March 30, 2005
It's the end of the world as we know it

And I feel fine. You'd think that after hundreds of years of predicting a doom which has never come, that these latter-day Malthusian adherents would be a little more reticent with their pronouncements of doom.

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March 30, 2005
Listen to the howls

Today's Wall Street Journal has an editorial that would cause Democrats to squeal like stuck pigs. For those of you who don't have a Journal subscription, the thrust of the piece is that Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia -- the crazy old uncle in the Senate -- pointed out that there is nothing in […]

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March 29, 2005
Retreat from partisanship

The Wall Street Journal has perhaps the nation's most conservative editorial page. Note that I use the term "conservative" and not "Republican." The Journal's editorial page is a principaled one, not a partisan one -- it often opposes actions by Republicans that betray conservative values, e.g. steel tariffs, overspending. The New York Times editiorial page, […]

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March 29, 2005
Krugman returns

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman is back from his week off. Did he use this time to formulate his much-anticipated plan to save Social Security? Well, the changed numbers in the banner atop this page should answer that question. No, instead Krugman returns with vitriol and decides to compare his caricature of the "religious […]

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March 28, 2005
Fund on "federal intervention"

John Fund has a piece in today's Wall Street Journal on the left's selective outrage at the idea of the federal branch of government involving itself in state family court matters. As I mentioned last week, the Clinton administration did something cloaked in the flimsiest color of law -- and the republic survived. Respect for […]

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March 27, 2005
Money for Marines

Harper's magazine has decided to contribute hundreds of thousands of dollars to several young Marines. Not really, but that's the likely fallout from the March cover. The St. Petersburg Times reports: Marine recruits so new that their hair hasn't been cut don't sound like the best models for a story about soldiers going AWOL - […]

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March 25, 2005
Maybe Bill Clinton was right

Overshadowed by the Eason Jordan slander of the American military at the Davos conference was statements made by former President Bill Clinton on Iran's "democracy." “Iran is the only country in the world that has now had six elections since the first election of President Khatami (in 1997). (It is) the only one with elections, […]

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March 24, 2005
Reversing course

Now that it looks like some reporters may face jail time at the hands of an overzealous prosecutor (originally egged on by various newspapers), journalists are now considering that a crime may never have occurred in the Joseph Wilson/Valerie Plame expose. The 40-page brief, filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of […]

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March 24, 2005
Howard Dean, theologian

Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean revisits one of his biggest foot-in-mouth moments and the irony passes him by. The party allowed its opponents too often to define debates and control issues, such as faith and family values, Dean said. ''We need to talk about values and not be afraid of them,'' he said, going on […]

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March 24, 2005
14-year-olds on the bench

After having had the opportunity to scan the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals decision in the Terri Schiavo case, and having read and listened to a variety of sources, I've come to the conclusion that the court is populated by a bunch of teenagers. Father: "Be home by 11." Son: "No problem, dad." Son arrives […]

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