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Rams Seek Third Victory

Rams oppose Detroit Lions.

Mike Martz returns to the place where he presided over "The Greatest Show on Turf" when the Detroit Lions visit the St. Louis Rams on Sunday.

Considered one of the NFL's best offensive minds, Martz was the offensive coordinator for the Rams in their Super Bowl-winning season in 1999. The Rams racked up 526 points that season, the third-most all-time.

The following year, Martz was named head coach and compiled a record of 53-32 with four playoff appearances. He guided St. Louis to a conference title in his second season before losing to New England in Super Bowl XXXVI.

Martz missed the final 11 games of the 2005 season with a bacterial infection of a heart valve. In January, he was fired by the Rams.
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Campaign Security

Kansas City Star recounts detainee restrictions.

The Senate joined the House in embracing President Bush’s view that the battle against terrorism justifies extraordinary limits on defendants’ traditional rights in the courtroom. The limits include restrictions on a suspect’s ability to challenge his detention, examine evidence against him and bar testimony allegedly acquired through coercion of witnesses.

The Senate’s 65-34 vote was a victory for Bush and the Republicans a month before the Nov. 7 elections as their party tries to make anti-terrorism a signature campaign issue. Senators in the Kansas and Missouri delegations voted for the bill.
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“It’s Crunch Time”

GOP USA chronicles abortion deadline.

Most schools require a parent's permission for a child to go on a field trip or even take an aspirin while at school. However, a minor girl can cross state lines to have an abortion -- without her parents' knowledge. That, say parental-rights advocates, is exactly why the Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act (CIANA) must be signed into law.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist has filed cloture on S. 403, which means the U.S. Senate could conduct a cloture vote on CIANA as early as Friday (September 29). It passed the bill once already in July, when it was known as the Child Custody Protection Act, on a 65-34 bipartisan vote. But Democratic leaders had prevented it from going to conference committee with the House, which had passed a similar bill last year. On Tuesday, however, the U.S. House voted 264-153 in favor of S. 403, adding to the Senate's version a provision that would require abortion providers to notify parents of a minor seeking an abortion at least 24 hours before it takes place.
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Cleaver’s Lack of Respect

Reading the article in the Kansas City Star regarding Emanuel Cleaver’s frustration with the millions of Missourians concerned with the marriage amendment, I was struck by the lack of empathy Reverend Cleaver has for a large portion of his constituents here in the 5th District.

Hundreds of thousands of the folks in this district, myself included, believe marriage between a man and a woman to be a cornerstone of stability for raising children in our society. It is an issue which does matter and makes a difference in how our society operates. I was disappointed that it was the author of the article who had to point out that marriage is a social contract governed by the state. Mr. Cleaver’s point of view on the issue and its impact on our society is short sighted.

The illogical argument of “Why not just put all the sacraments in the Constitution?” shows a lack of knowledge of what has happened to the social fabric in the western European countries where gay marriage became the law of the land. Marriage as an institution has disintegrated in those countries. It has lost its meaning as a holy sacrament AND a social contract.

What we make legal we get more of. If gay marriage becomes the law of our land, we will get more of it and it will tear at the traditional fabric of our country, because it starts us down the path that all unions are equal, that a man and a woman coming together is just one of many combinations that are equivalent - man and man, woman and woman, man and 2 women, woman and dolphin (this has happened in England).

Western Europe has shown once this happens co-habitation increases dramatically and choas in the lives of children grows. Social science has shown children in gay and lesbian households have social problems at the same rate as those raised by singe parents. Being a single parent myself for over 12 years, I understand the struggles and how difficult it is to give children all they need when one gender is absent. Marriage between a man and woman has been set aside as a special institution by both God and man over thousands of years of human history. It deserves our protection as a cornerstone of stability for our democracy.

We need a representative who recognizes those who disagree with him do hold a valid viewpoint and deserve to be respected and listened to, not belittled as intolerant and being concerned about an unimportant issue.

While I will not agree with every constituent I represent in Congress, I believe my constituents deserve respect as thinking human beings with valid viewpoints.

Jacob Turk

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Speaking The Truth

First-term Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II, D-Mo., got a call the other day from his brother-in-law in St. Louis who said, "I sure hope you will do something for America this week."

"And all I could think about was, 'I do too,'" Cleaver said on the House floor. "Because unfortunately, we are not doing much for America."
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Mcmuffin or Mcnugget?

From The Hill:

“It leaves something to be desired and could be infinitely more powerful,” said Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.), former mayor of Kansas City. “The proponents of the [wage] initiative should have gone on radio shortly after the August primary. The message has to be out repeatedly until it becomes a McDonald’s discussion.”
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Once Again, Democrats Poised For…

Horace Cooper analyzes impending failure.

The fall campaign is heating up in earnest and a pattern is repeating itself -- one that should look familiar. It's a pattern of Democrats preparing for their big win only to come up short on Election Day. Yet this reality has yet to dawn on Democrats. Today most Democrats still believe that they are likely to retake either the House or Senate. And perhaps they could afford this indulgence since so many in the media have repeated their boastful claims for much of the spring and summer. Tellingly, however, this reveals more about the media's political preferences than any political acumen.
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Making Detainees Defendants

Kansas City Star describes terrorism legislation.

