers of those currently being cared for. In essence, the TennCare population would be divided into two groups, with not quite half — predominantly chldren and uninsurables whose prior medical history had prevented them from being served by private insurors — being related to a limbo status.

Or, as Blackburn’s press release puts it: “Appropriately managing the group of insured and uninsurables and children that have been added to the program should lead to a reduction in the total program costÉ.”

That’s right-wingerese for ‘Cut ‘em loose so we can save a few bucks.’ Never mind that Governor Sundquist has argued in the past that these patients have attracted federal funding which more than offset their expense and that letting them go would constitute a burden on the state’s emergency rooms and thereby incite an increase in local jurisdictions’ property taxes.

The governor was right in the first place and is wrong now. Marsha Blackburn’s quick endorsement should have told him that.

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From a Memphian Abroad: T-SHIRTS IN JAPAN

OSAKA – If you need further evidence to show what a small villiage the entire world is becoming, this should suffice. In recent months, I have spotted the following T-shirt slogans here in the Kansai region of Japan, worn by young Japanese citizens. And folks, I couldn’t make this up….Used clothing from the USA and other western countries is a fairly hot commodity over here….

STATE FARM INSURANCE

OLIVE BRANCH, MS

LEE SURRENDERED – I DIDN’T (with a confederate battle flag)

MY TWO BEST FRIENDS ARE CHARLIE AND JACK (with a confederate battle flag)

DICK HACKETT-BEFORE HE DICKS YOU

(Mark Davis, who grew up in Raleigh and attended the University of Memphis, now teaches English in Osaka, Japan.)

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UT EYES FORREST PARK

If it is possible that there is a subject that draws more passionate mail and comment than Memphis and its NBA arena it is anything having to do with Nathan Bedford Forrest, the famous Confederate general.

So it is somewhat surprising that the city administration and the University of Tennessee are putting an item on the city council’s agenda next week regarding Forrest Park.

The item would give the University of Tennessee at Memphis first right of refusal if the city ever decides to sell the park. City councilman John Vergos says he was asked to bring the item up for committee consideration by Pete Aviotti, special assistant to Mayor Willie Herenton. Vergos says he’ll do that much, although he opposes selling off parkland in principle.

Aviotti couldn’t be reached for comment. But UT officials insist nothing newsy is going on and they are merely keeping their options open. UT surrounds the park on three sides and would like to build a pharmacy school building across from the park on the northwest corner of Union and Manassas, but the Tennessee Legislature did not fund the project.

“We’re just looking down the road,” says Odell Horton Jr., vice chancellor for university relations. “To be honest, we’d like to have the park. It fits well in our master plan.”

But he emphasizes that he has no indications that the city plans to sell it. At any rate, UT would keep the park as green space if it ever did acquire it, Horton says.

Why, then, take any action at all involving the high-profile Memphis City Council and Forrest Park?

“If the city ever decides to sell it,” says Horton, “it gives us an opportunity.”

The park features a prominent equestrian statue of Forrest, who is considered a tactical genius by no less an authority than Civil War historian and Memphis author Shelby Foote. The remains of Forrest and his wife were moved to the park in 1906 from Elmwood Cemetery. The Sons of Confederate Veterans’ Forrest Camp observed the 180th anniversary of his birth last month at Forrest Park, carrying on a 96-year tradition.

The fiery general who grew up near Holly Springs, where the local history museum does a brisk business in Forrest souvenirs, is still good copy because of his connection to the Ku Klux Klan. Forrest was a slave trader before the war and a Klan leader after the war but disbanded it in 1869. In the last three years, monuments to Forrest have made news in Nashville and Selma, Alabama.

If the city administration is smart, it will let sleeping generals lie.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

WILL WE GET TO SEE AL GORE LIKE THIS?

GORE: He’s Back And He’s … Bearded?!

Ex-VP Al Gore, who’ll be “easing back into” politics by training Dem operatives and founding a PAC, “has been vacationing in Europe for several weeks and has changed his image again: he has grown a beard.”

However, Gore associates said the new look “had nothing to do with politics and was unlikely to be seen” in the U.S. Gore “has promised to campaign” in NJ for Jim McGreevey and “expects to appear” for other Dems in states with mayoral elections.

These appearances and the “frequency of invitations to make them” will be an “important measure” of Gore’s standing among Dems. Several associates said Gore’s plans “did not commit him to running” for WH ’04, although “they expected him to run.”

Ex-Sen. James Sasser (TN) said that while Gore hadn’t “told him his intentions”: “I’ve always really thought that he would run. … I’ve always taken it for granted. After all, he got a half million more votes than the other guy.”

