How did the U.S. economy perform under George Washington? And how did he bring regional stability to troubled areas of the world?
In 1984, when Walter Mondale chose Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate, the media went wild over this “historic” step forward for women. Some milestone. What was all the excitement about? Women had already been senators, cabinet members, and prime ministers for a long time.
Dozens of people have announced their candidacies for the White House in 2008, and if I had to bet at this point, I would put my money on the old woman. Hillary may be awful, but at least she is predictable.
Before you pull that lever for Barack Obama, latest darling of the liberal media, ask yourself a simple question: At this point in our history,
Now that Barack Obama has all but thrown his halo into the ring, we could use a little skepticism. He makes an awfully good first impression, like a champion high-school orator, but what has he done to excite such messianic www.shotsfired.us). Sam was severely allergic to phony conservatives, especially the neoconservatives, which made him uneasy...
Read MoreAs I watched President Bush Tuesday night, for the first time I felt pity for him, in the same way you can’t help feeling sorry for any man at the end of his rope, even if he has brought it on himself.
Last week history was made. A woman, Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, was chosen speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, and anyone within hearing distance of a television set heard the word historic hundreds of times. To listen to the media hype, you’d have thought it was the most exciting event since Lindbergh’s solo flight...
Read MoreWhat a contrast between the quiet passing of a former president here and the embittered execution of one in Iraq. The hanging of Saddam Hussein, hardly undeserved, degenerated into something like a sectarian lynching, aggravating anger at the invaders rather than giving the satisfaction of condign justice.
They’re still making James Bond and Rocky movies, and the latest ones are getting surprisingly good reviews. A guy named Daniel Craig has now taken the role of Bond, which I guess means that George Lazenby has lost his box-office magic, but
Some people would — correction: do — accuse me of having a low taste in films. For example, I got an outraged reaction from the egghead community when I suggested that some of Ingmar Bergman’s earlier films might be much improved if they were colorized. Blasphemy!
My friend Robert Maday died last week in Michigan. Cancer finally got him, but he didn’t suffer too much. We’d been pals for 46 years. We were classmates by my good luck, because though
I’ve made a career of writing about politics, but I’ve never had political ambitions myself. It just never crossed my mind to go into politics (unless you count the short time that I was a candidate for vice president). Just the opposite. I wanted politics to leave my family and me alone.
If Rip Van Winkle were to awaken today, one would hardly know where to start. Explaining rap music and “ultimate fighting” would be the easy part. This week’s big news
Kwanzaa is imminent, but I’m planning to observe the holidays in a more traditional manner, curling up with The Snoop Dogg Christmas Album. Mutatis mutandis, Snoop Dogg is this generation’s Nat “King” Cole, and I look forward to his interpretation of that old chestnut “The Christmas Song.” Yes, there are obvious superficial
Some readers accuse me of having nothing good to say about President Bush, but I can hardly help that. He swore an oath to uphold the Constitution, and even his defenders don’t seriously say he has done so.
The columnist George Will, who would probably stand out for prissy pomposity at a nudist colony, with or without his bow tie, is not, shall we say, crippled by a sense of irony about himself. He has accused Virginia’s senator-elect, Jim Webb, of being “a pompous poseur and an abuser of the English language,”
I just heard on the radio that the publication of O.J. Simpson’s new book has been canceled. Literature’s loss, I guess. This particular Literary Event of the Season was aborted because of
Those who like to portray President Bush as a nincompoop always fasten on his alleged mispronunciation of nuclear. It apparently never occurs
Though I try to keep abreast of new ideas, the conclusions of modern science are often, as they say, “counterintuitive” — that is, contrary to what common sense might lead you to expect. In the realm of physics, this is true of the theory of relativity, quantum mechanics,
Hallelujah! Yippee! Hooray! Gloria in excelsis! Goody- goody! O frabjous day! Hot diggety dog! Heh-heh-heh.
As I write, tomorrow is election day and though I’m not foolish enough to vote, I can’t help sharing the excitement. If you haven’t been listening to Rush Limbaugh, you have no excuse for acting surprised when the Republicans win by a landslide, contrary to what the drive-by media have been telling you.
After a lapse of several years, I have cable television again. I got it just in time to watch the Detroit Tigers play like a bunch of Republicans in the World Series, their pitchers firing fastballs at more than 100 miles an hour at hitters but hopelessly inept at tossing balls to first
Nowadays, in startling contrast to my youth, it’s very fashionable to claim to be a conservative. Back in the Sixties, conservatism was still rather a fugitive thing, and the fashion was liberalism or even radicalism. By the late Eighties, liberal had become “the L-word,” and liberals were looking for a less alarming euphemism, such as...
Read MoreIn 1932, when most Americans feared the wolf at the door, the Democrats swept to a tremendous electoral victory, capturing the presidency and both houses of Congress. It was more than a momentary triumph; the once-mighty Republicans were nearly wiped out
The great sociologist Robert Nisbet once wrote that if America’s Founding Fathers could come back, the feature of today’s America that would most astound and appall them would be the vast scale of its military system and