I was trying to come up with a clever analogy to build on my post earlier this month faulting the President for focusing on enacting regulatory schemes rather than promoting econmic recovery, when I (via Glenn) chanced on Ben Stein’s recent op-ed in the New York Times. Stein whose father was the late economist Herbert Stein, [...] Full story...
On George Eliot’s birthday, Glenn Reynolds linked a Maureen Dowd column which showed that while the New York Times columnist does have a jaundiced view of the GOP, she does at least understand part of Sarah Palin’s appeal, what she calls the “visceral,” her ability to connect with people, a capacity that Barack Obama had [.
Clearly, this is the blogosphere-story-of-the-year (if not decade). It matters not that the Mainstream Media is covering up this scandal, the free-wheeling democratized Internet is getting the information out.
Wow…. it seems that all of the liberal lies are falling apart this week ….
A U.S. Census worker found dead in a secluded Clay County cemetery killed himself but tried to make the death look like a homicide, authorities have concluded.
While I have long counted myself as one of the skeptics of the theory of anthropogenic global warming (AGW), I don’t believe advocates of the theory invented it out of whole cloth.
Sometime late last summer shortly after John McCain announced he had tapped Sarah Palin as his running mate, a reader e-mailed me a comment from Andrew Sullivan where that former conservative had kind things to say about the then-Alaska Governor.
Perhaps it was because I caught sight of my print-out of Katie Couric’s inteview, with the CBS Anchor’s questions highlighted, after my phone interview yesterday with Carly Fiorina that I linked the two exchanges in my mind.
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.
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