Wednesday, May 31, 2006
Dean's moralizing
Corker--why not admit the change and move on?
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Premature celebration by Dems?
She can appear tentative and overscripted in interviews, with a tight smile and large, expressive eyes than can leave an impression of nervousness. While Pelosi flatly states in the article, "I haven't had a facelift," (go here for commentary on that subject) she didn't claim not to have an "eyelid lift" or one of host of procedures that don't technically qualify as "facelifts."
The Democrat "culture of corruption"?
Monday, May 29, 2006
Troubling story from UK
Sunday, May 28, 2006
Am not; are too; am not -- proving a negative
Saturday, May 27, 2006
Oh wow, Kerry is fighting back against the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth
If you know anything about the overall accusations of the Swifties, the purported body-blows of the Kerry effort are incredibly underwhelming. Kerry was SHOWN to be a pompous blowhard for his incessant allusions to his own valor, whether or not the couple of minor facts now being challenged are ever disproven. Besides, Kerry's PAST military experience was, if anything, a mere attempt to mask his PRESENT pacifistic tendencies. The Swifties didn't--as Kerry claims, spend $30 million to spread lies. They spent a couple hundred thousand to get the message out, and the story had legs of its own. But you have got to hand it to the NYT for so artfully doing its part to rehabilitate the war hero.
Friday, May 26, 2006
Senate's immigration bill
Mother who killed her Russian adoptee gets 35-year sentence
What comes to mind is that we (not Americans, necessarily) tend to view children as a treasured possession--like a home or nice car, rather than a responsibility or stewardship. And it is perhaps heightened in situations where a woman or family cannot conceive a child and feels compelled to obtain a child to "make" their family. I don't know what the answer is, but it sure seems like this woman had no business being allowed to adopt a child.
Kevorkian having change of heart?
Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Sad aspects of "American Idol"
More than 63 million votes were cast, "more than any president in the history of our country has received," [Ryan] Seacrest said.
Katrina coverage was disastrous
Hillary's grass roots apparently underground
I don't think Hillary will need to be drafted (actually, I think they may have to get a restraining order keeping her away from the Presidential debates if she doesn't get the Dems' nomination), but the folks at hillarynow.org will need more than 20 votes in Democrat-heavy Nashville to win the White House.
GOP demands return of docs taken from Dem Jefferson's office
Update: Sen. Bill Frist says he backs the FBI's search of the congressman's office. I think I'm going to side with Frist on this one; "arresting" a congressman to keep him from voting (or whatever) is different from searching his office. Here's the law at issue, the "speech and debate" protections in Article 1, Section 6 of the Constitution:
That section states that members of Congress "shall in all cases, except treason, felony and breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest during their attendance at the session of their respective houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any speech or debate in either house, they shall not be questioned in any other place."
Dems and their lack of self-awareness
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
The depression did it!!!
Saturday, May 20, 2006
"Religious Left" -- no basis for unity
Mr. Campolo, the Baptist minister, explained to the participants in a seminar that many people on Capitol Hill were religious, and that to reach them and to establish authority, liberals should rely on the Bible.
"You have no right to be a spiritual leader if you haven't read Scripture," he told the group. "People in Congress respect the Book, even if they don't know what it says. If we don't recognize this, we don't know squat."
A young man with long hair and a tunic challenged Mr. Campolo."I thought this was a spiritual progressives' conference," he said. "I don't want to play the game of 'the Bible says this or that,' or that we get validation from something other than ourselves. We should be speaking from our hearts."
Friday, May 12, 2006
On immigration, let's pull back from the edge . . .
Friday, May 12, 2006
A Final Word for Now [John Podhoretz]
Posted at 7:55 PMThere are really three immigration debates. There is the cultural debate, there is the economic debate, and there is the security debate. On matters of culture, I believe as everybody else here does that our immigration policy makes no sense if it is not directed at the process of turning non-Americans into Americans through the instruction of English, knowledge of civics and American history, and helping to instill a sense of pride and commitment to the country.
