Friday, October 28, 2011

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Flashpoints Around the World

FOX News National Security Analyst KT McFarland gave an engaging talk about several foreign policy “hot spots” around the world that most threaten the United States. Speaking to Conservative Women’s Network attendees this month, KT spoke extensively about what she believes are the three top issues in foreign policy today: the Arab Spring, Iran, and Israel.

Casualties of the 60's Feminist Revolution

Driven by a nearly pathological case of male envy, 60's radical feminists persuaded a generation of women to discard their femininity and become like men. Throw off sexual restraints! Forget marriage and family! Focus entirely on self-love and career building! How has it worked out a half-century later? Not so well. Recent articles tell of lonely, successful women and isolated, underachieving men—both products of the 60's sexual revolution, say the authors.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Turn this Ship Around

An overwhelming majority of Americans (77%) believe the country is on the wrong track. This short video shows why the majority is right:

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Tea and Pee Parties - what differences!

"The differences between the Tea and Pee parties (which is what some of its members are doing in public) are many, and large," writes Examiner columnist Noemie Emery.
The protests are against "greed," which is a sin, not a program, and therefore hard to pin down ... [it is] amorphous, and also bipartisan: It refers to CEO paychecks, but also to Massachusetts Democrat Sen. John Kerry's yacht, former North Carolina Democrat Sen. John Edwards' house, first lady Michelle Obama's vacations, and the salaries of film stars cheering the protesters.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Political Gridlock - a Blessing, not a Curse

Think the Bill of Rights serves as our greatest protector of liberty? Think again, says Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who explains in this short video why political gridlock is a genuine blessing of constitutional liberty:

Friday, October 7, 2011

Hayward: "Occupy Wall Street, in Pictures"

John Hayward at Human Events has a bit of fun with some of the Occupy Wall Street protestors' signs. Writes Hayward about this one, if by 'rich' you mean 'primitive, impoverished, and easily dominated', well, yeah.

GMU Law School & Nonie Darwish

The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) tried—and failed—to prevent author and Islamic law critic Nonie Darwish from speaking to George Mason University law school students this week.
In a stinging rebuke to CAIR, the George Mason University School of Law stood tall for freedom of speech and freedom of expression and allowed the lecture by Darwish to go ahead. The university took a very principled stand, firmly rejected CAIR and its arguments, and placed itself squarely on the side of civil liberties and the American way of life, despite the usual harassment, intimidation, and threats by CAIR and its fellow travelers.