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irotimental ience: brochures, invitations, informannual reports, advertising, t-shirts, packaging pieces. 12.445.5748 [email protected] -excruc rating honesty and exquisite tunefulness. one of the finest, female artists arpuhd. R1 ie C n 4 the first singi OCTOBER 11, 1996 THE TEXAS OBSERVER 25 the heart has no address a >% \\\\moo produced by j ohn 1 even tha 1 t t=://www. r y . otri “t HUH EURO IMO ROBS OPEN 9AM TO MIDNIGHT EVERYDAY! AUSTIN 24th & Guadalupe 800 ASK TOWER SHOP BY PHONE Om ROM FREE VALRWIRD *MOM AT ‘AU. MOM PARKING LOTS’ *stn A Oushapit Wt RECYCLE NO VIDEO RENTALS! “District 14,” from page 11 emancipation from the awkward, clumsy, and necessary business of community and self-government. Beneath the headline battle over drug laws and welfare, little of this actually serious debate will find its way into the 14th District campaign. Instead, we will be treated to comic vignettes like the momentary coupling of Ron Paul and Steve Forbes, the flat-tax buccaneer, who showed up at the Austin Marriot last month to endorse Paul as well as Teresa Doggett, the Republican sacrificial lamb to her namesake, Lloyd, in the 10th District. As Teresa proposed her own homemade flat tax and waved a spine in the air, challenging her opponent to a debate”he’s not afraid of a woman, is he?”Forbes beamed his goofy beam, and Ron Paul cleared his throat and said he had no objection to a flat tax, as long as it was a low flat tax. “We need to get rid of the capital gains tax, and the in heritance tax,” said Paul. “We have to get rid of the idea that the government somehow has a right to our money.” The audience, full of well-heeled Forbes partisansnone of whom appeared to be hurting in the pocketbook, any more than the trust-fund millionaire and his friends at the podiumapplauded enthusiastically, and went forth happily armed with the patriotic notion that they could have a country without a government, or at least any government that they had to pay for. So it will be tax cuts vs. drug police in the 14th District. Beyond these mutually garish headline opinions, more useful for soundbites than public policy, Lefty Morris’ commonsensical defense of public education, campaign finance reform, and proven government programs like Social Security, Medicare, student loans and so on, begin to make him sound like a wild-eyed radical in the present electoral context of knee-jerk, antigovernment cynicism. Campaigning at the opening of a new Democratic Party headquarters in LaGrange, Morris quietly defended his party’s record, but acknowledged that the alienation of many ‘of Americans from any sense of identification with their government had made it easier for the nuttier ideas of Ron Paul to flourish. “We have to work at remaining a party, and a government, of all the people.” Morris said. “We have to regain the confidence of the people.”