So, what do you think about recent events in the news?

A lot of good news all 'round.

How can you possibly say that? You think it's good about the baseball scandal - with even Barry Bonds saying he thought steroids were flax-seed oil? You think it's good about American kids ranking 24th in mathematics skills among 29 industrialized countries? You think it's good about one Catholic diocese after another going toes-up because of litigation from rampant homosexuality in the priesthood? You think it's good that more and more colleges are now trying to cope not only with knee-deep alcohol on campus - but with soaring suicide?

Of course not. Major League Baseball has been ignoring its own problems for too long; John McCain and others are right to jump on it big-time. The Paris-based PISA study, building on earlier studies showing too many American youngsters can't read, now shows too many American 15-year-olds have trouble counting - even on their fingers: bad business. Homosexual abuse among the Catholic priesthood, particularly toward boys, is shredding one of the nation's - the world's - most estimable institutions. And news from the country's campuses suggests Tom Wolfe, in his "I Am Charlotte Simmons" about the descent of life there, is not so hyperbolic and far off the mark as his detractors might wish.

So how can you say things are not going to the dogs?

A lot of the good relates in some way to George Bush.

You can't be ser -

Think about it. Bush has resisted appeals from John Kerry and Saddamite disciples to delay Iraq's elections. The military successes in Fallujah and Mosul have moved those elections from fluffy dreams to prospective realities. As Bush told Marines at Camp Pendleton Monday:

"When Iraqis choose their leaders in free elections, it will destroy the myth that the terrorists are fighting a foreign occupation and make clear that what the terrorists are really fighting is the will of the Iraqi people."

What one hopes will emerge in Iraq now is a Lech Walesa (as in Poland), a Vaclav Havel (as in the Czech Republic), a Hamid Karzai (as in Afghanistan) - even a Yulia Tymoshenko, who just may raise democracy to unimagined heights in Ukraine. The jury will be out for a while regarding whether democracy can work in Iraq, but there are countless impoverished people around who have bet the moon that a given jury will return a specific verdict.

Hmmmm. And at home?

At home, the news seems very good indeed.