I’ll be honest and tell you that I couldn’t care less about auto racing. The idea of spending my time watching a bunch of cars go around a track — much less caring which car finished first — is beyond my comprehension. I’m sure other people feel that way about sports I love, but car racing seems bizarre to me.
It’s hard to consider it a sport when the biggest key to strategy is to go as fast as you can and keep turning left. (The Onion had my all-time favorite satire of NASCAR.)
But news from the world of NASCAR caught my attention Friday when there was buzz that five drivers had declined an invitation to the White House to meet with Barack Obama. (One of them later said he actually will be there.) Not only can I not understand why this is news, but I can’t understand why all the other people who receive similar invitations don’t do the same thing.
Somewhere along the way in this country, we’ve started acting as though the president is a big deal and should be treated like royalty. If the apparatus of government were limited to the powers it should have, a peacetime president would have nearly as much power and appeal as the general manager of your local water purification plant. We need to quit treating presidents as though they hold an office worthy of automatic respect.
I don’t claim to know the solution, but the modern church has failed
Like an alien, I move through a world I can see but never touch
Life is like flying a plane as you assemble it from a box of parts
Whatever you’re doing for Fourth, have a safe and happy holiday
Top secret weapon for homeland security: the ‘Sno-Cone’ machine
I’m drawn to tales of brokenness, rescue and ultimate redemption
If you don’t have a burden in life, you probably won’t achieve much
There’s little unity to be found in our supposedly United States
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’