- Obama's radicalism is killing the DOW (Michael Boskin, WSJ)
- Obama's Radical Scheme Puts Country At Risk While Financial System Collapses (Michael Barone, US News)
- Obama and the schools: It's time to stand up to the teachers' unions (WSJ) The next time Obama stands up to a libDem interest group will be the first.
- Who pays for cap and trade? (WSJ) We all do!
- The Great Destabilization (Mark Steyn, NRO)
- President Obama's Double Talk (Robert Samuelson, WaPo)
- Obama's search for an enemy (Michael Goodwin, NY Daily News)
- Not quite like being the 100th Senator (Brothers Judd)
- The Obama Moment (Russell Saltzman, First Things)
- Obama's Left Turn (Stuart Taylor, National Journal)
- The great non sequitur (Charles Krauthammer, WaPo)
- Geithner, With Few Aides, Faces a Wave of Challenges (Edmund Andrews & Stephen Labaton, NY Times) So can any of the media cheerleaders now admit it wasn’t the smoothest transition in history (you know, like they reported), and in fact one of the most important executive offices remains barely staffed?
- Why Do Conservatives Eat Their Own? (Lone Star Times) Hmm, kind of a funny question from the folks who shriek “RINO” at anyone who doesn’t meet the definition of a KDAN Conservative.
- On Going Galt (WillWilkinson.net)
- The trouble with rail (Paul Burka, BurkaBlog)
- Diigo Buys Web Page Clipping Service Furl Away From LookSmart (TechCrunch) I get a bad feeling they’re gonna kill furl and try to move us all to their tool. Bah.
- TwitteReader Gives Twitter a Google Reader Feel (LifeHacker) This one may be worth a try.
- Let us give thanks for the departure of Terrell Owens' ego (Randy Galloway, FWST) Yes, let’s.
- Gillispie just not cutting it at Kentucky (Jeff Goodman, Fox Sports) Serves ’em right for trying so hard to chase Tubby Smith.
- Kansas Jayhawks coach parlayed 'the process’ into a Big 12 title (Mike Jones, FWST) Bill Self has done one hell of a job.
- F and B Offspring (Whole Fish) I love these posts by one of Houston’s best chefs.
- A Toast To Roses & Tangerines (Cepage Noir)
March 2008 came so quickly. That month began to mark a world that remains completely unexplainable for me. I look back to a time now only two years past and I can barely recognize the man in the mirror.
Obviously it’s not my livelihood on the line, but maybe March 2008 didn’t mark a sea change in people so much as a reaction to a slowing economy? People look for bargains when the economy slows.