Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label Newspapers Washington Examiner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newspapers Washington Examiner. Show all posts

Sunday, October 09, 2011

By: Examiner Editorial: Harry Reid shames the 'world's greatest deliberative body'

Washington Examiner Opinion

Harry Reid shames the 'world's greatest deliberative body'

For more than two centuries, the U.S. Senate has been known as the world's greatest deliberative body because of its rule ensuring the right of every senator to force consideration of, and a recorded vote on, any issue. The rule made the Senate unique as the world's only legislative entity in which the rights of majorities and minorities were equally protected. But 221 years of tradition and majestic debate mean nothing to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, who, for no better reason than avoiding an embarrassing vote, used procedural legerdemain to obliterate minority rights in the upper chamber.

No adults among the Occupy Wall Street protesters

I wouldn't think it would be worthwhile to draw attention to the Occupy Wall Street "movement," or its list of demands that wouldn't pass muster in an average kindergarten class. But if America's president and vice president choose to talk about it, and give it credibility, then it's news.

A Soviet spy in the White House invented 'stimulus spending'

Among the most amazing aspects of the accelerating American submission to the state are 1) how matter-of-fact we are in contemplating massive government interventions such as President Obama's latest stimulus "jobs" plan, and 2) how virtually no one notices the blatant Marxist overtones. When someone does, a la "Joe the Plumber" at the end of the 2008 campaign season, he is mocked off the stage.

Sunday Reflection: Judge orders EPA to pay up for malicious prosecution

By: Daniel J. Popeo
Last Friday, after five years of litigation, a federal judge in Louisiana ordered the U.S. government to pay $1.7 million in damages for maliciously prosecuting Hubert Vidrine, a used-oil processing plant manager.

*****

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Washington Examiner Opinion: A reminder that it can always be morning in America

Washington Examiner Opinion Email Digest

A reminder that it can always be morning in America
It has become conventional wisdom that President Reagan "restored America's confidence," an achievement that became forever encapsulated in political lore by the famous "It's morning again in America" television commercial that preceded his landslide re-election in 1984. But the reality is that Reagan didn't restore something that had been lost, he simply reminded Washington that it had been there all the time. Americans never lost faith in themselves or their capacity to shape better futures for themselves and their children. It was professional politicians inside the Beltway and fuzzy-minded thinkers at places like Harvard and the New York Times who lost sight of the country's boundless possibilities.

Williams plan to avert Social Security disaster

Politicians who are principled enough to point out the fraud of Social Security, referring to it as a lie and Ponzi scheme, are under siege. Acknowledgment of Social Security's problems is not the same as calling for the abandonment of its recipients. Instead, it's a call to take actions now, while there's time to avert a disaster. Let's look at it.

Republicans should avoid falling into the messiah complex

Listening to some establishment Republicans grousing about the field of GOP presidential candidates should serve as a warning. Republicans, if they are not careful, are in danger of catching the same virus that infected Democrats in 2008.

Examiner Local Editorial: Liberal nannies should leave Catholic University alone

A legally frivolous but potentially dangerous lawsuit filed against Catholic University by a crosstown rival has become a national cause celebre for liberal activists who want to shove their notions of college life down the private religious school's throat. At issue is CUA President John Garvey's decision to reinstate same-sex dorms to discourage underage drinking and casual sex among the incoming freshman class, something he has every legal and moral right to do.

Corpulent Christie may be the guy to slim down America

Moments after tramping out of my building's swaying stairwell and into the street during August's D.C. earthquake, I checked my phone's Twitter app and got my first good postquake laugh. Salon's Alex Pareene cracked: "I think Chris Christie just jumped into the race."

GOP primary chaos could produce another Ike-Taft convention showdown

By: Donald Devine
Well, Florida has done it – and it will explode the whole 2012 election process, as this space has predicted for months. Gov. Rick Scott and his legislative leaders’ special panel has declared that Florida’s presidential primary will be held January 31, 2011, more than a month ahead of schedule and well before the March 6 date that Republican rules set as the earliest date to hold a primary without losing half of their delegate power at the national GOP convention.

*****

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Examiner Sat. Politics EXTRA: Charlie Spiering - Obama: Odds are, I'll get re-elected

Washington Examiner Saturday Politics EXTRA
Breaking news & comment from The Washington Examiner's Campaign 2012 coverage team
 
 
"I just have to remind people that here's one thing I know for certain: The odds of me being reelected are much higher than the odds of me being elected in the first place.” President Obama told donors last night at a fundraiser.

