
Does Feminism Control The Bush Administration?
Assistant Education Secretary for Civil Rights Stephanie Monroe has announced that the Bush Administration is investigating universities that have fewer women in science and math programs than feminists would like.
Continue reading →
Unintended Consequences Of Welfare Reform
The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996, known as Welfare Reform, has been cheered as a stunning achievement of the Republican Congress and its Contract With America.
Continue reading →
Time To Terminate Foreign-Language Ballots
Led by the two House Kings, Peter King (R-NY) and Steve King (R-IA), 56 House members are urging Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI) to oppose the renewal of the section of the Voting Rights Act that mandates foreign-language ballots.
Continue reading →
"That Needs to Change"
To President Bush’s approval of the $6.5 billion sale of terminals at six of our most important ports to the United Arab Emirates, Americans are shouting, “That needs to change.” We are fed up with the post-9/11 failure (i.e., the refusal) of the Bush Administration to secure our borders and ports.
Continue reading →
Congressional Chicanery About H-1B Visas
“Why is it taking you five years to get through college?” I asked a student attending one of my campus lectures.
Continue reading →
Bill Gates Teams Up With UNESCO
Clinton is gone from the White House, but the federalization laws of his Administration — Goals 2000, School-to-Work, and Workforce Investment — are still in place.
Continue reading →
American Citizenship Is Precious
At least 383,000 babies are born in the United States every year to illegal aliens; that’s 10% of all U.S. births and about 40% of indigent births.
Continue reading →
Voters Won’t Fall For Bait-and-Switch
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff was reported to have said that Homeland Security will now “Return every single illegal entrant — no exceptions.”
Continue reading →
American Citizenship Is Precious
Rep. John Hostettler (R-IN) presided at a House hearing last week on Birthright Citizenship, Dual Citizenship and the Meaning of Sovereignty. It’s unfortunate that this important subject received little media coverage. The statistics are shocking. At least 383,000 babies are born in the United States every year to illegal aliens; that’s 10 percent of all U.S. births and about 40 percent of indigent births.
Continue reading →
Dealing with Katrina
Katrina has displaced hundreds of thousands of Americans who now need food, housing, and cash. Relief for those necessities will have to be temporary and it will be many months before they can return to New Orleans, if ever, so what they need most of all is jobs.
Continue reading →
What’s Behind a Phone Call From Newt Gingrich?
Newt was telling me about the danger from illegal aliens coming across our open borders.
Continue reading →
Time to Defund Feminist Pork
If Republicans are looking for a way to return to their principles of limited government and reduced federal spending, a good place to start would be rejection of the upcoming reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) sponsored by Senator Joe Biden (D-DE).
Continue reading →
The Plan to Integrate the U.S., Mexico and Canada
The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) has just let the cat out of the bag about what’s really behind our trade agreements and security partnerships with the other North American countries.
Continue reading →
CFR’s Plan to Integrate the U.S., Mexico and Canada
The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) has just let the cat out of the bag about what’s really behind our trade agreements and security partnerships with the other North American countries. A 59-page CFR document spells out a five-year plan for the “establishment by 2010 of a North American economic and security community” with a common “outer security perimeter.”
Continue reading →
CAFTA Should Be Rejected Just Like The EU Constitution
Since democracy is the worldwide goal of the Bush Administration, we must face the stunning fact that the integration of different nationalities under a common European Union (EU) constitution was rejected by decisive democratic votes.
Continue reading →
Is Environmentalism More Important Than Lives In Africa?
The United States has just assumed the largest burden of forgiving $40 billion in debt owed by 18 mostly African countries. It’s no wonder these countries can’t repay their debts when they suffer the enormous human and economic costs of malaria.
Continue reading →
Federal Incentives Make Children Fatherless
Why has Congress appropriated taxpayers’ money to give perverse incentives that break up families and deprive children of their fathers?
Continue reading →
Continental Dream; British Nightmare; Warning to America
The European ruling elite is having a collective nervous breakdown for fear the French will vote No on May 29 and reject the European constitution.
Continue reading →
Feminist Mischief on College Campuses
April 2005 The most intolerant feminists are on the faculties of elite colleges and universities. The Communists used to severely punish as “deviationists” all those
Continue reading →
The Outrages Taxpayers and Parents Pay For
The reluctance of the University of Colorado (CU) to fire Professor Ward Churchill is showing the public that colleges and universities are nests of subsidized radicals. Churchill is no anomaly; like-minded professors hold forth on campuses all over the country.
Continue reading →
CAFTA Is A Bad Deal For The United States
Those who believe in American sovereignty and/or our unique principle of federalism are waking up to the damage that CAFTA will do to both. Its fate in Congress is uncertain and bipartisan opposition is growing.
Continue reading →
Feminist Whines Lead Down a Dead-End Road
Now that Summers has released the text of his January 14 speech, we can see that he presented three very rational hypotheses to explain why there are fewer women than men in science and engineering academia: (1) “the high-powered job hypothesis” (the concept that women voluntarily reject the 80-hour-week and job-intensity that top careers require), (2) “different availability of aptitude at the high end,” and (3) “different socialization and patterns of discrimination” (the favorite feminist explanation for all sex differences).
Continue reading →
Making Schools Accountable
Are taxpayer-subsidized infomercials and payoffs to friendly commentators the federal government’s answer to education problems?
Continue reading →
The Judge And The President vs. The People
Federal Judge David C. Bury overturned the will of the people and enjoined enforcement of Arizona’s Proposition 200, which would require Arizonans to provide proof of citizenship in order to register to vote and require a valid ID to be presented when applying for benefits paid for by Arizona taxpayers.
Continue reading →