While in Europe, Gore has “stayed in touch with political and fund-raising associates, planning to resume political activity” (Clymer, New York Times, 8/3).

Trenton Times’ Perkiss reports, Gore “will come out of political hiding” when he visits NJ to campaign for McGreevey, Dems said 8/2. Gore spokesperson Kiki McLean: “Al Gore … wants to do what he can to help out in New Jersey.” Observers “said Gore’s willingness to campaign for McGreevey is an indication that he still has” WH ambitions.

UVA’s Larry Sabato “This is one of the first concrete signs that Gore is considering running (for president) again.” More Sabato: “Clearly this will mean more to Gore than it does to McGreevey” (8/3).

The first step in Gore’s return “is running a political academy” in Nashville the week of 8/12. One “mark of the importance” attached to NJ, which Gore won by 504K votes, is that state Sen. Raymond Lesniak”will direct the school,” along with Rep. Harold Ford Jr (D-TN) and Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-CA). The other state with a gov race, VA, “may be less hospitable” to Gore, who lost it by 220K votes.

Gore’s “activities this fall, and some contributions to candidates, will be financed from” a PAC formed to help Dems in the ’98 elections. That PAC, Leadership ’98, had $281K cash on hand on 9/30. A new PAC “will be founded after the” ’01 elections, a DC associate said (Clymer, New York Times, 8/3).

…Gore “plans to help train” young Dems to help in several elections, associates say. Gore “has kept a low profile,” but friends “indicate he is preparing to gradually step back into” politics in the coming months – though Gore “has given no indication” of his long-term plans. Some two dozen young Dems “will attend a weeklong workshop” in August focused on grass-roots activism, and a “bipartisan” workshop 8/11 at Vanderbilt Univ. with Gore and Gov. Lamar Alexander (R).

The young Dems will then “work with” Dem party orgs in several states – including VA, NJ and NY.

“Details were not outlined,” but in ’01 VA and NJ elect govs, and NY City elects a mayor. Gore associates “gave no timetable” for the appearances with McGreevey (Lester, AP, 8/2).

Familar Second Fiddle

Newsweek’s Fineman, on whether Clinton’s “comeback” obscures Gore: “Al Gore is so invisible that a large foot is not required to obscure him. I was just told today that he’s having Camp Al down in Tennessee in a couple weeks. Twenty five young activists are going to come down to be lectured in political activism by Al Gore.”

MSNBC’s Matthews responds: “You know what this reminds me of? In the back of the New York Times Magazine they have the ad for the camp for the fat kids. Please send your fat kid to this camp. … You know — Chester will come back 20 pounds lighter as a happy kid.”

Fineman: “Al Gore is slowly re-emerging on the political scene. … It should hit its maximum around 2032, I think” (“Hardball,” MSNBC, 8/1).

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UT EYES FORREST PARK

If it is possible that there is a subject that draws more passionate mail and comment than Memphis and its NBA arena it is anything having to do with Nathan Bedford Forrest, the famous Confederate general.

So it is somewhat surprising that the city administration and the University of Tennessee are putting an item on the city council’s agenda next week regarding Forrest Park.

The item would give the University of Tennessee at Memphis first right of refusal if the city ever decides to sell the park. City councilman John Vergos says he was asked to bring the item up for committee consideration by Pete Aviotti, special assistant to Mayor Willie Herenton. Vergos says he’ll do that much, although he opposes selling off parkland in principle.

Aviotti couldn’t be reached for comment. But UT officials insist nothing newsy is going on and they are merely keeping their options open. UT surrounds the park on three sides and would like to build a pharmacy school building across from the park on the northwest corner of Union and Manassas, but the Tennessee Legislature did not fund the project.

“We’re just looking down the road,” says Odell Horton Jr., vice chancellor for university relations. “To be honest, we’d like to have the park. It fits well in our master plan.”

But he emphasizes that he has no indications that the city plans to sell it. At any rate, UT would keep the park as green space if it ever did acquire it, Horton says.

Why, then, take any action at all involving the high-profile Memphis City Council and Forrest Park?

“If the city ever decides to sell it,” says Horton, “it gives us an opportunity.”

The park features a prominent equestrian statue of Forrest, who is considered a tactical genius by no less an authority than Civil War historian and Memphis author Shelby Foote. The remains of Forrest and his wife were moved to the park in 1906 from Elmwood Cemetery. The Sons of Confederate Veterans’ Forrest Camp observed the 180th anniversary of his birth last month at Forrest Park, carrying on a 96-year tradition.