Brian Hughes - Axelrod: Obama fine with base, in battlegrounds
Even as President Obama’s poll numbers hover around 40 percent, senior campaign strategist David Axelrod remains adamant that the president maintains strong standing with the public — particularly when compared to Republicans.


According to The Social Security Board of Trustees 2011 Annual Report, Social Security added paid out $49 billion more than it took in last year, and will pay out another another $46 billion more than it takes in next year.

Joel Gehrke - Obama: My bill spends $230k per job
 
Accepting for the sake of argument President Obama's prediction, that means Obama intends to spend $230,000 to create each new job. The predicted drop in unemployment would leave the unemployment percentage at 8.1% - or, put another way, one tenth of a percentage point higher than the unemployment number that Obama said his previous stimulus package would avoid.

 
Earlier this week, Eli Lake reported that the White House had tried to get a four-star general to alter his testimony to make it more favorable to the tech company LightSquared. Major Democratic donor Philip Falcone runs an investment fund that is majority owner of the company.
It turns out the company also runs an ads at Think Progress, a website run by the liberal Center for American Progress.
 
Newly sworn-in Republican Rep. Bob Turner of NY-9 is already moving into disgraced Rep. Anthony Weiner's office. His wife has requested a thorough cleaning of the office, after staffers found "a toothbrush with the name Anthony on it" in the bathroom.

 
 
"No ma'am." Rick Perry says in this video, after a woman asks him about his support of TARP.

 
Seeking to distance herself from her controversial HPV comments, Michele Bachmann released a video highlighting the original point scored against Rick Perry in Monday's debate. Crony capitalism.
 
Conn Carroll - Obama throws Geithner under the bus 
Hard to see how Obama comes out looking good either way here. Either Obama told Geithner to break up Citigroup, Geithner ignored him, and Obama did nothing; or the whole story is a farce and some forces in the White House are trying to make a villian out of Geithner to protect Obama. So far, those Obama supporters most upset about the bailouts are not buying the Geithner-did-it theory.

Charlie Spiering - Jon Stewart skewers Obama on Solyndra scandal
Even Jon Stewart can't ignore the humor behind President Obama's Solyndra misstep. Watch this hilarious clip.
 

*****

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Washington Examiner Daily Political Digest: Michael Barone - New York 9: Stunning Repudiation of Chuck Schumer


Washington Examiner Daily Political Digest

Michael Barone - New York 9: Stunning Repudiation of Chuck Schumer

This result is a rebuke to Barack Obama, but it is a rebuke as well—a stinging one, perhaps more stinging—to Senator Charles Schumer. He represented much of this district for 18 years and the now disgraced Anthony Weiner was his staffer and pretty obviously Schumer’s chosen successor as congressman when he ran successfully for the Senate in 1998.

Michael Barone - Obama tainted by loan guarantees to solar firms

One factor favoring President Obama's re-election, according to a recent article by political scientist Alan Lichtman, is the absence of scandal in his administration.

Lichtman may have spoken too soon.

The reason can be capsulized in a single word: Solyndra.

Philip Klein - Obama costs Dems a Congressional seat -- in NYC!

As with all special elections, there are always unique circumstances, but in this case even the Democratic firm Public Policy Polling concluded after conducting a survey leading up to the election that, "If Turner wins on Tuesday it will be largely due to the incredible unpopularity of Barack Obama dragging his party down in the district.

Byron York - New report cites 'regulatory tsunami' under Obama

The number and scope of federal regulations, along with the costs of those regulations and the number of federal regulators, are all growing despite an executive order from President Obama that was touted as a measure to curb over-regulation, according to a new report by the House Government Oversight and Reform Committee.

Susan Ferrechio - GOP may slice and dice Obama's jobs plan

Facing nearly universal Republican opposition to President Obama's mammoth jobs-creation plan, White House officials on Tuesday said they would not object if Congress passes only pieces of the $447 billion proposal, a move the GOP says increases the chances that Congress can agree on legislation to help the ailing economy.

Brian Hughes - Obama jobs tour rolls through key electoral states

The route of President Obama's national jobs tour can be traced through a familiar list of electoral battleground states that have been regular travel destinations for a White House under fire for blurring the line between presidential duties and political events.