The House approved legislation Wednesday giving the Bush administration authority to interrogate and prosecute terrorism detainees. The action moves President Bush to the edge of a victory with a key piece of his anti-terror plan.

The legislation would establish a military court system to prosecute terror suspects, a response to the Supreme Court ruling in June that Congress’ blessing was necessary. While the bill would grant defendants more legal rights than they had under the administration’s old system, it nevertheless would eliminate rights usually granted in civilian and military courts.
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What Are the Options?

Henry Lamb discusses military hesitation.

No one wants war, but what are the options?

The U.S. could adopt the view that we should take Iranian President Ahmadinejad at his word, and believe that Iran is developing nuclear technology for peaceful purposes only. This policy would certainly win the approval of the international community, as well as the anti-war forces at home. But then, would we not also have to take Ahmadinejad at his word when he says that Israel will be wiped off the map; that the U.S. should bow and surrender to Iran; that there will be cataclysmic events to remove Zionism from the face of the earth?

The U.S. could adopt the view that Ahmadinejad is a masterful liar who publicly proclaims to the U.N., and to the world, that Iran seeks peace - while privately supplying weapons to terrorists in Lebanon and Iraq. Iran is a present threat to peace in Iraq, and Israel. Ahmadinejad's public vows to destroy Israel, and his steadfast refusal to honor the U.N.'s demands to stop enriching uranium present a serious threat to world.

The Bush administration has adopted this latter view; Bush critics want public policy to reflect the former view.
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Chemical Terror

Kansas City Star depicts researcher’s nightmare.

It’s a chilling question, especially five years after 19 suicidal terrorists waged an explosive assault on the United States that killed nearly 3,000 people:

Could a killer pathogen be introduced in America, through a human carrier or contaminated food or water?

The answer from Kansas State University’s Jerry Jaax is even more chilling:

“If you can sign someone up to fly a plane into a building, you could sign them up to be infected with smallpox and go on a road trip.”
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Oh Really Senator?

From United Press International:

"I'm certain that if my husband and his national security team had been shown a classified report entitled 'Bin Laden Determined to Attack Inside the United States,' he would have taken it more seriously." (Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton)

You’re right. I am sure he would have. What about Kenya, Tanzania, and the USS Cole?

Raymond Smalley
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Separation of Money From Lawsuits

GOP USA denotes public expression victory.

Conservative groups are commending the U.S. House of Representatives for passing a bill on Tuesday that would cut off financial awards for lawsuits successfully filed against religious displays on government property.

The Public Expressions of Religion Act (PERA) (H.R. 2679) would deny the awarding of attorney's fees or monetary damages to a party that wins an Establishment Clause court case -- that is, one based on the so-called "separation of church and state." Backers of the legislation note that local and state governments often give in to demands to remove religious displays for fear of incurring costly attorney's fees. Opponents, on the other hand, consider the legislation a waste of time by Republicans who they say are anxious to shore up their conservative base before Election Day. They also note there is no companion Senate bill.

But Concerned Women for America, a major pro-family group in Washington, DC, is praising the 244 House members who voted in favor of PERA, calling the vote "a tremendous victory for Americans who value their constitutional and religious freedoms." Eliminating monetary awards in Establishment Clause cases, says CWA, will free up citizens who are often reluctant to stand up for those freedoms because they are intimidated by the potential of "crippling judgments" for attorney's fees.
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The Only Answer

From United Press International:

U.S. Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte said the United States can combat a new generation of jihadist leaders by continuing the war in Iraq.

Negroponte, speaking Monday at the Woodrow Wilson Center, said that the war has been creating a new generation of jihadist leaders but if the efforts of those leaders fail "or (are) perceived to have failed, fewer fighters will be inspired to carry on the fight."

He said Iraq is only one of several factors described in the National Intelligence Estimate, portions of which were leaked to The New York Times and The Washington Post, as influencing terrorist threats against the United States.

Negroponte said "Iraq represents a small portion of the overall NIE."

The document has been a source of White House criticism from Democrats after sources familiar with the document said it describes the war in Iraq as bolstering the terrorist threat against the United States. The Bush administration has said the Iraq section needs to be taken in context. Members of Congress from both parties have asked that the entire document be unclassified.

The National Intelligence chief said the NIE "highlighted the importance of the outcome in Iraq."
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Land of Consultants

From the KC Star Buzz Blog:

A new study, billed as the first of its kind, concludes that a stunning $1 of every $2 of total federal campaign spending in 2004 went to consultants.

"The skyrocketing costs of running for federal office puts such a premium on time spent fundraising to pay for consultants that many elected officials seem to be in permanent, self-serving campaigns," said Wendell Rawls, who heads the nonpartisan Center for Public Integrity.

While some may denounce the aforesaid, I applaud it. It is time candidates realize that this is the age of specialization. You simply have to allow operatives to perform in their strengths.

Raymond Smalley
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