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Nuclear Epidemic

The Mideast has long been "explosive," but more than a dozen countries there have now been emboldened to go nuclear. Further delays in stopping Iran's nuke program could turn it into an atomic Wild West.

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Barack Carter Obama

He views Iran's nuclear threat as "tiny." He'd meet with its leader, who is pledged to Israel's destruction. His adviser wants Israel to disarm. Clearly, Barack Obama is running for Jimmy Carter's second term.

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. . . He consistently demonstrates his lack of qualifications to be commander in chief based on experience, worldview and judgment.

His latest foray into dangerous naivete came while campaigning Sunday in Pendleton, Ore. He told the assembled multitude: "Iran? Cuba? Venezuela? — these countries are tiny compared to the Soviet Union. They don't pose a threat to us the way the Soviet Union posed a threat to us."

He went on to defend his policy of "aggressive personal diplomacy" and called for "tough, disciplined and direct diplomacy. That's what Kennedy did. That'd what Reagan did."

Well, not quite.

Obama said that Reagan's "direct negotiation" with Gorbachev "over time allowed the kind of opening that brought down the Berlin Wall." What brought down the Berlin Wall, and the Soviet Union, was Reagan's unrelenting resistance to and confrontation with the "evil empire" based on his strategy of "we win, they lose." That was how Reagan "negotiated" with Gorbachev.

Yes, Reagan talked with Gorbachev. But he resisted the Soviet advance from Nicaragua to Grenada to Afghanistan. He put Pershing missiles in Europe. He launched the Strategic Defense Initiative and said "nyet" when Gorbachev wanted us to deal it away. When Reagan said, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall," the end of the Cold War already was a fait accompli.

Obama responded during a campaign stop Monday in Billings, Mont.: "The Soviet Union had thousands of nuclear weapons, and Iran doesn't have one." And he'll probably believe that right up to the moment the phone rings at 3 a.m. and he hears: "Mr. President, Tel Aviv has been nuked."



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The Bubble Wife

Barack Obama puts the little lady off-limits, imposing a new double standard on presidential politics. At least Hillary didn't say, "Lay off my husband."

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Whatever else we've thought about Michelle Obama, we've never doubted that this outspoken Princeton- and Harvard-trained lawyer was capable of fighting her own battles. But now her husband says no. Pick on her and you're going to have to deal with him. As he told "Good Morning America" this week, "Lay off my wife."

How manly. How chivalrous. How hypocritical.

But now her husband has laid down a rule: Michelle can say whatever she wants and not be called on it. He specifically went after a group of Tennessee Republicans running TV ads that compared his wife's appearance of late-blooming patriotism with the views of some other Americans.

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Framers Left Little Open To Interpretation

In a recent On The Left article, columnist Ruth Marcus assails as "cartoonish" John McCain's criticism of overreaching federal judges...

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Most of the drafters of the Constitution and Bill of Rights were experienced legal practitioners. Even some of the non-attorneys — such as James Madison — had studied law extensively. Contrary to common myth, most of the clauses they wrote, including several sometimes misleadingly labeled "elastic" or "expansive," were composed with great precision.

To understand this, one first must learn something of the law of the time. Too many judges and law professors have jumped to conclusions about constitutional meaning without the necessary investigation.

A more egregious example involves the constitutional term "due process of law." The Supreme Court has interpreted this phrase in expansive ways that have led it to strike down scores of democratically enacted state and federal laws. The most notorious was Roe v. Wade, which invalidated centuries of abortion law.

Yet "due process of law" was not intended to be an expansive term at all. As originally understood, the phrase meant only that when government started a proceeding against a citizen, it had to proceed in accordance with pre-existing law, and (in some cases) by grand jury indictment.

Thus, decisions using the Constitution's Due Process Clauses to strike down substantive laws are indefensible. When McCain criticizes this sort of judicial decision making, he is again very much on target.


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Obama's Social Insecurity Plan

In trying to tie John McCain to the third rail of American politics by pandering to seniors, Barack Obama shows the only thing he's consistent on is his desire to raise our taxes.

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How does he demagogue the issue? Let us count the myths. Fact is, Social Security is all trust and no fund. There's no stash of your cash in an account with your name on it that nobody can touch. The money beneficiaries get comes from the paychecks of their children, grandchildren, friends and neighbors. But with private accounts there would be cash in an account.