The fiery general who grew up near Holly Springs, where the local history museum does a brisk business in Forrest souvenirs, is still good copy because of his connection to the Ku Klux Klan. Forrest was a slave trader before the war and a Klan leader after the war but disbanded it in 1869. In the last three years, monuments to Forrest have made news in Nashville and Selma, Alabama.

If the city administration is smart, it will let sleeping generals lie.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

WILL WE GET TO SEE AL GORE LIKE THIS?

from The Hotline:

GORE: He’s Back And He’s … Bearded?!

Ex-VP Al Gore, who’ll be “easing back into” politics by training Dem operatives and founding a PAC, “has been vacationing in Europe for several weeks and has changed his image again: he has grown a beard.”

However, Gore associates said the new look “had nothing to do with politics and was unlikely to be seen” in the U.S. Gore “has promised to campaign” in NJ for Jim McGreevey and “expects to appear” for other Dems in states with mayoral elections.

These appearances and the “frequency of invitations to make them” will be an “important measure” of Gore’s standing among Dems. Several associates said Gore’s plans “did not commit him to running” for WH ’04, although “they expected him to run.”

Ex-Sen. James Sasser (TN) said that while Gore hadn’t “told him his intentions”: “I’ve always really thought that he would run. … I’ve always taken it for granted. After all, he got a half million more votes than the other guy.”

While in Europe, Gore has “stayed in touch with political and fund-raising associates, planning to resume political activity” (Clymer, New York Times, 8/3).

Trenton Times’ Perkiss reports, Gore “will come out of political hiding” when he visits NJ to campaign for McGreevey, Dems said 8/2. Gore spokesperson Kiki McLean: “Al Gore … wants to do what he can to help out in New Jersey.” Observers “said Gore’s willingness to campaign for McGreevey is an indication that he still has” WH ambitions.

UVA’s Larry Sabato “This is one of the first concrete signs that Gore is considering running (for president) again.” More Sabato: “Clearly this will mean more to Gore than it does to McGreevey” (8/3).

The first step in Gore’s return “is running a political academy” in Nashville the week of 8/12. One “mark of the importance” attached to NJ, which Gore won by 504K votes, is that state Sen. Raymond Lesniak”will direct the school,” along with Rep. Harold Ford Jr (D-TN) and Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-CA). The other state with a gov race, VA, “may be less hospitable” to Gore, who lost it by 220K votes.

Gore’s “activities this fall, and some contributions to candidates, will be financed from” a PAC formed to help Dems in the ’98 elections. That PAC, Leadership ’98, had $281K cash on hand on 9/30. A new PAC “will be founded after the” ’01 elections, a DC associate said (Clymer, New York Times, 8/3).

…Gore “plans to help train” young Dems to help in several elections, associates say. Gore “has kept a low profile,” but friends “indicate he is preparing to gradually step back into” politics in the coming months – though Gore “has given no indication” of his long-term plans. Some two dozen young Dems “will attend a weeklong workshop” in August focused on grass-roots activism, and a “bipartisan” workshop 8/11 at Vanderbilt Univ. with Gore and Gov. Lamar Alexander (R).

The young Dems will then “work with” Dem party orgs in several states – including VA, NJ and NY.

“Details were not outlined,” but in ’01 VA and NJ elect govs, and NY City elects a mayor. Gore associates “gave no timetable” for the appearances with McGreevey (Lester, AP, 8/2).

Familar Second Fiddle

Newsweek’s Fineman, on whether Clinton’s “comeback” obscures Gore: “Al Gore is so invisible that a large foot is not required to obscure him. I was just told today that he’s having Camp Al down in Tennessee in a couple weeks. Twenty five young activists are going to come down to be lectured in political activism by Al Gore.”

MSNBC’s Matthews responds: “You know what this reminds me of? In the back of the New York Times Magazine they have the ad for the camp for the fat kids. Please send your fat kid to this camp. … You know — Chester will come back 20 pounds lighter as a happy kid.”

Fineman: “Al Gore is slowly re-emerging on the political scene. … It should hit its maximum around 2032, I think” (“Hardball,” MSNBC, 8/1).

Categories
News News Feature

from a Memphian abroad: T-SHIRTS IN JAPAN

OSAKA – If you need further evidence to show what a small villiage the entire world is becoming, this should suffice. In recent months, I have spotted the following T-shirt slogans here in the Kansai region of Japan, worn by young Japanese citizens. And folks, I couldn’t make this up….Used clothing from the USA and other western countries is a fairly hot commodity over here….