*****

Monday, September 12, 2011

Commemorating 9/11: The Washington Examiner's Legacy of 9/11 coverage


Commemorating 9/11: The Washington Examiner's Legacy of 9/11 coverage

Michael Barone: America changed in a day

Heroes of Flight 93 rememberedBy: Lisa Gartner
Unfinished business remains at crash site
SHANKSVILLE, PA. — There was unfinished business on the eve of   Sept. 11. Yes, the president was expected to visit Shanksville on Sunday to commemorate the 10th anniversary of that tragic day. Read More

Ceremony honors fallen heroes and soldiers at Pentagon 9/11 Memorial
By: Liz Farmer 
As survivors, friends and family of those killed in the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001 arrived at a remembrance ceremony at the Pentagon on Sunday, the noise from jetliners bound for Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport drowned out conversation, and served as a somber reminder of the crash that took so many lives that day. But at 9:37 a.m. -- silence.

9/11 triggered revolutionary changes in America's military

By: Sara A. Carter 09/08/11 8:05 PM
In the first hours after the Sept. 11 attacks, U.S. commanders understood they confronted a new enemy: one without borders, but capable of projecting power around the globe. Over the next 10 years the American military would confront terrorists and insurgents across a vast international battlefield who were no match for America's technology, but who were adept at fighting an asymmetrical, open-ended war. Read More

9/11 inspired local man to join U.S. Marines

By: Sara A. Carter 09/08/11 8:05 PM
U.S. Marine Corps 1st Lt. Ryan Raftery watched the events of 9/11 unfold on television during math class at Bishop Ireton High School, in Alexandria -- just a few miles from the Pentagon. "It changed my life," said Raftery, now 25, and stationed in Helmand province in Afghanistan, during a phone interview this week. "We're a volunteer force and many of us joined because of the attacks." Raftery finished high school two years later, and attended Norwich University, a private Read More
By: Brian Hughes 09/10/11 8:05 PM
 
NEW YORK -- Charles Wolf never heard from his wife again after the morning of Sept. 11. And her body was not recovered.
Instead, without any form of closure, he is left with the recollections of that horrific day ten years ago -- and the woman he knew would be his wife 30 seconds after meeting her.

Pain remains 10 years after wife died at Pentagon
 
Donn Marshall returned to the Pentagon on Sunday, 10 years to the day after he was forced to walk away from the building without his wife, Shelley.
 
NEW YORK -- Fatherless children, parents who outlived their youngest and other tearful family members on Sunday recited the names of the nearly 3,000 Sept. 11 dead in a solemn but inspiring display marking the 10th anniversary of the nation's deadliest terrorist attacks.
By: Lisa Gartner | 09/11/11 8:05 PM
SHANKSVILLE, PA. -- Bells rang out over a field of yellow and white wildflowers as, one by one, or in groups, they crossed the platform.  Family and friends of the victims of United Airlines Flight 93 read the names of their loved ones to thousands of visitors and fellow Americans on the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.

A decade later, America remains the exceptional nation

Examiner Editorial 09/10/11 8:05 PM
It is impossible for any American of a certain age to think of Sept. 11, 2001, without recalling what they were doing and when they realized that the first airliner crashing into the World Trade Center was not a wayward Cessna. Only later did we learn it was the opening move in the worst terrorist attack ever against the United States. Similarly, for the families and friends of those who died in the attack or in trying to rescue those trapped in its flames, memories of that day a decade later are mostly of the last precious moments spent with a lost loved one. Read More

D.C. quick to respond to security threats on 9/11 anniversary

By: Liz Essley 09/11/11 8:05 PM
Local security officials remained on high alert Sunday during the 10th anniversary of 9/11, with all 3,800 D.C. police on the streets for the weekend and police in surrounding counties patrolling Metro stops and ceremonies. Read More

Examiner cartoonist Nate Beeler's 9/11 cartoon: A Decade Later
Here is a collection of some of the most interesting tributes, articles, photos and videos surrounding the 10th anniversary of the terror attacks of 9/11.
 

*****

Monday, September 05, 2011

Examiner Politics Labor Day EXTRA: Byron York - Obama: I 'pulled our country back from the brink' and more Weekend breaking news & commentary

   Labor Day EXTRA: Hoffa: Obama should attack 'unpatriotic' Apple

Washington Examiner Daily Political Digest
Examiner Politics Labor Day EXTRA: Weekend breaking news & comment fromThe Washington Examiner's Campaign 2012 coverage team


In his Labor Day message to the nation, President Obama credits himself and his administration with having "pulled our country back from the brink" of economic disaster.

