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The Daily Cardinal Est. 1892
Saturday, April 27, 2024

Opinion

Mitt's Big Meal
OPINION

Concerns over Romney’s taxes should turn to fixing muddled system

Mitt Romney’s spectacular fall from the front-runner position in the Republican candidacy following the South Carolina primary election can be attributed to a variety of causes. Arguably, his reluctance to reveal his taxes seems to have been the greatest. Voters seemed to be indignant at the fact Romney would be taxed at a meager 15.4 percent for the 2011 fiscal year despite reported income that would make him eligible for the 35 percent tax bracket.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

P.E. cuts hurt UW-Madison

The additional $25.5 million UW-Madison will have to cut over the next two years is already having a major impact on campus, and one of the most tangible ways in which students will feel the cuts is the elimination of 29 for-credit physical education classes after 2012. Everything from fencing to yoga to badminton will no longer be offered through the university. The very fact that so many classes are on the chopping block should be a red flag for students and faculty alike.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Human toll of the war on drugs inexcusable

There is great suffering in our world. To pretend that you, or others aren't suffering at some points in time is to gloss over the realities of life. We all wish for a world without pain, but a world without suffering is a world without life. I accept this notion, but I reject the "suffering" projected by certain political and ideological interests.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

GOP Must Reconsider Pres Candidate

The Republican Party is in disarray. For the first time ever, three different presidential candidates have won the first three primaries of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, and the GOP establishment has become worried that Former Gov. Mitt Romney, R-MA, whom they presume to be their most electable candidate, may not obtain the nomination. For the past year, primary voters have been resisting Romney by switching from one conservative alternative to another, including ridiculous fringe candidates like Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-MN, and Herman Cain.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Union choice in recall may not be best

Last week, Democrats successfully turned in over one million signatures in the first step of the state's gubernatorial recall process. While it will take the state's Government Accountability Board weeks to verify the 540,208 signatures needed to begin a recall election against Gov. Scott Walker, unions throughout the state will be hard at work to find the perfect candidate who supports their ideas and ideologies. Chief among these concerns will be to restore collective bargaining rights as they see fit.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Education reform vital for Wisconsin

In the face of recall, Gov. Scott Walker is continuing to push for changes. His most recent plan calls for education reform, focusing mainly on teacher evaluations and improving reading levels. While these programs will improve Wisconsin’s public education system, Walker would do the state’s students even more good if he looked at reforms happening on America’s coasts.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Parliamentary style questioning keeps leaders in check

When Newt Gingrich triumphantly challenged President Obama to seven, three-hour Lincoln-Douglas style debates in early December, the prospect appeared to coincide with his image as the intellectual Republican candidate. Yet since his impressive performances in GOP debates, the professorial Gingrich appeal has tapered significantly. His disappointing fourth-place finish in the Iowa Caucus-due, in part, to a horde of negative advertisements in the state-shattered any hopes of the utopian, debate-based primary Gingrich desired. A strong showing in Florida could give a jolt of energy to his candidacy, but with a limited war chest and reservations about his personal life, Gingrich would best avoid buying new milk. 


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Mercury and other pollutant regulations beneficial for Wisconsin citizens

On Dec. 21 the mercury pollution saga finally came to an end. The long awaited Environmental Protection Agency regulations were finalized and put into effect. The new Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) are the first ever national limits on mercury and other toxic emissions from power plants. These new regulations will ultimately improve people's health by requiring power plants that contribute to air pollution in Wisconsin to use widely available, proven pollution control technologies. These technologies will help protect families from pollutants such as mercury, arsenic, chromium, nickel and acid gases.


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Letter: It's Christmas people! Get over it.

I just read an article titled “Keep the baby Jesus out of politics,” and while it brings up a few good points, I disagree with the majority of it.  To begin with, stating that a pine tree has no claim to Christmas is like stating the Green Bay Packers have no claim to the G logo that is now property of, and synonymous with, the team. It is true that conifers played no part in the first Christmas. In fact, they first mention of them being part of the Christmas celebration was in the 16th century in Germany and Livonia. However, tradition makes up a large part of every event, and I mean every event, after its inaugural year. After five centuries of being the only light up decorated tree widely known to the Western World, I think its safe to say that yes, a Christmas tree is a Christmas tree. Calling something by its name whether its good or bad from your point of view is the proper thing to do. As stated in Harry Potter, “Fear of the name only increase fear of the thing itself.”


Daily Cardinal
OPINION

Congress must act to save U.S. Postal Service

It is a seemingly "self-supporting enterprise" that collects no tax dollars to support its expenses. It relies completely on products and services to subsidize its operations. It generates approximately $67 billion a year in revenues and has been named the "Most Trusted Government Agency" for six consecutive years and the sixth "most trusted business in the nation" by the Ponemon Institute. What agency did I just describe? The answer is the United States Postal Service. This important agency is currently in a financial predicament and this problem is something that all of America should begin paying attention to.


Too big to fail
OPINION

Too big to fail

The United States Postal Service is burdened with high health-care, pension and labor costs, not to mention falling sales. It faces fierce competition in e-mail and private delivery systems, yet bailout talks are in the works.  Are big banks and auto manufacturers the only organizations that are too big to fail?


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