November 13, 2003
Where Howard Dean meets "High Fidelity"

This is funny, comparing presidential hopeful Howard Dean to the record store clerks in "High Fidelity." The man setting the tone of the campaign so far is Howard Dean, who is reported to be quite popular with Generation X and Y voters. When asked "What is your favorite song?" at a Sept. 9 debate, he […]

Read More
November 13, 2003
From the "Damned if you do...

...damned if you don't" news category, it appears that officials in Germany are in a quandary. A bird that was near extinction just two decades ago is doing fine now, thank you, with more than 6,000 cormorants in the wild. The problem? Well, the cormorants are eating endangered fish. "About 90 percent of river fish […]

Read More
November 13, 2003
More on Walter Duranty's Pulitzer

For some unexplainable reason, The New York Times waited over two weeks to publish this letter from historian Mark Von Hagen, whom the Times hired to look into Duranty's work. To the Editor: Regarding Arthur Sulzberger Jr.'s suggestion to the Pulitzer Prize Board that revoking Walter Duranty's 1932 prize recalled the "Stalinist practice to airbrush […]

Read More
November 13, 2003
Great Moments in the Senate

So, to set this up. Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) is bloviating, and he uses as an example of the unfairness of the GOP to former President Clinton's judicial nominee Elena Kagan (sp?). According to Reed, Kagan was nominated for a federal judgeship, but never got a hearing. She is now dean of the Harvard Law […]

Read More
November 12, 2003
30-hour ordeal begins

I was going to begin watching the debate on judges on CSPAN-2, but Sen. Barbara Boxer was speaking. I'm sorry, but I can't afford her -- after about a minute of watching her spout off, I'd smash the TV with a baseball bat. I'll tune in later.

Read More
November 12, 2003
Yakety yak

Tonight's the all-night talkathon in the Senate about the Democrats' illegal filibusters of Bush judicial nominees. I'll likely watch some of it when I get home from work, but the exercise is really meaningless. The show may get a little additional press coverage of the Democrats' illegal tactics, but it is not a serious effort […]

Read More
November 12, 2003
Two years later

Today marks two years since I started this blog. I had wanted to create a Web site for some time, but the prospect of spending more time on HTML coding than real writing prevented that. I eventually came across Blogger one day and the rest, as they say, is history. When this first began, about […]

Read More
November 11, 2003
Exposing the lie

The Democrats' primary accusation against Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryor's nomination to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals has been that he would be unable to fairly apply the law because of his "deeply held (religious) beliefs." Pryor, a devout Catholic, has been assailed by liberal interest groups for his opposition to abortion, among many […]

Read More
November 11, 2003
This is cheating

Yes, with the economy continuing to soar, Democrats are resorting to ever-more desperate tactics to actually put a damper on the recovery and get those unemployment numbers up.

Read More
November 11, 2003
Mark Steyn on EUnuchs

Mark Steyn's latest column once again presents us with the question of why we should ever care what the impotent Europeans have to say. The EU has done a grand job of trumpeting its weakness as strength, but the fact remains that there's something hollow at the heart of European identity. You can't be a […]

Read More
[custom-twitter-feeds headertext="Hoystory On Twitter"]

Calendar

November 2003
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Archives

Categories

pencil linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram