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THE STATE OF THE UNION – AS USUAL

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Making Sense by Michael Reagan

BY Rick McKee

If you missed the president’s final State of the Union message Tuesday night, don’t worry.

It might have been billed as historic, but you didn’t miss much.

There were no surprises. No shocks. No awe. Nothing historic or memorable.

It was the usual Obama setup — “We have to find a way to come together, end the government gridlock and make America better and stronger” — followed by the implication that Washington isn’t working the way it should because Republicans in Congress are mean, stubborn or stupid.

In seven years Obama hasn’t changed the country, not for the better anyway. He hasn’t changed his leadership style, either.

Remember back in 2009, three days after he was sworn in, when Barack Obama, his egocentric advisers and the congressional leaders of both parties met to discuss how to frame a gigantic stimulus bill working its way through Congress?

That’s when Obama famously said to Republican Whip Eric Cantor, “Elections have consequences, and at the end of the day, I won.”

We didn’t know it then, but that snippy quip betrayed a lot about the way the hope-and-change president plays ball.

It’s my football, damn it, and if you’re not going to play the way I want, I’m going to take my ball and go home.

Obama has run his administration for seven years with that “I won, you lost and I get what I want” game plan.

He’s right. There is a great divide between the two parties in Washington.

He ought to know, because he’s as much to blame for it as anyone.

It’s hard to find an example where he was willing to sit down and come to terms with conservatives and Republicans in Congress.

And how many times did he go home after he didn’t get what he wanted from Congress and sign an executive action that got him what he wanted?

My father looked at politics like a football game, too. But he understood throwing Hail Marys all the time wasn’t a winning strategy.

He knew you actually had to move down the field slowly and if you got 10 yards each play, eventually you’d reach the end zone.

The great liberal-conservative political divide that supposedly harms our country is not going to be closed between now and November. It’ll have to start with whoever the new leader is in January of 2017.

Whoever it is, the next president will have to act a lot more like Ronald Reagan and a lot less like Barack Obama.

My father disagreed greatly with Tip O’Neill and Ted Kennedy, but he always looked at the big picture. He was always asking, “How can we work together to get this done?”

If Ronald Reagan doesn’t sit down with Tip, we don’t get the tax break of 1981.

If Bill Clinton doesn’t sit down with Newt Gingrich and a Republican Congress in 1994, we don’t get welfare reform and a balanced budget.

Early next year, President Trump, President Sanders or President X will be all fired up about fixing immigration.

Whoever it is, when he meets with Congress he should not take the “all-or-nothing” Obama approach but do what Ronald Reagan or even Bill Clinton would do.

He should bring everybody in and find areas in the immigration bill where there is bipartisan agreement.

Then Congress should write a new bill covering those areas of agreement, pass it, have the president sign it and immediately begin the process of a writing a better, more comprehensive immigration bill.

Everyone likes to see a long Hail Mary thrown into the end zone. But as QB Obama should have learned after seven seasons — but didn’t — they almost never win the game.

Adopt A Pet

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This is 6-month-old female brown tabby kitten is Reggie! He is still pretty skinny from his previous life, so good food, some treats, and lots of love will help him gain weight. His brother is Oliver, also up for adoption. Reggie’s $30 adoption fee includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Call (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!

Watch Party set as Aces travel to Illinois State

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Aces fans can gather to watch Friday’s game

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Evansville men’s basketball fans are invited to a watch party on Friday evening at the Purple Aces travel to Illinois State for a pivotal Missouri Valley Conference matchup.

 

Chido Mexican Bar & Grill in downtown Evansville at The District will host the watch party on Friday as the Aces will face off against Illinois State at 8 p.m. on ESPN2.  Fans are invited to cheer the Aces on as they embark on a tough road game.

 

Evansville led wire-to-wire in an 84-65 win over Drake on Tuesday at the Ford Center to move to 15-13 overall and 4-1 in Missouri Valley Conference play.  The Aces led by a 38-22 score at the break and added 46 more tallies on the board in the second half.  D.J. Balentine scored a game-high 24 points while Egidijus Mockevicius added 21 points and 12 boards.  Friday’s game at Illinois State marks the beginning of a stretch that will see UE be on the road for three out of four contests.

 

With his efforts in the win over Drake, D.J. Balentine passed former teammate Colt Ryan in a pair of statistics.  Balentine moved to second in the Aces record book in field goals with 717; Larry Humes sits atop the list with 865.  He also jumped ahead of Ryan in assists with 407, Balentine is now in 6th place.

 

For the first time since the 2008-09 season, the Purple Aces have won their first 10 home games.  Should UE improve to 11-0, it would mark the first time doing so since the 1988-89 campaign when Evansville won all 15 games at Roberts Stadium.

 

The Purple Aces lead the MVC in shooting % (52.3%) and shooting defense (40.9%).  UE is one of just four schools to lead its conference in both categories; Stony Brook, Florida Gulf Coast and Weber State are the others.