STATE FARM INSURANCE

OLIVE BRANCH, MS

LEE SURRENDERED – I DIDN’T (with a confederate battle flag)

MY TWO BEST FRIENDS ARE CHARLIE AND JACK (with a confederate battle flag)

DICK HACKETT-BEFORE HE DICKS YOU

(Mark Davis, who grew up in Raleigh and attended the University of Memphis, now teaches English in Osaka, Japan.)

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FALLING FROM DISGRACELAND

I drink Diet Coke. All day long. I have a one at 9 in the morning and

then basically have one every hour on the hour until I go to sleep. Friends

have joked that if I don’t have a 20-ounce in my hand, there’s one in my

purse. I know it’s not healthy, but I’m addicted. And try telling any addict

— from cigarettes to sex — that what they’re doing isn’t healthy, and see

how far you get.

Anyway, the only time I don’t drink diet coke is when I’m out and about.

Then I usually drink Amaretto Sours. But what I’ve recently learned is I

have to get a new drink. Stat.

I know, it sounds trivial, but it’s become something of a problem. I’ll

be out and about and I’ll elbow my way to the bar and then the bartender

will look at me and I’ll draw a blank.

I’ll drink just about anything: beer, shots, wine, wine coolers, wine in

a box, you name it. But what happened was this: once upon a time, a friend

of mine insisted I taste her amaretto sour, extra cherries. With one sip, I

was hooked. It was like liquid candy rolling down my throat. Heck, I

thought, this is even better than jello shots.

Amaretto sour, extra cherries, became my standard. The first drink of

the night. The last drink of the night. Any drink in between.

This went on for almost a year before I realized that ordering an

Amaretto Sour was akin to ordering a Zima. Or a wine cooler. Or a milk.

I, of all people, understand how important accessories are: a simple

silk scarf can make almost anyone look classy, a pair of stilettos can do a

lot for even the doughiest of legs. The amaretto sour, extra cherries, says, “What are you, a 2-year-old girl?”

And, really, that’s just not the image I wanted to present to the world,

or to every bartender in town. (A friend of mine, after I told her I was

embarrassed by my drink order, said that when she used to wait tables an

amaretto sour was one of her main tipoffs that her customers were underage.)

I decided to go on a quest for the perfect drink. Something that was a

little rough and tumble, but tasted good. Something that I could both order

and drink without cringing.

I scoured my head for every drink I had ever had, trying to revisit the

ones I thought I liked as well as the ones I didn’t. I test drove

cosmopolitans, margaritas, Jack and (diet) cokes, gin and tonics, Tom

Collins, Bloody Marys, wedding cakes, Georgia Peaches, fuzzy nipples, Long

Island Ice Teas, Midtown Ice Teas, blue drinks whose names I forgot the

minute I uttered them, Kamikazes, vodka gimlets, tequila sunrises, Seven and Sevens, hard lemonades, ciders, Smirnoff Ices, hand grenades, hurricanes, and the list goes on.

It was hard work. You’ll notice that some, probably most, of those don’t

sound so rough and tumble. I just got so caught up in the quest, I felt I

should try everything. Just to make sure I didn’t cheat myself out of a

great drink.

So what happened at the end of the day? Well, I got raving drunk for

starters. And perhaps did a couple things I regret now. But I never found

anything that I could make my own. I found a few things I can alternate

between, though, and perhaps that’s the way to go. All that variety is the

spice of life stuff.

Or I might stop drinking alcohol altogether. I hear Coca-Cola is

introducing a new drink this fall, Diet Coke with a lemon twist.

Mary Cashiola writes about life every Friday @ memphisflyer.com. You’re invited to come along.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

POOPING THE MCAIN-FORD PARTY

A month or so ago, before Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert used his procedural know-how to pull the plug on campaign-finance legislation, Arizona Senator John McCain and Memphis’ 9th District congressman Harold Ford Jr. were said to be planning a joint appearance on behalf of it in Memphis, complete with attendant ballyhoo.

Before the first trumpet could sound a note, however, the whole thing came to nought. And people in the Ford camp, as well as Democrats in general, are pointing an accusatory finger at Tennessee’s two Republican senators Ñ Fred Thompson, who’s still agonizing over whether he will or won’t be a candidate for reelection next year, and Bill Frist, who heads the Gop Senate Campaign Committee.

According to an article in the August 2nd issue of Roll Call, Thompson and Frist may have conspired to pressure McCain into dropping the Memphis event with Ford, which would have occurred virtually on the eve of a scheduled vote on the Shays-Meehan reform bill, a companion measure to the McCain-Feingold campaign-finance bill in the Senate.

