
Thank You, William Rehnquist
William Rehnquist was the most unlikely of appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court.
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William Rehnquist was the most unlikely of appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court.
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The histrionics of the liberals about the impending nomination to fill the Supreme Court vacancy look overwrought, but they are heartfelt.
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The Supreme Court wrapped up one of its most disappointing terms in years. Plagued by Chief Justice Rehnquist’s absence due to illness, the other justices behaved like the gang that cannot shoot straight.
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Five activist justices (not even nine) imposed their personal social preference on every American voter, state legislator, congressman, and juror. Adding insult to injury, the supremacist five used foreign laws, “international opinion,” and even an unratified treaty to rationalize overturning more than 200 years of American law and history!
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A recent small gathering of conservatives who dared to criticize judicial supremacists has caused an outpouring of paranoia among liberals and others who want judges to make the major social and political decisions of our times.
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“By what conceivable warrant can nine lawyers presume to be the authoritative conscience of the Nation?” So asked an incredulous Justice Antonin Scalia in response to the latest outrage by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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Traditionally Republican Kansas, of all places, is the latest battleground in the judges’ grab for supremacy over the other branches of government.
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Conservative voters gave Republican politicians their best Christmas in at least half a century, conferring majorities at nearly all levels of government.
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Globalism doesn’t mean just accepting foreign countries’ products and people across our borders. Supreme Court justices are beginning to manifest a curious fascination with foreign legal systems, too.
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The American Dream is to start a small business and develop it through years of hard work and investment.
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Don’t think that the lawsuits about the Ten Commandments and the Pledge of Allegiance are settled because Judge Roy Moore was fired and Michael Newdow lost his appeal to the Supreme Court.
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Our public school system is our country’s biggest and most inefficient monopoly, yet it keeps demanding more and more money.
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The supervisors of the great Los Angeles County decided to turn tail and run rather than fight a lawsuit threatened by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Why such weak-kneed response?
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A Clinton-appointed activist judge has wrapped the First Amendment around video and computer games that teach teenagers to kill policemen.
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by Phyllis Schlafly The principal speakers at the Democratic National Convention conspicuously omitted one topic: the courts. The speakers didn’t talk about what kind of
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Do you ever wonder why the internet is so polluted with pornography? The Supreme Court just reminded us why: it blocks every attempt by Congress to regulate the pornographers.
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Nevada just witnessed the political equivalent of Shootout at the OK Corral. On one side was the full power of the Nevada government, and on the other side was a grandmother armed with a pen, a petition and a clipboard.
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Bill Cosby doesn’t deserve the negative fallout that followed his remarks about the dropout rate of some poor students.
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How the votes in this year’s November election will be counted broke into the news last week when California Secretary of State Kevin Shelley banned the use of 14,000 touch-screen voting machines because of security and reliability concerns.
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David Horowitz thinks that anybody who cares about the future of America should confront the fact that U.S. colleges and universities are the fountainhead of financing for the radical movement in America.
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The atheists had their day before the Supreme Court, but they are not in good spirits about it. Their attempt to drive “one nation under God” from the Pledge of Allegiance now looks like a legal boomerang.
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“Why is it important for scientists to critically analyze evolution?”
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The Constitution Restoration Act is the vehicle to restore the Separation of Powers designed by our great United States Constitution and to rid us of the un-American notion of judicial supremacy.
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The opening blast in a campaign to require the federal courts to operate within their authorized jurisdiction was unveiled last week in Montgomery, Alabama under the title the Constitution Restoration Act.
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