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On the State of Our Union: |
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"It is terribly appropriate that President Obama gave his halting and graceless State of the Union address on Mardi Gras: He spent the evening shouting 'Laissez les bons temps rouler!' at every liberal constituency in sight, promising new spending for public-sector unions ('Fix-It-First'), demanding (yet again) that banks renegotiate mortgages on politically driven terms, offering handouts to Al Gore–style enviropreneurs (reviving cap-and-trade, offering yet more subsidies to politically connected energy firms), and promising a $9-an-hour minimum wage. ...
"In reality, the state of our union is this: The United States is today $6 trillion deeper in debt than it was before Barack Obama was first sworn in as president. That represents an increase of 57 percent in just four years. Put another way: Out of every dollar the country owes in government debt, 36 cents was acquired under the Obama administration.
"The state of our union is this: Today there are more than 4 million fewer Americans working than there were when Barack Obama was first sworn in as president — not including those who have retired. The work-force-participation rate is at a historic low. Never before have so many Americans simply abandoned the hope of a job." |
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— The Editors, National Review Online
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— The Editors, National Review Online
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Posted February 13, 2013 • 08:06 AM
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On the Administration's Handling of the 9/11/12 Benghazi Attack: |
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"The Obama White House is to be congratulated. It has executed one of the most effective stonewalls in recent memory over the Benghazi attack last Sept. 11 that killed our ambassador to Libya and three others. Its handling of the aftermath of the debacle is a model example of the power of obfuscation and delay.
"Future high-ranking officials please take note: This is how it is done. ...
"Benghazi was a fiasco. The handling of its aftermath by President Obama and his team was brilliant. I guess that’s why they call him the commander in chief." |
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— Rich Lowry, National Review Editor
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— Rich Lowry, National Review Editor
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Posted February 12, 2013 • 07:54 AM
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On the U.S. Economy and President Obama's State of the Union Speech: |
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"White House spinners are working furiously in the final 72 hours before President Obama’s State of the Union speech. Their job: convince the recession-scarred American public that economic recovery is Obama’s top priority — after everything he has said and done to suggest otherwise. ...
"Since his inauguration, Obama has traveled outside Washington to make high-profile speeches, with an address on immigration reform in Las Vegas and on gun control in Minneapolis. That big speech on the economy, by far the public’s number one concern? It hasn’t happened. ...
"[...] Despite the nation’s deep and prolonged suffering, the president has simply never put the economy at the top of his agenda. After all he has said and done, will a single speech convince the public the he does now?" |
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— Byron York, The Washington Examiner
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— Byron York, The Washington Examiner
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Posted February 11, 2013 • 08:24 AM
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On Calling the President's Sequestration Bluff: |
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"For the first time since Election Day, President Obama is on the defensive. That’s because on March 1, automatic spending cuts ('sequestration') go into effect — $1.2 trillion over 10 years, half from domestic (discretionary) programs, half from defense. ...
"So Tuesday, Obama urgently called on Congress to head off the sequester with a short-term fix. But instead of offering an alternative $1.2 trillion in cuts, Obama demanded a 'balanced approach,' coupling any cuts with new tax increases.
"What should the Republicans do? Nothing." |
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— Charles Krauthammer, Syndicated Columnist
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— Charles Krauthammer, Syndicated Columnist
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Posted February 08, 2013 • 07:51 AM
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On Incoherent Immigration Reform: |
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"Nothing about illegal immigration quite adds up. ...
"Democratic politicos don't want closed borders, only to see the melting pot someday turn their loyal supporters into independent voters. And panicky Republicans simply have no idea what they want -- other than to cater to as many constituencies as they can.
"The present system of immigration is far too often illegal and immoral. But it is also weirdly rational in the way that it serves so well so many lobbies -- and so poorly the shared public interest at large." |
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— Victor Davis Hanson, Hoover Institution Senior Fellow and Nationally Syndicated Columnist
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— Victor Davis Hanson, Hoover Institution Senior Fellow and Nationally Syndicated Columnist
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Posted February 07, 2013 • 08:02 AM
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On Federally-Funded Infrastructure Spending: |
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"The federal government’s budget deficits are pushing the nation toward a fiscal meltdown, yet our leaders can’t seem to curb their zeal for infrastructure spending. President Obama has been pushing a $50 billion package for infrastructure and will likely include a similar plan in his upcoming budget. For their part, most Republicans eagerly pursue all the spending they can get for road, rail, airport, and dam projects in their districts.
"The enthusiasm for infrastructure spending is emblematic of broader problems in the bloated federal budget. Federal politicians love to intervene in activities that should be left to state governments and the private sector. And they claim that new and expanded programs will produce great results even after decades of waste on existing policies. ...
