Friday, September 3, 2010

It Sells Itself

July 26, 2010 by Anthony Bialy  
Filed under Commentary

Some claims are indisputable.  For example, disobedient monkeys are the most hilarious animals of all, beer with lime flavoring is for either sorority girls or commies, and all hand sports are superior to soccer.
Most of all, it’s eternally infinitely better to do and not say than to say and not do.  Running off one’s mouth [...]

Nobody’s Business

May 3, 2010 by Anthony Bialy  
Filed under Commentary

I don’t like Walmart.  I’m a heartless reactionary whose hobbies include clinging to guns and Bibles, which means I’m supposed to treat the expansive suburban supercenter as a shrine.  But I always find the commercial experience to be gloomy, as the oppressive fluorescent blandness fails to compensate for the opportunity to buy a gross of [...]

What a difference a Marxist makes.

July 17, 2009 by Dawn  
Filed under Featured Writers, Features

By Russ Cote

The hypocrisy isn’t new. The equation of terrorism to talk radio isn’t new. What seems new is an increasingly disturbing sense of entitlement amongst, mostly, Democratic lawmakers. The genesis of this sense of entitlement is beyond the scope of this article, but it seems to me to be a combination of the general leftward shift in political class thinking toward soft tyranny and the election of Barack Obama. I’m not saying Obama is to blame-lord knows Harry Reid, . .

Whatever you do SGP, don’t let cap and trade pass the Senate

July 13, 2009 by Lisa Farrar Wellman  
Filed under Features

With so many socialistic agenda items to fight, you may be tempted to back off on cap and trade. Don’t give into that temptation, ladies. Cap and trade scares the pants off of me and it should scare you, too. The House passed the bill (a pox on those traitorous eight Republicans!) 219-212. This has gone too far.

The Community Organizer in Chief and fellow arrogant world leaders promised at the G8 Summit to keep temperatures from rising more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit above average levels of more than a century ago. They also agreed to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050. This would be knee-slapping humor except that they’re serious about it. . .

It is Personal

June 26, 2009 by Dawn  
Filed under Featured Writers

By Lenny Moynihan

The Republican party could take a lesson from the Democrats. This week we all found out that Governor Mark Sanford was having an affair. Today I read he is considering resigning. The Democrats have been caught in as many compromising positions as any Republican and many are still working in politics. The most famous names that comes to mind are Kennedy and of course Clinton. I remember Clinton’s finger wagging in our faces through the TV as he told us, he did not have sex with that girl, or did he call her woman? In any case, he remained President and Kennedy remains a Senator.

Corruption Out In The Open

June 11, 2009 by Bridget Blanton  
Filed under Features

Image by Getty Images via Daylife

By Bridget Geegan Blanton
I actually remember the Sixties, but then I was still a kid in ’68 when the ‘Summer of Love’ was happening. Life for an 8-year-old was pretty far removed from the anti-war/hippy culture. We were aware of pop culture because Madison Avenue quickly capitalized on it. [...]

Open Letter To Congress

March 27, 2009 by Tabitha Hale  
Filed under Commentary

Dear Congress,
Stop. Right now.
Stop forcing legislation through faster than you can read it. No one actually thinks you read the stimulus. And we’re pretty hacked off about it, too.
Stop spending $1 billion a day. It’s not your money, and you’ve made it pretty apparent that you’re not even sure where it’s being spent. See: AIG [...]