- General David Petraeus: My philosophy on war (Damien McElroy, Telegraph)
- HIRAs Are The Future (Diana Furchtgott-Roth, NY Sun) They should be, anyway.
- NCLB gets a passing grade (USA TODAY)
- Study Says Student Reading and Math Scores Are Improving (Eddy Ramirez, US News)
- Obamaweek in review (Mark Hemingway, NRO)
- Can't-Do Government (Paul Light, WaPo) One hardly needs a Ph.D. in political science to comprehend that as government grows, so does
Month: June 2008
Metro Light Rail involved in crash with car (KHOU-11 News)
A Metro Light Rail train was involved in an accident with a car Wednesday morning.
The train was heading south on Main at Leland when a woman in a car ran a red light.
The train struck the car, and the woman and her passenger were taken to St.
- Read George Carlin’s books for comedic brilliance (Ken Hoffman, Houston Chronicle)
- “Victims” of cut-rate loans (Rich Lowry, RCP)
These are Dem Senators? This must be a mistake, because I was previously convinced from reading lefty blogs that the Culture of Corruption had nothing to do with power, and everything to do with Republicans. - Gloucester girls gone wild (Kay Hymowitz, City Journal)
It’s apparently easier for the media to frame the story according to their
- Fiscal Medicine Man (Robert Novak, WaPo)
- Robert Mundell: An economist who matters (Kyle Wingfield, WSJ)
- Let Us by All Means Have an Honest Conversation About Race (Linda Chavez, Commentary)
- The Obama code (John Pitney, NRO)
- St. Barack was a mirage (Peter Wehner, NRO)
Was? - Why We’re Gloomier Than The Economy (Neil Irwin, WaPo)
It may well be that many Americans don’t even remember what a truly deep recession is like.
Since Sen. John McCain enlisted the help of former Sen. Phil Gramm for economic advice, various Dems have been testing out a variety of attacks on the economist from Texas, who was a highly popular pol before his retirement.
In the latest National Review (subscriber only, this free link may or may not work for you), Ramesh Ponnuru debunked some of the criticisms coming from the far left. Here’s the intro:
Phil Gramm