AVOIDING THE PERILS OF PALINBY JOE SCARBOROUGHPOLITICO
Conventional wisdom tells us that Mitt Romney is in search of a boring white guy as a running mate. The melodrama of John McCain’s “high risk-high reward” pick of Alaska’s Sarah Palin is the main driver of that discussion since the Palin choice gave us a lot of reality shows — and helped give us President Obama. No way this time, say the Romneyites. They’ll happily forgo heat and buzz for safety and stolidity. But the danger in Romney’s “Safety First” approach is that his search for the uncontroversial will keep him from the best possible candidates. …Tim Pawlenty or Rob Portman may be just right for the Romney pick. Each is a strong public servant. If the call comes, though, they — and we — need to know it’s because Romney thinks they have what it takes, not because neither seems likely to get their own reality show. The reality of Washington is ugly enough, as events have taught us since 2008. A president needs all the help he can get to face it, and, God willing, master it.
A POINTLESS PARTISAN FIGHTEDITORIALNEW YORK TIMES
The political feud between the White House and Congressional Republicans has now culminated in a House oversight committee vote to cite Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. for criminal contempt. … The Republicans shamelessly turned what should be a routine matter into a pointless constitutional confrontation. And the White House responded as most administrations do at some point: it invoked executive privilege to make a political problem go away. … Executive privilege cannot and should not be allowed to shield the executive branch from regular, valuable Congressional oversight. There was no reason the House committee and the Justice Department could not work out a deal to produce the documents requested, or some form of them. Instead, they show again that every issue, large or small, can be turned into ammunition for political combat.
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LET’S ADD A LITTLE DIRT TO OUR DIETBY JEFF D. LEACHNEW YORK TIMES
Increasing evidence suggests that the alarming rise in allergic and autoimmune disorders during the past few decades is at least partly attributable to our lack of exposure to microorganisms that once covered our food and us. …While…improvements in hygiene and sanitation deserve applause, they have inadvertently given rise to a set of truly human-made diseases. While comforting to the germ-phobic public, the too-shiny produce and triple-washed and bagged leafy greens in our local grocery aisle are hardly recognized by our immune system as food. … As we move deeper into a “postmodern” era of squeaky-clean food and hand sanitizers at every turn, we should probably hug our local farmers’ markets a little tighter. They may represent our only connection with some “old friends” we cannot afford to ignore.
WE’RE NOT GREECEBY E.J. DIONNE, JR.WASHINGTON POST
What’s happened so far in Europe is austerity without enough stimulus. This is a recipe for keeping economies down, unemployment high and electorates in an entirely understandable rage. No wonder historians and economists are now regularly offering frightening comparisons between the Europe of our times and the Europe of the early 1930s. … The real lesson from Europe is not that we should all tighten our belts and endure more pain but that we need to get the global economy moving. That means our Federal Reserve should pursue more expansive policies. And if congressional Republicans weren’t so determined to block nearly every initiative President Obama puts forward, they would agree to pump more money into state governments and into infrastructure spending to speed a decline in unemployment.








