On the Left Side

Shock And Awe Obama-Style

As President, Barak Obama has consistently pushed U.S. foreign policy in one direction, straight into a kumbaya coalition of countries. To him, we are no longer the dominant player on the world stage. Instead, our nation is merely one of many. This shift in policy from past Presidents fits nicely into Obama’s community organizer world view. We can finally all come together to explore our common issues, rise above our differences and live happily together. It works because…

Public Employee Unions: The Bottom Line

With all the absurd verbiage flying around from union leaders and politicos lately, you’d think the sky has fallen. Take the emotion-charged responses of the unions over last week’s passage of the Wisconsin bill restricting collective bargaining rights. It “jeopardizes fundamental American values”, is “an abuse of power”, a “slap in the face to the middle class” and a pretense to “fix a phony budget crisis”. Phony? Really? These people probably started the rumor that the moon landing…

Deficit Spending: The Other Immigration Problem

We are inundated on what seems like a daily basis with information and proposals on the illegal immigration problem. And it is huge a mess. Annually, illegal immigrants cost taxpayers over $100 billion with no end in site. While Congress kicks that one around like the political football it’s become, few are paying attention to the other immigration problem occurring within our borders. That one makes our territorial boundary woes look almost penny ante by comparison. While this…

Deficit Politics: Obama, The Comedian

Barack Obama released his proposed 2012 budget on Monday. It was not the Valentine many were hoping to get. The budget’s spending figure of $3.73 trillion includes $1.1 trillion, or more than 29%, in deficit dollars. Apparently, the flowery promises of budget cutting our way to fiscal health have died on the President’s lips. He did propose $1.1 trillion in total reductions over the next 10 years. But, that isn’t even peanuts. The combined deficits in just…

Mubarak’s Failure: Lessons From Egypt

The nine-day old turmoil in Egypt shows no sign of letting up despite Hosni Mubarak’s assurances that he will step down in September. His pledge to forego his pro forma re-election as Egypt’s President is part of an effort to take the momentum away from the burgeoning opposition. The U.S. urges the move mainly because it does not want Egypt to end up like Iran after the last Shah. Iran’s staunch support of the U.S. went the way of…

The Tucson Tragedy: Inciting Thought

The tragedy in Tucson eleven days ago spawned a national debate over whether certain types of political expression incite violence and should, therefore, be banned. Congressman Robert Brady, D-Pa, lead proponent of the ban, identifies a Sarah Palin map of the U.S. as the calamity’s trigger. Opponents charge Brady with political opportunism at its rankest, especially since the investigation was barely underway when the Congressman launched his verbal assault. In the days since Brady’s allegation, not a single…

1 2 3 4 5 6 11