Krusin' the Capitol
By Nebraska State Senator Lowen Kruse
2005 Week 8 February 26, 2005
Hi
New set of initials in Nebraska: TERREX. Terrorist exercise, which of
course is one more thing we are supposed to fund.
The big news this week is the meeting of the Economic Forecast Board. Board
members discuss the state economy and come up with a revenue figure that the
legislature must use in budgeting. They caused a few relieved smiles as they
forecast that revenue will be over their last projection. The new total
increase over the previous year is 6.2% for this year, 4.8% for the year starting in
July, and 4.0% for the following year.
You can see that this is not buying a lot of blue sky in the future, so we
can assume these are fairly safe figures. It means a total of $150 million over
past projections for the current year, $110 m. for next year and $90 m. for
the following. The current year's will be used to pay the $145 m. low level
waste judgment. Our tentative budget needs about $30 m. each of the other two
years and of course we have used our cash reserves to get through the crisis,
so these must be restored. In short, no real extra money, but we will be able
to do what is necessary to do. Which is new.
Agencies, school districts, cities, etc., will not understand that last
paragraph and will see "millions of dollars" floating around, looking for a home.
Hopefully the enthusiastic inquirers will buy me a cup of coffee before I tell
them "Not."
For a change of pace, I will muse about subjects which are real but quite
small in the scheme of things -- but which generate all kinds of passion. Shall
motorists be required to wear seat belts? Can motorcycle riders be exempted
from having to wear helmets? Can citizens wear a concealed weapon? Shall
grade schools which have a proud history but now have few or no students be
closed? These do not bring you to the end of the world, nor can you see it from
here. I do not put any of them down, as they are real questions that affect some
people's lives. But one wonders how they can generate so much heat.
The one this week was discrimination against gays. Important subject,
certainly, but as I listened to a long line of testifiers I could not help but
wonder, "Why does this continue to be such a big deal? Why do we talk about it
this much?"
We are created with all sorts of physical and mental conditions and we
generally get along with them. I wanted to be a star basketball player, but after I
read the smiles of the coaches and other team members I got over it. I would
love to be an artist, but even my stick figures put an overload on the
imagination.
Someone is handed a gay body/voice/wiring and we can rationally observe that
this guy really has no interest in dating girls. However, some go ballistic
with no more than that, and their imaginations, to go on. One testifier this
week said that every gay person is a predator on children or is trying to
recruit others as predators. Hello, earth? Follow-up questions indicated he
probably had never met one.
There is good humor in it all. A pastor-type said that gays are a huge
problem in our society. Then, unbelievably, he said he would support this bill if
discrimination against gays presented a massive problem, but there are so few
that we should not bother.
Reverend Chambers (I love to call him Revenuer) charged to the questions.
Brother Ernie asked him, since he was a pastor, if he remembered how many it
took for Jesus' promise to be in the midst of them? Quiet answer: two or three.
What, cries out a shocked Ernie, does there not have to be a multitude for
Jesus to pay attention?
The next is sheer scriptural genius, given the theology of this pastor.
Ernie asked him how many it would take for Jesus to be willing to be stretched out
on the cross and crucified? Would Jesus willingly die for one or two? Or
did it have to be a multitude?
I was sitting there thinking that this is fun and this dude brought it on
himself. But why does the whole process of legislation have to grind to a stop
to let someone's imagination churn up dust? For individual rights, yes. That
is a big deal. But for the rehash of feelings of someone who despises another
person he has never met..... I do wonder how much longer this has to go on.
A fellow with highfalutin scientific-sounding language wrote to one paper
this week to say there is no scientific basis for assuming that water in the
ground relates to water in the stream. O my. We in Nebraska recently spent $35
million [!] to argue that question with Kansas, complete with a bevy of
researchers and consultants. In a hearing this week, I asked one of our team if
there is even flimsy merit in what this man says, or is there a school of thought
which would support him? "None."
So watch your highfalutin language, and I will try to do the same.
Lowen
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