Joel Gehrke - Union: Obama should attack 'unpatriotic' Apple
international Brotherhood of Teamsters Union President Jim Hoffa told Candy Crowley on "State of the Union" that President Obama should attack American companies in his upcoming speech for being "unpatriotic" by investing on other countries.

Byron York - At last minute, Perry pulls out of DeMint forum
Texas Gov. Rick Perry surprised the organizers of today's Palmetto Freedom Forum, put together by Sen. Jim DeMint, who is widely acknowledged as a kingmaker in the Republican race in South Carolina, by withdrawing from the event just hours before it is scheduled to begin. According to several sources familiar with events, the chairman of Perry's campaign in South Carolina, former Republican party chief Katon Dawson, called organizers this morning to say that Perry needs to return to Texas to deal with quickly-spreading wildfires.

Examiner Editorial Obama's un-Labor Day

Friday's job numbers sounded a sharp and discordant note for Americans going into this Labor Day weekend. Amid record government spending, and two years after the economy stopped shrinking in the Great Recession, the United States added zero net jobs for the month of August. The modest job gains for June and July were also revised downward for a total loss of 58,000. Read More

Thirty-two months after President Obama promised his $820 billion economic stimulus would keep unemployment from rising above 8%, the Labor Department announced today that the United States economy added zero jobs in August as the unemployment rate held steady at 9.1%.

Joel Gehrke - Spygate? In Queens?
New Yorkers take note: spying on the opposition, famous as a Boston vice, has moved south for the summer, allegedly. Not to the Meadowlands, but to Brooklyn and Queens, where, according to the Republican Bob Turner, the Democrat nominee for the U.S. House David Weprin has repeatedly tried to place a mole in his Republican rival's campaign.

Obama to AFL-CIO: GOP must back US first, create jobs
DETROIT (AP) — President Barack Obama said Monday that congressional Republicans must put their country ahead of their party and vote to create new jobs as he used a boisterous Labor Day rally to aim a partisan barb at the GOP.
 

 
 The Washington Examiner | 1015 15th St. NW | Suite 500 | Washington, DC | DC | 20005 

*****

Sunday, August 07, 2011

Examiner Politics Sunday - Barone on the honor of "earned success," reports from Campaign trail 2012

Washington Examiner Political Digest

Examiner Politics Sunday: Weekend breaking news & comment from The Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential bloggers
Michael Barone - Americans want the honor of 'earned success'
Why aren't voters moving to the left, toward parties favoring bigger government, during what increasingly looks like an economic depression? That's a question I've asked, and one that was
addressed with characteristic thoughtfulness by Democratic pollster Stanley Greenberg in the New York Times last week. Read More
Follow on Twitter:@byronyork
In the wake of Standard & Poor's decision to downgrade the United States government's credit rating from AAA to AA+, a number of commentators on the left are directing most of the blame not at high levels of government spending, and not even at tax rates they would like to increase, but at the ratings agency itself.  Since S&P made enormous mistakes in rating securities backed by subprime mortgages prior to the economic meltdown, they argue, the ratings agency has no right to judge the U.S. government today. 
Examiner writers report from the 2012 Campaign trail: 

Philip Klein in Texas for Gov. Rick Perry's prayer rally in Houston:

Perry leads 30,000 in prayer at rally
HOUSTON -- Texas Gov. Rick Perry led about 30,000 people in prayer here on Saturday, triggering a debate over how his leading role in a religious event would affect his expected bid for the Republican presidential nomination. After months of controversy over his promotion of the event, dubbed "The Response: A call to prayer for a nation in crisis," Perry took the stage only briefly, reading from scripture and steering clear of politics in his remarks.Read More

HOUSTON--Despite the media assumption that Texas Gov. Rick Perry is certain to run for president, his top aides insist that no decision has yet been made, and there’s no hard deadline other than a general desire to resolve the question by the end of the summer.   
HOUSTON -- A day-long prayer event organized by Texas Gov. Rick Perry will be simulcast by 1,100 churches across the country, according to event organizers, including several in the key primary states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.
HOUSTON -- Texas Gov. Rick Perry, the potential Republican presidential candidate, will lead thousands in a short scripture reading here this morning, as part of the mega prayer event he helped organize.
And Haley Peterson in Iowa:

Pawlenty fights for recognition in Iowa

GRINNELL, Iowa - Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty was still introducing himself and trying to win over voters one handshake at a time as he readies himself for a debate and straw poll that could make or break his nascent campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. Read More

Pawlenty on Obama: 'You could stick a fork in him'

          GRINNELL, Iowa -- Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty says Obama is "done."

