Luckily, the Fightin' Whities are going strong. Now in its seventh year, the National Collegiate Athletic Association's battle with the University of North Dakota may be reaching a final conclusion. In 2005, the NCAA announced a complete ban on hosting post-season competition by 18 colleges that were using Native American mascots, logos, or ... MOREMark Hyman: The NCAA Political Correctness Witch Hunt
Luckily, the Fightin' Whities are going strong. Now in its seventh year, the National Collegiate Athletic Association's battle with the University of North Dakota may be reaching a final conclusion. In 2005, the NCAA announced a complete ban on hosting post-season competition by 18 colleges that were using Native American mascots, logos, or ... MOREWalter E. Williams: Duped By Congressional Lies
In the name of fairness or generational theft? Some of the responses to my column last week, titled "Immoral Beyond Redemption," prove that Americans have been hoodwinked by Congress. Some readers protested my counting Social Security among government handout programs that can be described as Congress' taking what belongs ... MORE
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benefits,
Congress,
FICA,
government,
handouts,
redistribution,
Social Security,
tax,
wealth
David Klepper: Efforts Growing To Decriminalize Marijuana
Medical pot in 17 states, penalties rolled back in 14. Catharine Leach is married and has two boys, aged 2 and 8. She has a good job with a federal contractor and smokes pot most every day. While she worries that her public support for marijuana decriminalization and legalization could cost her a job or bring the police to her door, the 30-year-old ... MOREHow Minimum Wage Laws Do More Harm Than Good
by Bryan Hyde. Most of us remember our first minimum wage job with a sense of fondness. Mine was delivering prescriptions for Magic Valley Drug for a whopping $3.35 an hour. As far as I was concerned, that was pretty decent pay for driving my boss’s Thunderbird and singing along with the radio. At the time I was too young to vote, so the thought of lobbying politicians ... MOREAlicia M. Cohn: Dems Twice As Likely To Be Nannies
And, twice as likely to back the Big Gulp ban. Democratic voters are more than twice as likely as Republicans to back a proposal by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg (I) to ban super-sized sugary drinks in the Big Apple, according to a new poll for The Hill. Amid national scrutiny over Bloomberg’s so-called Big Gulp ban plan, the national survey found ... MOREJason Method: School Choice Thrives In New Jersey
Kids benefit, even if the teachers' union does not. When Superintendent Anthony Moro drove to Trenton on nearly two years ago, he knew the survival of his elementary school would be determined by the paperwork on his front seat. State officials gave Moro his wish. The brick school, little used by residents of this small Monmouth County town ... MORE
Micah Zenko: The Overblown Threat Of Terrorism
You're as likely to be killed by furniture as terrorism. Today, the National Counter Terrorism Center (NCTC) released its 2011 Report on Terrorism. The report offers the U.S. government's best statistical analysis of terrorism trends through its Worldwide Incidents Tracking System (WITS), which compiles and vets open-source information about ... MORE
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citizens,
death,
government,
policy,
reality,
regulation,
risk,
statistics,
terrorism,
tracking
Star Parker: Voter Rights Are Not Free
Just like freedom itself. Engraved large on one of the walls of the Korean War Veterans Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, DC are the words “Freedom is not free.” It is sad that so many are unable or unwilling to appreciate the truth of this simple phrase or are ready to heed those who have or seek power who distort it. I cannot think of ... MORE
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corruption,
defense,
election,
freedom,
information,
political correctness,
voter ID,
voting,
war
VIDEO: FOX NEWS: The Bad Witness
Fast and Furious! A Fox News team discusses the Eric Holder testimony before Congress that made Darrell Issa furious fast. A year after the fact, America's top law enforcement officer continues to claim no knowledge of who signed off on government's gunrunning scheme with Mexican drug cartels.
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Congress,
corruption,
death,
DOJ,
Eric Holder,
guns,
justice,
law enforcement,
leaks,
scandal
Washington Times: Obama, The Leaker In Chief
When politics trump national security. President Obama takes umbrage at the idea that a spate of leaks of highly classified national-security information is somehow purposefully intended to bolster his leadership credentials. His resistance to an independent investigation will only make things worse for him. The Obama White House is leaking ... MORE
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campaign,
CIA,
drones,
economics,
intelligence,
international,
leaks,
Obama,
security,
terrorism
Patrick Michaels: UN Prepares Shakedown Attempt Of U.S.
End of the world predictions lay the groundwork. Notice all the horrendous news about our environment? That’s a sure sign that the UN is about to throw another mega-gabfest where global leaders will shake their heads and shake down the U.S. for monies that Congress will wisely refuse to fork over. Two weekends from now, the UN is holding its “Rio+20 ... MOREVIDEO: Bath Salts, Naked Zombie Cannibals & Senators
It is clear which of the three do society the most damage.
Kevin D. Williamson: Detroit - The Moral Of The Story
Lessons among the ruins. The Left’s answer to the deficit: raise taxes to protect spending. The Left’s answer to the weak economy: raise taxes to enable new spending. The Left’s answer to the looming sovereign-debt crisis: raise taxes to pay off old spending. For the Left, every deficit is a revenue-side problem, not a spending-side problem, and the ... MORE
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corruption,
debt,
economics,
government,
growth,
incentives,
morality,
revenue,
spending,
tax
Charles C. Johnson: Ray Bradbury - Enemy Of The State
Remembering the late science fiction writer. Ray Bradbury won’t “live forever,” as he wished, but he may well live on as the most-read critic of the state in America’s public schools. It was in public school that I first encountered Bradbury’s magnum opus, Fahrenheit 451, which is required reading in the government schools that made him shutter. ... MORENullification: What Is It Good For? Absolutely Everything!
by Diane Rufino. Nullification is a term introduced by Thomas Jefferson in 1798 when he drafted the Kentucky Resolves to articulate the reason for the state to oppose an unconstitutional federal law - the Alien and Sedition Acts. Nullification begins with the central premise that a federal law that violates the Constitution is no law at all. It is void and has no ... MORESteve Chapman: The Myth Of Unfair Paychecks
A difference in pay does not prove discrimination. As any debater knows, defining the issue is a major part of the battle. On Tuesday, Democrats failed to persuade the Senate to approve the Paycheck Fairness Act. What are we to conclude from that outcome? That paychecks will be unfair, to the detriment of America's working ... MORE
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