
Totalization: Sellout of American Workers
The Democrats are trying to make a campaign issue out of George W. Bush’s alleged plan to “privatize” Social Security, scaring seniors into thinking their checks will be cut off.
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The Democrats are trying to make a campaign issue out of George W. Bush’s alleged plan to “privatize” Social Security, scaring seniors into thinking their checks will be cut off.
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Time Magazine broke through the media silence about illegal aliens with a cover story on September 20 called “America’s Border: Who Left the Door Open?”
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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 flap over the Department of Education consigning 300,000 copies of “Helping Your Child to Learn History” to the dumpster is evidence anew that the Federal Government should have no role in education. Illiteracy and low scores in public schools are a national scandal, but it’s hard to see how federal spending improves anything.
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Becoming more and more hysterical at the possibility of losing the presidential election, the liberals and their media allies are psyching up the public to expect legal challenges in any states that have close elections.
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The presidential candidate praised abstinence at a key moment in the debate in St. Louis, and he admitted that the Kyoto global warming treaty was “flawed.”
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To find out what the two major parties stand for, we should be able to compare their Party Platforms adopted by their National Nominating Conventions in the summer of 2004.
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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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John Kerry’s campaign is squealing like a stuck pig about Republican mailings in the swing states of Arkansas and West Virginia.
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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 Republican and Democratic parties could have stirred up more television audience for their national nominating conventions by allowing the delegates to debate their party platforms.
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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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Alan Keyes has upset the liberal game plan to crown law school lecturer Barack Obama as the new leader of blacks in America.
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As the country appears so closely divided between the red and blue states, the Democrats are seeking odd-ball constituencies to enhance their numbers.
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The 2004 national convention of the National Education Association adopted its usual leftwing legislative goals, giving the green light to the NEA’s highly paid staff to lobby the Congress that will convene in January 2005.
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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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The head of the NEA, Reg Weaver, opened the annual convention in July in Washington, DC with a call for public school teachers and employees to mobilize to defeat President Bush this fall.
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A presidential nominee’s choice of a running mate is supposed to balance the ticket.
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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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The handover of power to Iraq by the victorious American forces has stimulated public discussion about a word that seems to have fallen in disfavor in the last few years: sovereignty. That means the ability of a government to act without being subject to the legal control of another country or international organization, restrained only by moral principles.
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When Ronald Reagan became President in 1980, conventional wisdom assumed that the Soviet Union’s position as a fearsome superpower was permanent.
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The thesis of “The Day After Tomorrow” is that the Bush Administration has failed to protect us from global warming.
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Oil-for-Food was a giant scam that allowed Saddam Hussein to divert that incredible sum to finance his lavish lifestyle and to buy friends to keep himself in power.
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