Okay, at least I have an excuse: Last week was an awfully busy
one. I started teaching PE and having kids coming to the computer lab, not at
the same time however. Oh, and my son moved out of the house to go to college. That might
explain how I callously skipped over the watershed event of Rick Perry dropping
out of the race for the Republican nomination for President of the United
States. Some might suggest that I have my priorities squarely fixed and that I
should not feel bad about making my own job and family the focus of my life.
Others might disagree. Rick Perry, for one. Sorry about that, Rick.
So 2012's
also-ran has decided to take the same route again in 2016. Or 2015, since that
is the year we are currently enduring. Former Texas governor Rick "Four Eyes" Perry didn't even make it to the primaries
this time. Maybe wearing glasses gave him the vision to see that the path ahead
was rocky and inhospitable. Or maybe he just got tired of being one of
more than a dozen hopefuls in an already crowded casting call. It takes courage
to be the first clown out of the car. Or maybe he just forgot where he was parked.
Whatever the
reason, we won't have Rick Perry to kick around anymore. Well, we can continue
to kick him, but it won't be in order to get him to drop out of the race. That
also means that Rick will probably feel free to take a couple wild swings on
his way out: "The conservative movement has always
been about principles, not personalities," Perry said, before making a
not-too-veiled swipe at Donald Trump, the GOP's current front-runner. "Our
nominee should embody those principles. He, or she, must make the case for
the cause of conservatism more than the cause of their own celebrity."
Whether Governor Perry truly embodies the ideals of conservatism or no longer up to an electorate to decide. The Conservative Review gave him generally passing marks back in April, Their conclusion: "Voters
seem to see Perry the same way girls look at the 'nice guy' who's not
nerdy enough to be the next Bill Gates, jock enough to be the next star
quarterback, or cool enough to be the lead singer. They don't mind him being
around, but whenever he tries to push for a commitment they just want to be
friends." A friend with seventeen million dollars in a Super PAC. Maybe that not-so-nerdy quasi-jock will have to settle for being the guy who tells everyone that the rich guy is trouble, and maybe when he gives all that money back, he can still influence somebody. Somewhere. So long, Governor Rick. We'll see y'all down the trail.
Hm. I bet people would pay to see Katy Perry kick Rick Perry though.
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