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- NATION, Page 34Is Texas to Blame?
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- What is it about Texas politicians and greed? First there
- was the furor over John Tower's defense contracting, and now the
- Jim Wright scandal. Hark back to John Connally's tangled legal
- history, and recall the get-rich-on-the-public-payroll legacy
- of Lyndon Johnson. On the national stage, those Texans who have
- avoided this moral indictment seem to be those who were born
- rich, like George Bush or Senator Lloyd Bentsen.
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- How beguiling it is to blame what might be called "Lone
- Star ethics" -- the symbiotic relationship between the
- freewheeling Texas business establishment and the state's
- political leadership that has created an environment where only
- suckers remain squeaky clean. As Washington Post columnist David
- Broder put it, "The Texas system has ruined more brilliant
- political figures than larger states such as California and New
- York have been capable of producing in the postwar period."
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- Alas, the go-for-it Texas system has in the 1980s become
- the American system. From former Attorney General Edwin Meese
- (not indicted) to imagemaker Michael Deaver (convicted), Ronald
- Reagan's closest advisers ran aground in part because they
- envied the easy California wealth of the President's kitchen
- Cabinet. From Abscam to Wedtech, East Coast Congressmen have
- found it hard to resist fast-money blandishments and outright
- bribery. Texas politicians like Jim Wright are far from unique
- in confusing doing well with doing good.
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