 

Illinois State enters Friday’s tilt with a 9-9 mark following an 81-78 defeat at Southern Illinois on Tuesday.  The Redbird are 3-2 in the MVC, winning their first three contests versus Missouri State, Drake and Loyola.  Preseason All-MVC First Team member DeVaughn Akoon-Purcell leads the way for the Redbirds with 15.6 points per game, he is shooting 46.7% on the season.

 

MiKyle McIntosh and Paris Lee are next up with 10.1 points per game each.  McIntosh is tied for second on the squad with 12 blocked shots while Lee has registered a team-best 62 assists on the season.

 

Governor Pence to Offer Remarks, Volunteer at Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service Events

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Indianapolis –  Governor Mike Pence will offer remarks at the Indiana Civil Rights Commission’s 5th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service. Following, he will join state employees in volunteering at the MLK Day of Service at Shepherd Community Center. Details below.

 

Friday, January 15:

 

9:15 a.m. EST – Governor Pence to offer remarks at the 5th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service, hosted by the Indiana Civil Rights Commission

*Media are welcome to attend.

Watkins Park Family Center – 2360 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. St., Indianapolis, IN

 

10:30 a.m. EST – Governor Pence to volunteer with fellow state employees at the MLK Day of Service

*Media are welcome to attend.

Shepherd Community Center – 4107 E. Washington St., Indianapolis, IN

 

Dr. Bucshon Votes to Reject EPA’s WOTUS Rule

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(WASHINGTON, DC) – This week, the House of Representatives passed a joint resolution nullifying the Environmental Protection Agency’s flawed Waters of the United States (WOTUS).The resolution was approved in the House by a bipartisan vote of 253-166 and was sent to President Obama’s desk.

 

Eighth District Congressman Larry Bucshon supported the legislation saying that stopping the EPA’s aggressive power grab is important for Indiana’s farmers and agriculture industry.

 

“The federal EPA wants to expand its jurisdiction from main waterways to streams, drainage ditches and ponds, including those on private property. States should be the primary regulators of water within their borders, not the federal government,” said Bucshon. “This rule is an unnecessary power grab that will be disastrous for Hoosier farmers, manufacturers, and localities and we’re going to stop it.”

 

In an op-ed this week, House Speaker Paul Ryan argued, “If they can’t control the water on their land, farmers, ranchers and cattlemen can’t grow their crops or feed their livestock. And precisely because farmers and ranchers — and their elected representatives — know the needs of their land best, the states have long had primary authority over water that flows within their boundaries.”

 

In October, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals temporarily blocked the EPA from enforcing the rule after a bipartisan group of 32 governors (including Indiana) filed lawsuits, saying the EPA’s rule rewrite is unconstitutional because it undermines the states’ primacy in water management.

 

BACKGROUND:

 

S.J. Res. 22 vacates the rule submitted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) relating to the definition of “waters of the United States” under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (commonly referred to as the Clean Water Act (CWA)) that was published in the Federal Register on June 29, 2015.The final rule greatly expands the scope of waters protected under the CWA.

Congressman Larry Bucshon, M.D. is a physician and Republican member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee serving his third term representing Indiana’s 8th Congressional district. The 8th District of Indiana includes all or parts of Clay, Crawford, Daviess, Dubois, Gibson, Greene, Knox, Martin, Owen, Parke, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Sullivan, Vanderburgh, Vermillion, Vigo, and Warrick counties.  

THE SNOWBIRD’S LAMENT by Jim Redwine

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Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

THE SNOWBIRD’S LAMENT

Hoosiers wear pajamas on Sunday morning at home. Many Floridians wear them everywhere, all the time. The only Hoosiers who wear house shoes to dinner are the same Hoosiers who play Bingo. Floridians wear house shoes to church.

The servants at Downton Abbey dress better than elected officials in Florida, well, maybe Indiana too, but you get the metaphor.

Half of God’s waiting room sits around, not in, swimming pools speaking English with funny Yankee accents while the other half mow, trim, plant and construct while speaking Spanish.

Peg and I fall into category one, but we speak proper Hoosier. We only use our high school Spanish when we leave our geriatric condo complex.

There are parks everywhere in Florida. Nobody uses them except people with dogs. Indiana does not waste farmland on parks. Hoosiers flock to the few parks they can find and play softball while Floridians remain Bingo-bound and look at all the parks.

Indiana in winter provides proper weather. Ice, snow, sleet and frostbite are reveled in by Hoosiers who honor school closings and worship tow trucks. Floridians don parkas at 60 °, give unsolicited advice to Hoosiers such as, “Just quit your job and move down here”, and ask, “What’s a tow truck?”

The grass in Indiana has the courtesy to go dormant in October and remain in repose until April. Grass in Florida prides itself on providing year round off the books employment to the three million illegal immigrants who have accepted Emma Lazarus’ open invitation on the Statue of Liberty. By the way, within a month of arrival, each traveler puts, at least, two more cars into Florida’s kamikaze traffic. Hoosiers drive cars too, but in Indiana, dodge’em as a sport is discouraged.

Hoosiers eat breakfast at breakfast time, i.e., before eight a.m. Restaurants in Florida do not even open until nine and Floridians consider it gauche to eat an egg before ten.

