
What's Hiding Behind The Student Visa Scandal
The U.S. State Department grants over a half million student visas a year even though student visas are known to be a tremendous source of fraud.
Continue reading →
The U.S. State Department grants over a half million student visas a year even though student visas are known to be a tremendous source of fraud.
Continue reading →
Where are all those strict-constructionist Republicans who’ve been complaining about activist judges who don’t respect the fact that the U.S. Constitution gives “all legislative powers” to the Congress? Don’t those Republicans realize that it is just as unconstitutional to transfer legislative powers to the executive branch?
Continue reading →
“I am ruling out a tax increase,” the new Governor of debt-ridden New Jersey declared the day after his election. He said he is embarking on “an agonizing reappraisal of what government should do, and perhaps more importantly, what government ought not be doing.”
Continue reading →
The Bush Administration’s announcements that it will delay indefinitely the admission of refugees from terrorist countries, and that it will find and deport foreigners who are illegally in the United States because their visa terms have expired, are two moves in the right direction.
Continue reading →
As President Bush has warned us, this is a new kind of war. He is doing a good job of the military and diplomatic legs of the U.S. response to terrorism, but it’s up to citizens to insist that the response on the homeland front be effective and constitutional.
Continue reading →
The act of war that was committed against America on September 11, 2001 (9/11) has changed the way we look at many things.
Continue reading →
The current attempt to inflict Americans with the burden of having to carry a national ID card did not begin on 9-11 and, indeed, is unrelated to it. The attack on the World Trade Center is just a convenient excuse to promote this thoroughly un-American idea.
Continue reading →
After the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, the Left moved quickly to use it as an excuse to enact draconian federal gun control. Fortunately, saner heads prevailed by showing that no new gun control laws would have been the slightest deterrent to that tragedy.
Continue reading →
The Bush Administration properly walked out of the ridiculous United Nations Conference on Racism in South Africa because we didn’t care to be insulted (or have our friends insulted) by Fidel Castro and his allies.
Continue reading →
Perhaps one good result of President George W. Bush’s toying with the unpopular notion of granting amnesty to millions of illegal aliens is that Americans are starting to debate the constitutional, cultural, social, language, moral, and economic questions involved.
Continue reading →
Those who officially advise government agencies whether or not to force Americans to submit to vaccines should not be on the payroll of the corporations that profit from the government mandates.
Continue reading →
Perhaps one good result of President George W. Bush’s toying with the unpopular notion of granting amnesty to millions of illegal aliens is that Americans are starting to have a frank debate about the constitutional, cultural, social, language, moral, and economic questions involved.
Continue reading →
When demonstrators displayed anti-American signs against our President while traveling to Europe last month, we could brush it off as a bunch of street radicals getting their kicks. But it is an insult when a foreign head of state comes to the heart of the United States and attacks our laws while his audience waves foreign flags.
Continue reading →
President Bush and 30 Republican Senators are trying to crowd our highways with Mexican trucks that are not required to meet the same safety, weight, licensing and insurance standards required of American trucks.
Continue reading →
On July 12, Oregon’s U.S. Senator Gordon Smith (R-OR) offered Amendment 899 to release the river water to the farmers. That should have been a no-brainer — what could be easier than choosing between desperate farmers and a couple of ugly fish?
Continue reading →
The weather was supposed to be sunny when I arrived in Bonn, Germany for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Sixth Conference of the Parties, Part II, but instead it was raining. Forecasts for the next day called for rain, but it was dry. It seems that the UN’s premise that “science” can accurately predict the weather and control climate change is completely false.
Continue reading →
The Bush Administration plan is to allow Mexican trucks to operate freely on U.S. highways in all 48 states without auditing their safety practices for up to 18 months.
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 →
It isn’t just Social Security benefits that Americans are worried about; it’s the Social Security Number (SSN) itself.
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 →
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled April 24 in a very significant case that concerns our right to respect and legislate English as our national language.
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 →