Looks like in matters of federal domestic spending, Barack Obama’s First Term has become George W. Bush’s third. “President Bush enlarged government more than anyone since Lyndon Johnson; Obama will accelerate and expand on that.“ “THE NEW ERA OF SPEND AND BLAME: ‘After running a campaign against the $1 trillion deficit he ‘inherited’ from President Bush and [...] Full story...
As I read Dan Riehl’s impassioned plea for Republican elitists to stop denigrating grassroots conservative favorites (like Sarah Palin), I recall how, a few years back, many such elitists of a previous generation had similar concerns about a conservative politician beloved by the grassroots, a man who could communicate his ideas while showing that he [.
Earlier today, I had the chance to interview Carly Fiorina on her campaign for the Senate; I expect to devote at least two posts (including this one) to the conversation.
Slowly reading Sarah Palin’s books amidst various obligations and amusements (taking a friend to Disneyland yesterday for her birthday), I’ve now completed slightly over half the book, just getting to the part where John McCain’s has announced the successful Alaska reformer as his running mate on the Republican ticket in 2008.
Jus’ wondering ’cause this headline now appears on its mainpage: Palin limits crowd interaction at NC’s Fort Bragg.
I enjoy Michelle Malkin’s blog and find that while her rhetoric is sometimes a bit overheated, she always gets her facts right.
So says a reader at Instapundit about the latest revelations regarding the firing of AmeriCorps inspector general Gerald Walpin.
I’m glad Dan did a post on “Climategate” earlier this morning. As usual, he took the words right out of my head.
Last week, I wrote two posts questioning Newsweek’s cover story calling global warming crusader Al Gore “a thinking man’s thinking man.
It is perhaps fitting that my youngest nephew celebrates his first birthday today (three days before the actual event) on the 113th anniversary of the birth of his great-great Aunt Ruth and the 190th anniversary of the birth of the greatest English novelist who ever lived, Mary Anne Evans Cross (AKA George Eliot).
Among the sixty Senators voting to begin debate on Harry Reid’s 2,074-page health care bill were thirteen from states which voted for John McCain last fall, five of them from states which haven’t voted for a Democrat for President in forty-five years.
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