DavidL's Breakfast Scramble
Dumbo’s Economics, more on yesterday’s Scramble theme of Barack Obama’s economic ignorance.  First up, from Robert R. Baker, American Thinker:

[President Franklin] Roosevelt responded to the recession he inherited with a combination of massive spending on new government

Continue reading about Breakfast Scramble: The High Speed Rail to the Poor House

davidl on May 28th, 2009

Matthew Yglesias  is just a tad bit confused.

This seems very confused. Being a “reverse racist” can’t be similar to being a “racist,” it needs to be the reverse of being a racist. Limbaugh clearly just thinks Sotomayor is a

Continue reading about Libtard of the Day: Matthew Yglesias.

davidl on May 27th, 2009

The Retard in Chief recently gave a speech at the formerly Catholic universiity, Notre Dame, where he ponticated on the need to find a “middle ground” on abourtion.   To be blunt, the Obama adminstration seeks no middle ground, via Wendy

Continue reading about On Baby Killers And Obama’s Middle Ground

Eric Florack on October 29th, 2008

Word from the Boston Pheonix, this morning:

This morning, Massachusetts State Senator Dianne Wilkerson was arrested on charges of attempted extortion and wire fraud after an 18-month investigation by the FBI. The FBI alleges that Wilkerson took bribes from

Continue reading about State Sen Dianne Wilkerson (D) Nabbed in Corruption Probe

Eric Florack on September 26th, 2008

Welcome, dear reader, to the most intense nightly read on the ‘sphere: Bitsblog’s Nightly Ramble.

Lots going on.

  • So, Ol’ Gaffe-O-Matic Biden and, one assumes, B. O. both think John McCain is wrong on security? Is that why they both

Continue reading about Nightly Ramble:All This And a Large Fries

Eric Florack on May 28th, 2008

Ramesh Ponnuru points out yesterday that in a Libertarian fantasy world the Cato institute’s platform would win in a landslide. I would hasten to add that the only reason that the whole thing is a fantasy is because nobody’s bothered

Continue reading about The Long View