More from The Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential bloggers

Rick Perry's bad grades leak from Texas A&M
Follow on Twitter:@charliespiering
The Huffington Post just got a copy of Texas Governor Rick Perry's grades at Texas A&M from a source that suggests Perry was "not the brightest guy around."

Follow on Twitter:@conncarroll
“I believe that this is without question the Tea Party downgrade,” Sen John Kerry, D-Mass., told David Gregory this morning on Meet the Press. “This is the Tea Party downgrade because a minority of people in the House of Representatives countered even the will of many Republicans in the United States Senate who were prepared to do a bigger deal to do $4.7 trillion, $4 trillion, [that had] a mix of reductions and reforms in Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, but also recognize that we needed to do some revenue,” Kerry finished.

byPhilip Klein
Standard and Poor’s explanation for why it downgraded U.S. debt is written in such a way that it can be seized upon by all ideological stripes. The statement cites the unwillingness of Republicans to raise taxes and of Democrats to agree to entitlement cuts. And the rating agency’s discourse about the political dysfunction will provide column fodder for Washington pundits who long for the days when both parties would work together to reach compromises. But make no mistake, when all the dust settles, it will be difficult for President Obama to escape blame for this.

Follow on Twitter:@jsgehrkejr
On the day that Gov. Rick Perry is holding a National Day of Prayer, Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., announced that over one hundred pastors and church leaders have endorsed Bachmann, as Republican candidates jockey for support before the Ames straw poll.

Follow on Twitter:@michaelbarone
Do great minds move in the same direction? Evidence in favor of this proposition comes from the fact that bothCharles Krauthammer and Stephen Moore have columns in today’s papers advocating a 1986-style rate-cutting, preference-eliminating tax reform law. Many have argued that this would be precluded by the debt limit agreement, but they beg to differ.

Follow on Twitter:@freddoso
Throughout the debate over the debt ceiling, the media did all of us a great disservice. They reported as though the Republicans were threatening to ruin America's credit unless they got their way.

*****

Friday, July 08, 2011

Washington Examiner Political Digest: Byron York - Wisconsin schools buck union to cut health costs

Byron York - Wisconsin schools buck union to cut health costs

The Hartland-Lakeside School District, about 30 miles west of Milwaukee in tiny Hartland, Wis., had a problem in its collective bargaining contract with the local teachers union. The contract required the school district to purchase health insurance from a company called WEA Trust. The creation of Wisconsin's largest teachers union -- "WEA" stands for Wisconsin Education Association -- WEA Trust made money when union officials used collective bargaining agreements to steer profitable business its way. Read More

Susan Ferrechio - Obama, GOP inching toward debt deal

President Obama on Thursday told congressional leaders in a closed-door meeting that he wants to reduce the federal deficit by $4 trillion as the two sides inched closer to a deal that could allow the government to avoid defaulting on its debt. Congressional aides said Obama laid out the three deficit reduction proposals during the meeting, but favored the most sweeping plan, which would require budget-saving changes to Social Security and Medicare and include tax increases. Read More

Hayley Peterson - Obama expands mortgage aid for unemployed

The Obama administration on Thursday started a new initiative that would require mortgage lenders to give some unemployed homeowners who have fallen behind in their payments up to a year before the banks can foreclose on their homes. Read More

Timothy Carney - A call to end a corporate welfare agency

If you believe the likes of liberal columnists Thomas Frank, Frank Rich, and Jane Mayer, the Cato Institute is part of a "pro-corporate movement." I would like Frank, Rich, and Mayer, then to explain this Cato Institute paper calling for the abolition of the most blatant bit of corporate welfare in our government -- the Export-Import Ba Read More

David Fredosso - Dozens of 'Fast & Furious' guns were confiscated from illegal aliens in Phoenix

In case you weren't aware, Phoenix's ABC 15 News recently reported that guns from the ATF's disastrous "Operation Fast and Furious" are being used in local crimes. This week, ABC 15 compared the serial numbers of dozens of Fast and Furious" guns to those seized from a group of illegal aliens in an April drug bust. Read More