On economic matters, I agree that if immigrants are not of net benefit to the country, it makes no sense for us to allow newcomers to do harm in this way — and here, in my opinion, the case made by restrictionists is by far the weakest. On security matters, an uncontrolled border is clearly unacceptable, and a panoply of measures, including a border fence, is more than called for.
As for dealing with the illegals already here, there's a sense in which this debate has been radicalized to such an extent that the Right won't be satisfied with a policy that does not explicitly advocate expulsion — all other policies being dubbed "amnesty" and therefore illegitimate — while the Left refuses to consider any policy other than special-treatment affirmative-action line-jumping legalization. In other words, there is nothing our politicians can do, absolutely nothing, to satisfy the activists — because neither extreme will be reflected in any kind of law or policy that emerges even from a Washington energized to deal with them.
If a more sober reckoning of political reality does not intrude here, the Right will hurtle headlong toward schism, division, a third party and all sorts of other "pox on all your houses" actions. The cost of this is what I detail in the direst parts of my book Can She Be Stopped? — the easy transfer of power on Capitol Hill and the White House to the Democrats, and particularly to Hillary Clinton.
It's doubtful the policies she will follow as president on immigration will please anyone on the Right. It's certain that the policies she will follow on courts, on social issues, on foreign policy, on taxes, on regulation and on almost everything else you can think of will be deeply displeasing to people on the Right. And then, as a result of the pursuit of an impossible policy of purity on immigration, the country and the world will suffer the consequences.
The potential for self-destruction is terrifying. The potential for grave national harm is worse. Please, you guys, pull back from the edge.
Kerry, THIS time he could win it for the Dems!
Which prompts the question, Why now? Pollster Frank Luntz recently showed a focus group of Democratic primary voters in Iowa and New Hampshire footage of Kerry over the past few months. "Where the hell was this John Kerry?" Luntz says the voters asked him. "Why didn't he have this passion, this specificity, when we needed him to?" If Kerry had run in 2004 using his 2006 language, Luntz argues, he might be President now.Uh, Kerry won in both of those primaries, but winning among core Dems doesn't win you the WH.
Gore v. Clinton (Mrs.)
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Wow, Dean misrepresented Dems' position on homosexual marriage!?
Aside: I like how the AP writer labels the Dean's admission that the DNC supports homosexual marriage by saying he "reasserted the party's commitment to equal protection for all." How's that for objectivity?
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
Darfur, Sudan v. Iraq
Essay on "populism"
. . . only populism in its purist form derives its entire agenda from “people power.” Indeed, the word basically means “people-ism.” It does not pretend to privilege objective truth or the best arguments or even justice—if by justice you mean an objective system of judgment which might rule against “the people.” For populists, “justice” is defined by the giant baby getting its bottle.
Sunday, May 07, 2006
McCain and Liberty U. commencement address
Should we investigate movie studios?
Friday, May 05, 2006
Clarence Thomas tome
Yikes, on election problems in Memphis
Low poll numbers and "direct democracy"
Which leads me to another concern of mine about a phenomenon that has become more common due to advances in electronic communication as well as the popularity of talk radio: "direct democracy" or pressuring those in office toward a particular policy. As I alluded to above, the time to take action is at election time. I remember when ol' Ross Perot would talk about setting up a system of direct ballots or what amounted to referenda on Federal issues . . . how democratic! how noble! Uh, no. In reality it is counter to our form of gov't which is republican and representative not technically "democratic." Our constitutional republic is designed to foster rule of law and to counter mob rule. Sure, it's a free country, and we can and often should complain about politicians, but an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Thursday, May 04, 2006
Shelby Steele article on Western Civ-guilt
La backlash
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Eee-vul Wal-Mart in the news . . .
And in a perhaps related story, a Maryland Wal-Mart employee discovered a man glued to a toilet seat. On the other hand, law enforcement folks probably were not summoned.

