The Battle For New Hampshire
Posted: 29 Dec 2007 06:33 AM CST
Things took a nasty turn yesterday between Mitt Romney and John McCain in the battle for
The Capt'n be using his spyglass to search out those scalawag political bilge rats, and givm a broadside when they need to be exposed for their skulduggery.
Posted: 29 Dec 2007 06:33 AM CST
Things took a nasty turn yesterday between Mitt Romney and John McCain in the battle for
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 5:59 PM 0 comments
Obama Transcends Racial Confinements Posted: 30 Dec 2007 12:00 AM CST |
World Conflicts Should Weigh On Voters' Minds Posted: 30 Dec 2007 12:00 AM CST |
Posted: 30 Dec 2007 12:00 AM CST |
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 10:26 PM CST LOWRY: Welcome back to HANNITY AND COLMES. I'm Rich Lowry, siting in for Sean Hannity tonight. Joining us now is GOP presidential hopeful John McCain. Senator, thanks for being with us.... |
Breaking Down The Closing Arguments Posted: 28 Dec 2007 10:23 PM CST (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) JAVED IQBAL CHEEMA, PAKISTAN INTERIOR MINISTRY SPOKESMAN: There is no external body inside |
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 5:56 PM 0 comments
Criticism Aside, 'FairTax' Boosts Huckabee Campaign
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 10:31 AM CST
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:30 PM 0 comments
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 01:19 PM CST
The Thompson campaign announced it has raised enough money to get on air in Iowa, though it's not clear for exactly how long they'll be able to keep this ad running:...
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:26 PM 0 comments
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 08:46 AM CST
Peter Nicholas of the LA Times reports that Hillary isn't taking any questions on her final "Time to Pick a President" tour of
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:26 PM 0 comments
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 08:30 AM CST
On this day in 1856 Woodrow Wilson is born in
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:25 PM 0 comments
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 07:32 AM CST
The ad war between Mitt Romney and John McCain is heating up in
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:24 PM 0 comments
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 07:02 AM CST
2008 is just around the corner, and
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:23 PM 0 comments
What the newspapers are saying about Bhutto
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 07:31 AM CST
Yesterday we heard statements from the presidential candidates on the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister of
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:22 PM 0 comments
Republican Race Twists & Turns Even Before Bhutto Assassination
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:52 AM CST
Even before the death of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto on Thursday, there were signs of continued churning in the GOP race, with Arizona Senator John McCain pulling even with and ahead of...
The Legacy of Benazir Bhutto
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:50 AM CST
AVON, Colo. -- Try to imagine a young Pakistani woman bounding into the newsroom of the Harvard Crimson in the early 1970s and banging out stories about college sports teams with the passion of a cub...
When an Assassin Succeeds
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:41 AM CST
The roll call of U.S. allies in the Middle East and its neighborhood has always read like a target list: Maliki, Karzai, Sistani, Musharraf. One bullet or one suicide blast could wipe out all our...
A Crisis Intrudes On Iowa
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:40 AM CST
DES MOINES, Iowa -- The assassination of Benazir Bhutto came as a brutal reminder of the gravity of the decision Iowa's voters will be rendering in their caucuses next Thursday night. Its impact may...
What the Campaign Vets Are Saying
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:36 AM CST
LOS ANGELES -- At Christmas dinner at my friend Lynne's, the talk was politics. What else? Scattered around the room were veterans of more campaigns than anyone wanted to count, and the best news,...
Obama & the Burden of Liberalism
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:33 AM CST
"If you want conventional Washington thinking, I'm not your man. If you want rigid ideology, I'm not your man. If you think that fundamental change can wait, I'm definitely not your man. But if you...
The Real World Intrudes
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:25 AM CST
The next to last assassination attempt on Benazir Bhutto came on Dec. 13, when a man in the crowd got the former prime minister's attention. He was holding a 1-year-old baby -- Bhutto said later she...
Annus Horribilis Ahead?
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:20 AM CST
With the New Hampshire primary on Jan. 8, and the Iowa caucuses dead ahead, the nominees of both parties may be known in two weeks. Surely, after Feb. 5, when a slew of primaries are held, both races...
My 'Persons of the Year'
Posted: 28 Dec 2007 12:20 AM CST
WASHINGTON -- While I was in Fallujah, Iraq, embedded with a U.S. Special Operations Command Task Force, Time magazine gave Russian President -- and soon to be Prime Minister (and long to be ruler)...
Iowa And New Hampshire: Same Old, Same Old
Posted: 27 Dec 2007 09:00 AM CST
One definition of crazy is to keep doing diligently the same thing over and over when it's not working. By that definition America's presidential primary system is seriously loony, for with respect...
How McCain Wins
Posted: 27 Dec 2007 08:11 AM CST
If you've been watching the news or reading the paper in the past couple days, you're sure to have noticed a new tone emerging when reporters and pundits discuss John McCain. "He can win", "McCain...
