When Gov. Jim Gibbons reveals his hole card with his โ€œstate of the stateโ€ speech next week, few anticipate he will unveil a winning hand.

In some observersโ€™ eyes the only ace in the hole with which he could win would be an announcement he wonโ€™t seek re-election while fighting tax hikes. Otherwise, itโ€™s business as usual.

Coming less than two weeks after President Obamaโ€™s state of the union speech, Gibbonsโ€™ talk may suffer by comparison despite his undoubted continuing commitment to austerity. To be fair, Nevada canโ€™t print money; the Federal Reserve can.

Also to be fair, there are those who think Gibbons should fight and can win. My take is they arenโ€™t astute observers, but opinions do differ, thus engendering political fun and commentary.

This potpourri column, I hope, will add to the fun with pointed references regarding politics, commentary and PR flaks. As always, the potpourri column drill is to tackle various subjects with verve.

Gibbons is unbuttered toast if he thinks whacking up to $1 billion from Nevadaโ€™s state budget can be done without losing more votes than he gains. His base isnโ€™t big enough nor his campaign finances flush enough to stay in office that way. Or, I think, any way.

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Some commentary on this (and other) politics in Nevadaโ€™s daffy daily press is ludicrous. For example, the Reno Gazette-Journal sounded a high-minded budgetary editorial trumpet call: โ€œThere will be pain. But it is unconscionable for anyone in a position of responsibility to try to take advantage of that pain for political gain.โ€ Unconscionable perhaps, but not unexpected. Politicians are in the game of building on pain, pleasure, gain or treasure. Moralizing about it is a foolโ€™s errand.

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Las Vegas residents, for their part, were treated to journalists lamenting the loss of entertainment when theatrical LV Mayor Oscar Goodman took himself out of the governorโ€™s race. Newspaper reporters and columnists there predict a boring race without the colorful Goodman to chronicle. This only shows the sophomoric attention span of many modern journalists. Boring is the puerile province of the easily bored.

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Those who ply what once was the journalistic craft should thank the U.S. Supreme Court for a recent ruling that corporations can join political advertising wars without any anti-First Amendment blocking of their spending. Private sector journalism is a business, not a public service, and it needs ad revenues (particularly now) for profit after paying ink-stained wretches or bombastic broadcasters. So-called news professionals uncomfortable with this might do better as social workers.

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Also of late came โ€œnewsโ€ that Rep. Dean Heller urged Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to squelch Chrysler ads on Super Bowl Sunday, citing the car companyโ€™s bailout. The Northern Nevada Republican protested expendiure of upwards of $2.5 million per 30-second spot. Fine, but then he also should advocate ending tax money for politiciansโ€™ mouthpieces, also known as PR flaks. I view Hellerโ€™s Geithner letter as a fart in a windstorm of congressional posturing about federal bailouts.

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This brings me full circle to Gov. Gibbons. Heโ€™ll make his speech Monday and then his flak, a swell fellow named Dan Burns, will bustle about to justify Gibbonsโ€™ positions. Sound use of tax money? To be fair once again, most politicians waste tax dollars this way. Iโ€™d go after Democrats about it, for theyโ€™re worse than Republicans, but Iโ€™m trying to wake up conservatives and wonโ€™t let loose my own fart in a windstorm on liberals. Most of them couldnโ€™t smell government waste right under their noses.

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