Phillip Klein - GOP discussing blocking Obama from making future NLRB recess appointments

House Republicans have been in talks with their counterparts in the Senate about blocking President Obama from filling two upcoming vacancies to the National Labor Relations Board through recess appointments, which would leave the body deadlocked with just two members, Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., said on Thursday. Read More

Barbara Hollingsworth - Virginia: Tea Party Senate candidate calls for abolition of airports authority

On the same day a federal judge was dismissing a lawsuit against the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, a candidate for U.S. Senate in Virginia was calling for MWAA's abolishment. U.S. District Court Judge Anthony Trenga ruled in Alexandria that MWAA has the right to levy tolls without the consent of the Virginia General Assembly under the Constitution's interstate compact provisions.  Read More

Conn Carroll - Charticle: Defense spending vs entitlement spending

A constant claim among liberals is that government spends more on defense than anything else in the federal budget. The reality is that even after paying for the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya, Washington spends twice as much on entitlement programs than on defense. Read More

Francesca Chambers - It's not that Democrats don't "own" the economy, it's that they just don't care

Ahead of what of today’s report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on the number of jobs created in June, the WH is downplaying the importance of the unemployment rate to Obama’s reelection. At a Bloomberg breakfast yesterday, Obama’s 2008 campaign manager said this: Read More

Barbara Hollingsworth - Documents confirm Obama administration’s ‘catch and release’ immigration policy

Well, what do you know. Obama administration officials at the Department of Homeland Security deliberately misled Congress when they denied using “selective enforcement” to deport convicted criminals in the U.S. illegally. Read More

Gene Healy - Uncle Sam, robot

Here's a new wrinkle in the debt-limit debate: it turns out that the feds may not be able to turn off the spigot even if the deadline passes and they're legally required to. Reuters reports that: Read More


*****

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Examiner Politics Timonthy P. Carney: Time for U.S. manufacturers to declare independence -- from government

Examiner Politics Timonthy P. Carney: Time for U.S. manufacturers to declare independence -- from government

Timothy P. Carney - Time for U.S. manufacturers to declare independence -- from government
Big industrial lobbies continue to rail against overregulation and overtaxation, but they don't hesitate to come to Capitol Hill with open palms. In June, the manufacturing lobby pushed hard in both chambers of Congress for the preservation and expansion of a federal corporate welfare agency - the Export-Import Bank of the United States. The lobbyists don't have to apply too much pressure, though, because both parties love the subsidies. Read More


Timothy P. Carney - For Americans, 'Independence' and 'Liberty' are inseparable
A parting thought for the July 4 weekend: As a kid, I needed my brothers and parents to explain to me the difference between "Independence" and "Liberty." I think this says something about America. Today is Canada Day. It used to be called "Dominion Day." It's the day the Crown united Canada's providences into one country. This is a common theme in the West: a country's national day is often the day disparate states became one. In Germany it's unification day. In Belgium, it's the crowning of the first Belgian King. Read More 


Michael Barone - Obama's corporate jet fixation
I note that President Obama took on corporate jets five or six times in his press conference. Evidently he wants voters to think that changes in the depreciation schedule for corporate jet aircraft will go a long ways toward cutting the federal budget deficit. I doubt that voters are so naive. Read More

David Freddoso - If you're unemployed...
Consider moving to North Dakota, where the cost of living is low, the jobs are plentiful, and entry-level workers at McDonalds can make $15 per hour. In a free market, we'd see a lot more movement in the direction of a state with 0.7 unemployed workers for every job opening. Unfortunately, we are paying people to stay in places where there is no work. Read More

Philip Klein - Obama gets failing grade on "Sunlight Before Signing" pledge
As part of his drive to lead the most transparent administration in history, President Obama once made a “Sunlight Before Signing” promise to post bills online for five days before signing them into law. Yet Jim Harper of the Cato Institute observes that his bad record on this promise has gotten even worse in the current Congress. Read More

Conn Carroll - Schumer confirms White House considering ignoring debt limit
This morning we speculated that Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner was seriously considering just ignoring the statutory debt limit by claiming it was superseded by section Four of the 14th amendment. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., confirmed that that course of action has been considered by the White House. Read More

Phil Klein - Hawkishness and neoconservatism are not the same thing
Andrew McCarthy has a strong post over at National Review's Corner responding to the absurd attempt by neoconservatives to portray those who oppose intervention in Libya as isolationists. Read More

*****