Should it be illegal – a crime in and of itself – to dislike cops?
The Fraternal Order of Police – the union for cops – thinks it ought to be.
The best predictor of future voting patterns is past voting patterns, to use a twist on a famous maxim.
This is probably even truer of groups than individuals, and, despite some wishful thinking to the contrary, this election cycle was no exception.
It’s not possible to do much about income taxes, or the taxes we’re forced to pay on “our” property in order to maintain the fiction we – rather than the government – “own” it.
On June 12, 1987, the President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, speaking in Berlin, said, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” It fell in 1989 and, in 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed. From the end of World War Two in 1945, the United States had stood strong against the Communist empire’s effort to extend its power and influence around the world.
On Monday evening I tuned to ABC Radio’s “Savage Nation” starring Michael Savage. I rarely listen to him, but I was looking for some diversion.
Writing for Front Page Magazine, Arnold Ahlert castigates his fellow conservatives for acting badly.
“Diversity” is not just a good in the academic world. It is the supreme good, the one good before which all other considerations must yield.
On a stretch of road near Austin, Texas there is an actual speed limit. Or at least, close to one.
You can drive up to 85 MPH on Texas Highway 130 – and not worry about receiving a “reckless driving” ticket. Or even a “speeding” ticket.
“I'm guessing that as soon as I walk into the voting booth, I'll probably make up my mind then.” So said undecided voter Kerry Ladka, appearing on Greta Van Susteren’s program after the second presidential debate.