Why would the two GOP senators do a thing like that? Because, Democrats suggest, the joint appearance with Ford would have given Democrat Ford high visibility and serious momentum for a Senate race next year, should Thompson eventually decide against a reelection bid and allow his seat to become open.

Republicans Ñ a technical minority since the conversion to independent status of Vermont Senator Jim Jeffords Ñ are just one seat shy of possessing a controlling majority in the Senate and are loath to risk any seat currently in their possession.

And how could the almost fussily independent-minded McCain allow himself to be so influenced? Because he and Thompson, an early backer of his ultimately unsuccessful presidential bid last year, remain close.

And, even though McCain is planning a number of nationwide whistle-stop events this fall as a means of reviving the reform bills, Memphis remains off the calendar.

Thompson and Frist deny having anything to do with all this. “I didn’t discourage [McCain] to do it,” Thompson told Roll Call. “Quite frankly, I think Harold Jr. has a bright future, but his future is not foremost on my mind. I think he’s concerned about something that doesn’t exist.”

And Frist says his hands are clean, too. “Never talked to Fred about it, never talked to McCain about it, never talked to Junior about it,” he said.

Even McCain weighed in with a disclaimer. “It was a better use of our time. It’s about media markets,” McCain said of his abrupt decision last month to drop plans for a Memphis appearance and limit his pre-vote visits to Boston and New York.

For his part, Ford – who played a key role in keeping members of the Congressional Black Caucus loyal to the reform legislation even as some of them began to feel it might interfere with African-Americans’ money-raising efforts – remained intent to making things happen. “[McCain’ has mentioned to me that he wanted to come down,” Ford told Roll Call . “I want it to happen.”

Like his boss, Ford’s chief of staff, Memphian Mark Schuermann, stressed the public-interest aspects of the contemplated visit – which, as originally planned, might also have included Sen. Feingold and Georgia congressman John Lewis. “The overriding objective of having Sen. McCain come to Memphis was to advance the debate on campaign finance reform,” said Schuermann, who pointedly added that he had “heard” the speculation about a party-pooping effort by Frist and Thompson.

John Weaver, who heads Straight Talk America, McCain’s political action committee (PAC), said “[w]e liked it” about the aborted Memphis event and professed, “We’re still open to doing it.”

And Matt Keller, legislative director for the activist group Common Cause, which has been working closely with both McCain and Feingold, said the proposed joint appearance might still come off “[i]f we need to resurrect it to help pass [campaign finance reform].”

The thrust of the Roll Call article, however, was that this might be so much wishful thinking at this point.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

HORNE EXITS GOVERNOR’S RACE

On the basis of a decision announced to his staff Friday morning, Knoxville businessman Doug Horne announced Friday that he was withdrawing from the Democratic race for governor, effective immediately

Horne had been scheduled to address several groups in Memphis on Saturday but has now canceled his engagements.

Horne’s decision leaves former Nashville Mayor Phil Brerdesen, who was the party nominee in 1994, the odds-on favorite to win the Democratic nomination again.

The following bombshell announcement was sent out to Democrats and media statewide late Friday afternoon:

Horne withdraws from Governors race

“Candidate for Tennessee Governor, Doug Horne, withdrew from the Governors

race today. Citing the need for Democratic unity and a Democratic Governor

in Tennessee, Horne departed the Governor’s race. “Our party needs a

consensus candidate and we do not need a divisive and costly primary next

year,” stated the former Democratic Party chairman.

“Horne, the former chairman of the Democratic Party and Knoxville businessman

had traveled the state and visited all 95 counties in Tennessee. After

building up a campaign organization for his bid for the democratic

nomination, Horne decided to forgo a primary battle with other good

democrats.

“I have been honored by all of the great support I have received

over the last several months, but now I need to do what I believe is best

for the party so we can begin to unite around one of the other great

candidates we have in the race,” said Horne.

“Horne stated on numerous occasions that he was running if other credible

candidates did not enter the race. ‘I’ve had the privilege of joining the

other Democratic candidates on the campaign trail and I know that we have

very credible candidates. Tennessee needs a Democrat to be elected Governor

and IÕm going to help make sure that happens,’ said Horne.

‘I have thoroughly enjoyed the journey across this great state and I hope to

serve again in the future,’ stated Horne.”

Deputy campaign manager Greg Wanderman, who dispatched the faxes and emails that bore the surprise news, added that Horne had achieved his ends, which were to ensure that major Democratic candidates sought the office of governor, and had become concerned about the possible divisive effect of an extended primary contest. Wanderman said, however, that he thought Horne would have been well positioned to win had he chosen to continue the race.