A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.
How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.
I worked at Kmart with John McCain's director of strategy.
4) No more elaborate last meals. Why should the state spend tax dollars and employee time trying to run down every last example of redneck cooking? Slap a Slim-Fast can on the IV before you put in the lethal injection. That oughta hold the guy long enough. (If youÂre going to get in a dither about being inhumane, also offer CampbellÂs Soup To Go!)
Still, itÂs obvious that speeding up the process is going to take things only so far. And thatÂs where the real talent of Alberto Gonzales comes in.As White House counsel, Gonzales submitted memos outlining just how far the Constitution allows an administration to go when it comes to torturing people. You might be surprised that the answer is pretty damn far.
ItÂs gonna take some balls to put Texas back on the worldÂs outrage map, and balls Gonzales has. Any White House lawyer who argues that the Geneva Convention is Âquaint obviously has what it takes.
In an August 2002 memo, Gonzales outlined the pros and cons of dropping the Geneva Convention. Among the pros: Doing it Âpreserves flexibility. Among the cons: ÂConcluding the Geneva Convention does not apply may encourage other countries to look for technical Âloopholes in future conflicts to conclude that they are not bound by [the Convention] either.Â
Now that is the Rice-bred thinking we need  when we do it, itÂs to preserve flexibility. When they do it, theyÂre looking for loopholes.
Not to mention GonzalesÂs definition of torture. Unless thereÂs Âdeath, organ failure or serious impairment of bodily functions, youÂre just having some good, clean fun.
So we say itÂs time for Alberto Gonzales to come home. Texas needs him. In fact, the world needs him, because a world that cannot look down in horror at Texas prisons is not a world worth living in.
Just think of all the things the Texas Department of Criminal Justice can do that donÂt involve death or organ failure:
A Clockwork (Burnt) Orange
In Stanley KubrickÂs classic movie A Clockwork Orange, the character of sociopath Alex de Large is forced to rehabilitate by being strapped to a chair with his eyes pried open so he has no choice but to watch whatever his captors want him to see.
In Texas there are many, many awful things that would have the most hardened criminal screaming for mercy and set solidly on the road to recovery. You could put on KPRC news during a sweeps month  sure, the shouts of ÂCynthia Hunt putting on a fat suit to shop with a hidden camera? And they say IÂm guilty of crimes! might get tiresome, but no one said ignoring the Geneva Convention was easy.
You could put on Time WarnerÂs public access channel, to determine just how long it takes for someone to go nuts by watching slightly out-of-focus, stationary-camera coverage of an incompetent speaker talking about the Trilateral Commission or Jesus. Or sometimes both.
But if revenge is what you seek on a person who has committed a heinous crime, there is no better choice for a Texan than to put on video of every Texas-OU game coached by Mack Brown. For really despicable offenders, you can splice in press-conference coverage of every national signing day when Brown has once again been declared the nationÂs best recruiter.
Sure, there may be some Âserious impairment of bodily functions  your fingers will never again be able to form the ÂHook Âem Horns sign  but weÂre not sure the Geneva Convention folks will notice. Besides, they think Âfootball is soccer. (As does Brown, at least in terms of points scored against OU.)
For at least some Texans, this procedure will have them begging for the lethal-injection needle. Aggies, of course, would enjoy the show. Then again, Aggies donÂt commit capital crimes. Except of taste.
DonÂt Mess with Texas
The entire Alberto Project is designed, of course, to bring Texas back to its proper place of world scorn. Therefore it will require using all the deep, rich history of the Lone Star State to drive the point home.
What says ÂTexas more than cattle prods? Nothing, thatÂs what. But why keep Âem down on the farm?
All right, all right, we already hear you naysayers out there. Yeah, yeah, we know: Applying electrical shocks is so Abu Ghraib. And we also realize that the Houston Police Department is ahead of the curve on this with its energetic use of Tasers on anyone without a Â100 Club sticker on their car.
But itÂs not just a matter of cattle prods. ItÂs how you use them.
We realize this is where the Alberto Project may run into some political trouble in Austin. Implementing the proper use of cattle prods would require state legislators to sign off on some changes to the sodomy law, and you know how tough that might be.