
Kyoto = Kick the United States
The anti-Bush brigade in the United States and abroad has coalesced around the Kyoto Protocol, thinking it is a neat hammer with which to hit our President.
Continue reading →
The anti-Bush brigade in the United States and abroad has coalesced around the Kyoto Protocol, thinking it is a neat hammer with which to hit our President.
Continue reading →
President Bush deserves an “A” from Americans for his five-nation European tour because he stood firm for the U.S. positions on missile defense, the Kyoto Protocol, capital punishment, and non-involvement in expanded military engagements.
Continue reading →
Most conservatives are so happy that we now have a President who has restored dignity to the White House. We are pleased that he brings a moral dimension to his actions and isn’t squeamish about acknowledging his religious faith.
Continue reading →
by Phyllis Schlafly Phyllis Schlafly, president of Eagle Forum, issued this statement today: On April 24, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down one of its
Continue reading →
The incident in the China sea has made it clear to those who did not want to admit it that China isn’t a strategic partner after all.
Continue reading →
The IRS tax collector, using the police power of the government, takes a big slice of your income while sweet-talking you with the lie that this organized theft is really an investment (even though it will rapidly vanish rather than grow).
Continue reading →
When President George W. Bush gets around to appointing federal judges, the issue of parental rights should be a major criterion.
Continue reading →
Instead of the present plan to cut the death tax rates for all in small incremental steps stretched out over many years, President Bush and Congress should compromise by raising the exemption to $10 million.
Continue reading →
In earlier, simpler times, medical privacy was no problem. Your doctor recorded the date of your visit and his diagnosis and prescriptions in his inimitable illegible handwriting and put it safely in a manila folder where only he or his nurse would ever see it and nobody else could possibly read it.
Continue reading →
Denmark has been in the forefront of European efforts to encourage easy immigration and integration of immigrants with the native-born population. Denmark spends one percent of its GNP on foreign aid, the highest per capita in the world.
Continue reading →
In an era when we have endured so much scandal, so much embarrassingly improper behavior by high public officials, one might have reasonably predicted that Senator John Ashcroft would be the least controversial of all George W. Bush’s Cabinet nominations.
Continue reading →
Since Bill Clinton stuck his finger in the eye of all who care about American sovereignty and constitutional rights by signing the International Criminal Court Treaty (ICC) on New Year’s Eve, Congress should immediately pass Senator Jesse Helms’s American Servicemembers’ Protection Act.
Continue reading →
Al Gore’s supporters and their allies in the media continue to falsify the facts about Florida in order to try to delegitimize George W. Bush’s election.
Continue reading →
The U.S. Supreme Court has taken a bold step towards returning Florida’s election process to sanity. By halting the 11th hour partial hand recount, it stopped a reckless judicial attempt to elect Al Gore and potentially disenfranchise six million Florida voters.
Continue reading →
The most consequential election fraud on November 7 was committed by the television networks in falsely announcing, while the polls were still open in Florida’s Panhandle (which operates on central time), that Gore had won Florida.
Continue reading →
Jim Lehrer put the ultimate foreign policy question on the table during the second presidential debate when he ran through the list of eight military actions taken by the last three Presidents and asked the candidates to give a thumbs up or thumbs down.
Continue reading →
The one issue where the word risky is appropriately applied is the Clinton-Gore plan to keep the American people totally vulnerable to a nuclear missile attack.
Continue reading →
President Clinton’s National Security Adviser Samuel R. “Sandy” Berger was driven in a bullet-proof White House limousine on November 4 to address the members of the Bilderberg Steering Committee who were dining at the Library of Congress.
Continue reading →
Americans who are fascinated with spy and mystery fiction should get the Cox Report for their summer reading. It’s a fascinating whodunit.
Continue reading →
Not only does President Clinton not feel any shame about his impeachment (as he told Dan Rather), Clinton now feels stronger than ever, able to override the U.S. Constitution and ignore Congress.
Continue reading →
Most of what we hear on the media about “campaign finance reform” constitutes political posturing and “spin” about proposals that would do nothing to correct campaign abuses, but would do a great deal to interfere with the First Amendment right of citizens to spend our own money for the candidates of our choice.
Continue reading →
The phrase “New World Order” was not invented by President George Bush, but it was popularized by him in 1990 in order to resuscitate the then-moribund United Nations and make it a sponsor of his Gulf War. Like Saddam Hussein, the New World Order concept survived the Gulf War intact.
Continue reading →