Search






Jeff's Amazon.com Wish List

Archive Calendar

May 2010
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  

Archives

May 17, 2010

Do good fences make good neighbors?

Who can say? Though Doug Ross has photos that suggest it might not be such a bad thought: This outrageous administration and its pathetic sycophants in Congress spent trillions on “shovel-ready” projects that only harmed the economic health of the country. They borrowed hundreds of billions of dollars from China, which our children must repay with interest when they grow up. And the border remains open, even though the one

Another moment of unabashed pragmatism

I probably could have made a salad for lunch, but fuck it: that leftover sausage and mushroom pizza wasn’t getting any younger — and it certainly wasn’t going to eat itself. So. That settled that.

The end of American Exceptionalism?

The Obama Administration seems to believe so: Congressman Mike Pence suspects that the Administration, despite [Hillary] Clinton’s denial, really does believe that America is in decline. At the Conservative Political Action Conference this year, he said, “I am told that officials in this administration will actually admit in private that they see their job as ‘managing American decline.’” If true, the Administration’s approach is extremely chilling. Actually, what’s most chilling

“Is the Cure Worse than the Disease?”

In the case of Obamacare, that’s a rhetorical question. Peter Suderman, Reason: […] while ObamaCare might qualify as victory for Washington’s army of bureaucrats and rulemakers, for the rest of us, there isn’t much to cheer. Since the law’s passage, the news about it has been been unrelentingly bad. With each passing it day, it looks more likely that costs will go up, businesses will face new bureaucratic burdens, and

"Is the Cure Worse than the Disease?"

In the case of Obamacare, that’s a rhetorical question. Peter Suderman, Reason: […] while ObamaCare might qualify as victory for Washington’s army of bureaucrats and rulemakers, for the rest of us, there isn’t much to cheer. Since the law’s passage, the news about it has been been unrelentingly bad. With each passing it day, it looks more likely that costs will go up, businesses will face new bureaucratic burdens, and