Is it just me or did making the cut for the first Republican presidential debate sound just like making the field for playoff contention? You have your inevitable clinchers dominating the field (Donald Trump, Jeb Bush and Scott Walker), those who were considered to make the cut in the middle of the pack (Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and Rand Paul), the somewhat surprising contenders (Ben Carson and Mike Huckabee), the guys on the bubble who just made it (John Kasich and Chris Christie), and those whose bubble just burst for now (Rick Santorum and Rick Perry, among others).
All Fox News needs to do is to play the well-known NFL theme music from its sister Fox Sports brand during the debate and the metamorphosis from a presidential debate to a full-contact sports competition will be complete.
William Cory Labovitch, South St. Paul
LAKE MILLE LACS WALLEYE
If only the officials had been listening, plus, a suggestion
I share a troubling question with respect to the early closure of the walleye fishing season on Lake Mille Lacs ("One last walleye launch," Aug. 4). How did our elected and appointed leaders let it get to this point? We are at, or near, the bottom.
Department of Natural Resources Commissioner Tom Landwehr is quoted saying, "It's a dark day for Minnesota fishing." Gov. Mark Dayton spoke with reporters, calling it a "dark day" for those affected. He went on to say, "This is the beginning of a brighter future for fishing on Mille Lacs."
Those are quotes better suited for an overnight tragedy. A plane crash. A car accident. A mass shooting. The problem is that this did not happen overnight. A more suitable quote would be, "This is a dark day for those in charge of managing the walleye resource on Lake Mille Lacs."
The blue-ribbon panel of walleye experts concluded, within the last year, that a primary cause of young walleye not surviving at an acceptable rate is due to an imbalance in the size structure of walleyes in the lake. But, again, this did not happen overnight.
Reputable fishermen with dozens of years of fishing the lake have pointed out publicly — for years — the dearth of young walleye. Articles in print and fishing-related radio talk shows have pointed out the same — for years. Much has been made of the relative absence of younger walleye and the preponderance of large walleye in the lake — for years.
So, this is not a new phenomenon. What this reveals is a failure to see the obvious, and more important, a lack of listening and a lack of imagination on behalf of leadership. Another blue-ribbon panel will be assembled to remedy the situation and help local businesses through tax abatement, no-interest loans, advertising and more. All expensive propositions. Businesses will be lost, the economy (yes, walleye fishing drives the economy around Mille Lacs) will suffer. All very expensive propositions. And think, the sad thing is that the price of listening to those who have seen this coming for years would have been free if leadership had been willing to hear the message.