As for raising the retirement age, it's an option that's been considered by politicians of both parties, even by Barack Obama. In a May 2007 interview with George Stephano-poulos on ABC's "This Week," Obama said he'd consider raising the retirement age himself. Obama also said he'd consider raising payroll taxes. Indeed he would.

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Stuff Muslims Don’t Like: #2 Due Process For Wives

Michelle Malkin  •  May 8, 2008 03:15 PM

Time for another installment of Stuff Muslims Don’t Like.

#2: Due process for wives.

In Malaysia, Islamic Sharia law allows men to divorce their wives with a triple talaq text message.

Coming to the US?

Well, here’s a small dose of sanity–surprising, I know–from Maryland’s Supreme Court, which refused to recognize Islamic divorce. Yes, you can resist sharia creep
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Kos Keeps It Up

Stay classy, Daily Kos
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Everything's Bigger In Texas

I just couldn’t pass up the chance to comment on this solar-power piece from the Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s enviro-blog, the fetchingly named Planet DFW: Giant 30 mile by 30 mile solar plants in west Texas could power the entire state, according to a new report from the Environment Texas conservation group. According . . . Go
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Random Thoughts

If Barack Obama had given a speech on bowling, it might well have been brilliant and inspiring. To talk is not to do. Scattershot Sowell

. . . Some people who think it is wrong to tell children to believe in Santa Claus nevertheless think it is all right to tell adults to believe that the government can give the whole population things that we cannot afford ourselves. Believing in Santa Claus is apparently bad for children but O.K. for adults.

“McCarthyism” is a term used to dismiss the threat of internal subversion and espionage. But whatever the sins of Senator Joe McCarthy, the efforts of others showed that Alger Hiss was not a figment of anyone’s imagination, nor was the espionage of the Rosenbergs that turned American atomic secrets over to Stalin, or the espionage networks to which Michael Straight, once editor of The New Republic, belatedly admitted being part of.


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Investigation

We’re under investigation — by the U.N. Theater of the Absurd
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Voter-ID Facts

Voter-ID facts, as opposed to paranoid fantasies conjured up by lawyers and editorial writers, don’t support naysaying claims. Disadvantaged Arguments

Unfortunately for the naysayers, the facts, as opposed to paranoid fantasies conjured up by lawyers and editorial writers, don’t support those claims. Both trial judges in the Indiana and Georgia cases rejected as incredible and utterly unreliable the claim that there were hundreds of thousands of voters without photo ID. In two years of litigation, lawyers were unable, as the Indiana judge noted, to introduce “evidence of a single, individual Indiana resident who will be unable to vote” as a result of the photo-ID law. In Georgia, the ACLU sent out a desperate e-mail asking their contacts to find an individual who could not vote because of the voter-ID requirement — but they could not find one. And none of the organizations like the NAACP that sued could produce a single member unable to vote. The Georgia court found that the failure to identify any such individuals was “particularly acute in light of Plaintiffs’ contention that a large number of Georgia voters lack acceptable Photo ID.”

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Kennedy Diagnosed With Brain Tumor

Michelle Malkin  •  May 20, 2008 02:12 PM

Put aside your political differences and join me in keeping Sen. Ted Kennedy and his family in your prayers as they grapple with the news of his malignant brain tumor diagnosis.

My feelings exactly.


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Tennessee GOP Sen. Corker Tells Tennessee GOP To Shut Up

Michelle Malkin  •  May 20, 2008 08:02 AM

You knew it was only a matter of time. A Republican in the US Senate has now stepped forward to condemn the Tennessee state Republican party for running an ad criticizing Michelle Obama’s lack-o’-pride comments, which she made twice on the campaign trail and then tried to explain away. Via The Caucus

“Negative personal campaigning?” What’s “personal?” Michelle Obama is out on the stump, speaking on behalf of her husband. The only thing “negative” about the Tennessee GOP’s ad came from Michelle Obama’s mouth.

Is it “negative personal campaigning” when candidate spouse Bill Clinton’s public campaign trail remarks are scrutinized, criticized, and analyzed?

Are we to shut up about him, too? Will the Republican civility-mongers not stop until the Right is completely disarmed?

The GOP establishment has been all atwitter of late over its demise and urging itself to “stand for something.” But when its state parties takes a stand–againstagainst the America-bashing of the Obamas–the party elders quiver like Jell-O on a roller coaster ride. the radical demagoguery of Jeremiah Wright or

GOP: The fecklessness we deserve.

The Examiner tells the presidential candidates and their wives to suck it up

We're Screwed '08 Bumper Sticker

 




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