The most evil man I’ve ever personally experienced was almost elected lieutenant governor of Alabama. I met him years before that, though, when he was about to run for his first office. Our first meeting at his office was surreal.
He had the coldest eyes I’ve ever seen. His voice was flat and monotone. But he had a presence that you might expect from a senator or a governor. He seemed to feel entitled. He seemed to feel superior. Strangely, none of his words matched what I felt in his eyes. He talked a good game about morality and ethics and feeling guided by his Christian faith to run for office. The scary thing is that I think he believed what he was telling me. I’ve worked with enough charming liars to know the difference. This guy felt evil, like a psychopath.
I didn’t work for the guy, but he was elected to his first office and became a powerful man in state politics. I heard plenty of things about him from friends inside his campaigns that gave me a great relief that I never worked for him. I felt a sigh of relief when statewide voters barely rejected him.
What I’m about to say is terribly unfair, because I don’t have enough facts to know the truth about this man. I’m well aware of that. But I get the same feelings about Rick Perry that I got from that psychopath long ago. I think he’s scary.
With space shuttle finally dead, free market can do better job in space
If you want to win a chess match, you have to play chess, not lecture the other players
Why keep playing a game that’s impossible for you to win?
Cycles keep us circling through life until we get something right
Happy birthday to the monkeys; we’re marking two years today
Will better marketing make you love state-controlled medical industry?
3 years after my father’s death, happy memories getting stronger
With NASA getting out of the way, free market heads to outer space
Preview of 2012? Voter landslide in Colorado against new school taxes