I love Charles Barkley for his great sense of humor and frank words when talking about basketball. He once claimed he’d been misquoted in his autobiography, a refreshing admission that he had not written, nor carefully read it.

It’s not so funny when it’s the US Senate doing it. Mark Steyn:

For “the world’s greatest deliberative body,” this was a much more ominous popular insurrection than the conservative backlash against the president’s nomination of Harriet Miers for the Supreme Court. Time and again, the remote insulated emirs were offered the opportunity to rise above their condescension and declined to do so.

Sen. John McCain, R- Maverickistan, confidently asserted that he’d worked hard on this bill and knew it better than all these no-account nonentities riled up about it and then had to have it explained to him – by bloggers on a conference call – that he’d misunderstood a key provision of his own legislation: There was no requirement for illegal immigrants to pay back taxes. Their amnesty would come tax-free. Blustering senators who claimed to have drafted this thing had to be told what was in it by critics who’d actually taken the trouble to look at it.