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Opinion: In today’s pages: Wright’s relevance, Eight Belles’ ankles, Yahoo’s ads

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Columnist Jonah Goldberg says issues that may seem irrelevant actually give us clues about the candidates:

Whatever the true import of Obama’s relationship with Wright may be, or whatever the proper weight voters should give to his view that poor whites ‘cling’ to guns and religion because they’ve suffered under bad economic policies, or, for that matter, what Clinton’s ‘sniper fire’ story says about her, it strikes me as absurd to argue that these data are meaningless but their stance on a gas-tax holiday is of enduring importance.

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Pacific Council on International Policy adjunct fellow Joshua Kurlantzick profiles China’s educated, wealthy next-generation nationalists who aren’t afraid to be aggressive toward the West. And USC’s Sara Catania has an idea for the Silver Lake Reservoir: a new kind of urban park.

The editorial board thinks a tax on services might work for California if done right and explains why Yahoo and Google’s teaming up on advertising would be bad for consumers. The board also responds to the death of racehorse Eight Belles at the Kentucky Derby last weekend:

As we explore the limits of physical performance, sports trend toward the more extreme, even if it harms rather than enhances the athlete’s health. Steroids in baseball, eating disorders in prepubescent gymnasts, whatever it takes to win, until there’s a public pushback that threatens the sport. Without industry reform in the near future, it’s easy to imagine such a pushback against the biggest athlete of all -- the racehorse.

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On the letters page, readers discuss May Day. Chino’s Raul Perez asks, ‘How is it that I have to have a passport to enter the country in which I was born, raised and served in the armed forces while others come and go as they please?’

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