NY Post: The Senate's Foolish USPS Bailout
A good reason for taxpayers to go postal. The US Postal Service is so mired in debt that nothing can save it from going bust — but the Senate is trying to dump a $33.7 billion bailout in its lap anyway. Against the Postal Service’s wishes. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe did something brave last year: He tried to bring USPS into the age of instant electronic ... MOREPaul Joseph Watson: Talking Surveillance Cameras
See what's coming to a street near you. Talking surveillance cameras that bark orders at passers-by and can also record conversations are heading for U.S. streets, with manufacturer Illuminating Concepts announcing the progress of its ‘Intellistreets’ system. As we first reported last year, high tech street lights with “homeland security ... MOREEmily O'Neill: Public School Is Prison For Patriots
Public education teaches not to question authority. When I was twelve, my mom took me out of public school and homeschooled me. I chose my own reading list and learned all I could about politics, law, and history. Eventually my mom didn’t have to call meetings at the kitchen table to check on my progress. I wanted to learn — and I wanted to arrive at my ... MORE
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education,
government,
history,
indoctrination,
law,
politics,
principles,
rules,
schools,
thinking
Gene Healy: From Watergate to Wedgiegate
The nasty pranks potential candidates committed as kids. From Watergate to Wedgiegate—the Washington Post's investigative journalism has sure come a long way. If last week's "expose" on Mitt Romney's prep-school bullying is any indication, from now on the fully informed voter will have to pore over every nasty prank potential candidates committed as ... MOREKrauthammer On Drones: "Stop It Here, Stop It Now"
Government marches toward a police state. "I'm going to go hard left on you here, I'm going ACLU," syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer said in opposition to the use of drones on the U.S. homeland. "I don't want regulations, I don't want restrictions, I want a ban on this. Drones are instruments of war. The Founders had a great aversion to any ... MORE
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drones,
government,
law enforcement,
police,
privacy,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance,
tyranny
William Tucker: It Will Be Hot In Texas This Summer
Courtesy of federal energy policies. Texas, the most energy-intensive state in the nation, could be facing a severe electrical shortage this summer. How could such a thing happen? Mainly, it's the result of a long series of federal interventions that have finally left the state turning in circles about what to do next. First, the gory details. Last summer ... MORE
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coal,
electricity,
energy,
federal,
gas,
government,
nuclear,
oil,
price controls,
wind power
Walter E Williams: Should We Obey All Laws?
Labels:
law,
legislation,
morality,
nullification,
ObamaCare,
slavery,
states' rights,
Supreme Court
Thomas Sowell: A Censored Race War?
A one-way street called 'hate crimes.' When two white newspaper reporters for the Virginian-Pilot were driving through Norfolk, and were set upon and beaten by a mob of young blacks — beaten so badly that they had to take a week off from work — that might seem to have been news that should have been reported, at least by their own newspaper. ... MOREDaniel Halper: $16 Billion Deficit In California
Another bad gamble by the bluest of states. California Governor Jerry Brown bet that a nascent financial recovery would lift the world’s ninth- largest economy enough to whittle down a $9.2 billion deficit. Instead, the gap has widened to $16 billion. Today the 74-year-old Democrat will unveil his revised budget and explain what additional spending must be cut. ... MORE
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budget,
deficit,
economics,
government,
jobs,
liberalism,
politicians,
schools,
spending,
tax
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