"There are few, if any, advantages to funding infrastructure at the federal level, and long experience shows that there are many disadvantages. Rather than increasing federal infrastructure spending and adding to the federal deficit, policymakers should sort through current programs and start handing back responsibilities to the states and the private sector." |
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— Chris Edwards, The Cato Institute
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— Chris Edwards, The Cato Institute
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Posted February 06, 2013 • 08:55 AM
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On Federal Community Mental Health Centers and America's Mentally Ill: |
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"On Feb. 5, 1963, 50 years ago this week, President John F. Kennedy addressed Congress on 'Mental Illness and Mental Retardation.' He proposed a new program under which the federal government would fund community mental-health centers, or CMHCs, to take the place of state mental hospitals. As Kennedy envisioned it, 'reliance on the cold mercy of custodial isolations will be supplanted by the open warmth of community concern and capability.' ...
"Fifty years later, we can see the results of 'the open warmth of community concern and capability.' Approximately half of the mentally ill individuals discharged from state mental hospitals, many of whom had family support, sought outpatient treatment and have done well. The other half, many of whom lack family support and suffer from the most severe illnesses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, have done poorly.
"According to multiple studies summarized by the Treatment Advocacy Center, these untreated mentally ill are responsible for 10% of all homicides (and a higher percentage of the mass killings), constitute 20% of jail and prison inmates and at least 30% of the homeless. Severely mentally ill individuals now inundate hospital emergency rooms and have colonized libraries, parks, train stations and other public spaces. The quality of the lives of these individuals mocks the lofty intentions of the founders of the CMHC program." |
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— Edwin Fuller Torrey, M.D., Psychiatrist, Schizophrenia Researcher and Treatment Advocacy Center Founder
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— Edwin Fuller Torrey, M.D., Psychiatrist, Schizophrenia Researcher and Treatment Advocacy Center Founder
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Posted February 05, 2013 • 08:04 AM
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On President Obama's Priorities and the U..S. Economy: |
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"It must be terribly inconvenient for the Obama White House to be reminded every quarter and every month that the $800 billion stimulus — and subsequent mini-stimuli — failed to ignite the boom Obama economists repeatedly predicted through the first term. The president has so many higher priorities, after all: immigration reform, gun control, climate change, income inequality. Stuff with which to build a legacy.
"Faster growth and faster job creation apparently don’t make the cut. A president deeply concerned about growth would perhaps have followed a few more of the recommendations of his own Jobs and Competitiveness Council before letting it expire, as Obama did last week. Sure, Obama acted on agenda items that comfortably synced with his ideology, like retrofitting government buildings for energy efficiency. But he ignored commonsense ideas that didn’t mesh, such as expanding domestic oil and gas drilling and revamping the corporate tax code. More high-skill immigration? Sorry, it will have to wait for comprehensive immigration reform." |
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— James Pethokoukis, CNBC Money & Politics Columnist and American Enterprise Institute Blogger
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— James Pethokoukis, CNBC Money & Politics Columnist and American Enterprise Institute Blogger
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Posted February 04, 2013 • 07:53 AM
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On the Mainstream Media's Public Relations Efforts: |
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"Many have rightly condemned MSNBC's serpentine editing of a video to make it appear that certain gun rights activists heckled the father of a 6-year-old victim of the Sandy Hook shooting massacre, but let's not pretend this was a one-off event.
"The liberal media long ago forfeited their respected role as watchdog over the government and have voluntarily descended to the status of a public relations arm of the Democratic Party and various liberal causes.
"It doesn't do it justice to call them cheerleaders, for they are active participants, every bit as much involved in bringing about the events as the party with which they collude." |
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— David Limbaugh, Author and Syndicated Columnist
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— David Limbaugh, Author and Syndicated Columnist
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Posted February 01, 2013 • 07:29 AM
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On Senator Marco Rubio's Immigration Bill: |
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"Rubio's bill is nothing but amnesty. It isn't even 'amnesty thinly disguised as border enforcement.' This is a wolf in wolf's clothing. ...
"Step One of Marco Rubio's plan is: Grant illegal aliens the right to live and work in America legally. (Rubio's first move in poker: Fold.)
"People who have broken our laws will thus leap ahead of millions of foreigners dying to immigrate here, but -- unwilling to enter illegally -- waiting patiently in their own countries.
"The only thing the newly legalized illegal immigrants won't get immediately is citizenship. Rubio claims that under his plan, they won't be able to vote or go on welfare. But in practice, they'll have to wait only until the ACLU finds a judge to say otherwise." |
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— Ann Coulter, Syndicated Columnist
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— Ann Coulter, Syndicated Columnist
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Posted January 31, 2013 • 08:16 AM
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