People in Indiana harness the Ohio and Wabash Rivers for industry and recreation. Florida is also surrounded by water, but the only ones who use the ocean are a few middle aged surfers who greet everyone with, “Hey, Dude.”

In summary, Floridians dress funny, talk funny, drive crazy and have no winter. Hoosiers are normal, but freeze half the year. If you want to contact Peg or me before spring, send us a letter.

Indy Lawyer Assisting Estate Of Late NFL Player Lawrence Phillips

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Indy Lawyer Assisting Estate Of Late NFL Player Lawrence Phillips

Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

An Indianapolis attorney said he will be assisting the family of late former NFL player Lawrence Phillips document brain injuries that might have contributed to his apparent suicide in a California prison this week.

Cohen & Malad LLP partner Dan Chamberlain said he’s helping Phillips’ estate secure his brain for testing at the CTE Center at Boston University, a leading facility for the diagnosis of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which can be confirmed only after death. Chamberlain said he believes Phillips is among a class of retired NFL players the league is shortchanging in its $1 billion concussion settlement approved last year.

Phillips, 40, died Wednesday after he was found unresponsive in a California prison where he had been housed alone in a segregation cell since April 2015, the Associated Press reported. Phillips was facing a possible death-penalty trial after being charged with murdering his cellmate. Phillips’ cause of death was not available Thursday morning. Officials at Kern Valley State Prison released few details but said guards transported Phillips to a nearby hospital where he was pronounced dead early Wednesday morning.

A star running back who helped lead the Nebraska Cornhuskers to two national titles in the 1990s, Phillips came into the NFL with a record as a domestic violence offender and a reputation for disciplinary problems. He played just three seasons in the NFL, his career shortened in part by off-the-field criminal charges.

Chamberlain, who is chairman of the board of the Brain Injury Association of America, said he’d been in contact with Phillips in an attempt to increase his benefits under the settlement before his death. Now, he’s trying to coordinate with Phillips’ mother, prison staff and a California coroner the transfer of Phillips’ brain to the Boston facility for analysis. He suspects Phillips may have had CTE caused by repeated trauma to the head.

“Basically I’ve been trying to help these guys figure our how to help themselves and how to help their families, and unfortunately, it looks like Lawrence couldn’t take it anymore,” Chamberlain said.

An NFL spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Chamberlain also represents one-time Colts quarterback Art Schlichter in a suit seeking broader coveragefrom the NFL from its brain injury settlement. The suit claims the league is failing to properly credit Schlichter for years in which he was on an NFL roster but suspended. The suit says Schlichter, 55, is suffering from Parkinson’s disease as he serves time in the federal correctional institute in Terre Haute.

Under the NFL concussion settlement, retired players undergo a baseline assessment protocol that classifies brain injuries on a scale of one to four with CTE, ALS and Parkinson’s at the top end of the scale. Ex-players or their estates are entitled to compensation from $1.5 million to $5 million each depending on the severity of the diagnosis. That amount is incrementally reduced for retirees credited with fewer than five years as “active players.”

Chamberlain said the average NFL career span is less than four years. In many of those cases, he said, the league’s failure to adequately compensate for the long-term care needs of those with brain injuries means those costs will fall to Medicare or Medicaid.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Evansville, IN – Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Wednesday, Jan. 13, 2016.

Roger Matthew Pirtle Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Kyle James Wood Dealing in a look-alike substance, Level 5 felony

John Eugene Deer Carrying a handgun without a license, Level 5 felony

Dealing in a look-alike substance, Level 5 felony

Amanda Carol Fryman Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Randal Dale Schaeffer Attempted battery by bodily waste, Level 5 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Javion Hisheem Bell Resisting law enforcement, Level 6 felony

Carrying a handgun without a license, Class A misdemeanor

Keyvan Shamaal Fellows Possession of marijuana, Level 6 felony

Ricardo Markim Roberts Sr. Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Jeremy Craig Collier Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony

Travis Lee Buchanan Armed robbery, Level 3 felony

Criminal confinement, Level 3 felony

Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Quinton Lee Jennings Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Michele Denise Guthrie Dealing in a narcotic drug, Level 4 felony

Maintaining a common nuisance, Level 6 felony

Timothy Boyd Shane Burglary, Level 5 felony

Theft, Level 6 felony

Gerald Lamont Robinson Intimidation, Level 5 felony

Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug look-alike substance, Class A misdemeanor

Donald Charles Freeman Jr. Armed robbery, Level 3 felony

Battery against a public safety official, Level 5 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Level 6 felony

Carrying a handgun without a license, Class A misdemeanor

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Seth Andrew Dill Child seduction, Level 5 felony

Stacy Ryan Goldman Battery against a public safety official, Level 5 felony

Theft, Level 6 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Level 6 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Ushanda Raye Johnson Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony

Bennie Lee Fulton II Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Jimmy Ray Davis Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Theft, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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Indiana - Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features First Sergeant Ty Utterback of the Indiana State Police Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Division. F/Sgt. Utterback discusses the Indiana State Police program to Inspect Private Busses. A link to view the program is available at www.in.gov/isp under “Commercial Vehicles.”

Download the program from the Network Indiana public websites at www.networkindiana.com.  Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/   and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.