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 7:44 AM 0 comments
Labels: 2008 presidential campaign
by Jill Zuckman
Henniker, N.H. – What if you went to a popular New Hampshire spot and couldn't find anyone who actually votes in the state?
That's what happened to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney Wednesday when he visited Pat's Peak, a popular ski area where he says he taught his five sons to ski. The place was packed with children, a.k.a non-voters, as well as vacationers from places such as Ireland, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Israel and Canada, a.k.a. non-New Hampshire voters.
But perhaps the real point of his visit was to level a couple zingers at Sen. John McCain, his closest rival in the New Hampshire primary. Romney said it is "totally appropriate" to "compare and contrast" the candidates' positions before criticizing McCain on illegal immigration and taxes. He also accused McCain of sending a mailer to voters that attacked him personally.
The back and forth between the two campaigns and the dissecting of comments went long past the Pat's Peak visit and into the night. Let's review the bidding.
Romney launched the first salvo, saying that McCain was "wrong to say all illegal aliens can stay here permanently" and "he was wrong to vote against the Bush tax cuts."
McCain mocked Romney, saying his campaign is in a "tailspin," and called his attacks "desperate, flailing and false."
Full Story: http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/news/politics/blog/2007/12/mitt_v_mccain_mccain_v_mitt_an.html
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 5:26 PM 0 comments
Labels: 2008 presidential campaign
Iowa Races Entering the Home Stretch Posted: 26 Dec 2007 10:59 AM CST |
Mitt, Huckabee Present Stark Choice for Iowans Posted: 26 Dec 2007 10:56 AM CST |
Courting Students, And Hoping They'll Cast Votes Posted: 26 Dec 2007 10:52 AM CST |
Edwards Gets Demerits for Tardiness on the Trail Posted: 26 Dec 2007 10:50 AM CST New York Times |
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 7:25 AM 0 comments
FORT MITCHELL, Ky. -- In Norse mythology, trolls steal babies and leave their own shape-shifting offspring behind. On the Internet, they just steal attention.
As candidates increasingly use the Internet to build political bridges, their message boards have become homes for trolls, users of an online community who leave messages that are ideologically opposed, off-topic or off-color.
WSJ's Timothy Farnam delves into the furtive life of an Internet troll. He meets Brian O'Neill, a 33-year-old student at Northern Kentucky University, who posts anti-Clinton comments and links on the candidate's campaign website. |
Brian O'Neill, a 33-year-old part-time bartender and full-time college student, has been marauding on Sen. Hillary Clinton's Web site for the past few months, even though his posts attacking the candidate are frequently scrubbed from the site within hours. Mr. O'Neill turned to Mrs. Clinton's site after being booted from online forums of former Sen. John Edwards, Sen. Barack Obama and the Democratic National Committee.
Although Mr. O'Neill says he isn't familiar with the term "troll," he has been labeled as one -- and not just once. "I thought they were calling me like the, you know, little garden trolls," Mr. O'Neill says, "and I'm, like, 'I'm not a garden item.' "
Mr. O'Neill, who lives in this small town outside Cincinnati, has a "special blogging place" two levels underground at the library on the campus of Northern Kentucky University in nearby Highland Heights. On a break between classes, he sits down at a bank of computers in the back corner of the stacks, places his large cup of nutmeg-seasoned French roast coffee on the table and logs on.
While many of the students browse the social-networking site MySpace, Mr. O'Neill gets right to work posting an unfavorable article from the online Drudge Report to a bulletin board on Mrs. Clinton's site. He keeps looking for disparaging news before finding a link to her personal financial disclosure filing. He adjusts his chair and leans in toward the screen, muttering, "Let's get me some dirt." Grabbing a piece of unlined copier paper left on the desk next to him, he begins scribbling notes about her stock holdings for his next raid.
Mr. O'Neill is hardly alone. Although the number of trolls can't be measured, they regularly haunt online political sites, which have mushroomed in recent years. Technorati, which follows blogging trends, now tracks 40,000 English-language politics blogs. "The ability of trolls to gain attention, to secure an audience, if ever briefly, is much greater than before," says Derek Gordon, a former vice president at the company.
Sites try various weapons to combat trolls. Campaign trolls popped up en masse in 2004 on Democratic presidential hopeful Howard Dean's Web site. Dean supporters batted them back with a "troll goal," donating money to the campaign's coffers each time they spotted an offending post. The supporters crowed about each sighting, eliminating the trolls' incentive to disrupt.
Most campaigns and individual bloggers invite readers to report offensive comments, and others approve each comment before it appears. At the liberal discussion Web site Daily Kos, "trusted users" can block people whose comments regularly offend members.
Daily Kos has another tactic: the recipe. When a troll attempts to start a conversation at that site, loyalists post recipes instead of engaging them. With so many trolls, the recipes have proliferated -- enough so that Daily Kos compiled a 144-page "Trollhouse Cookbook," including crab bisque inspired by President Bush's second inauguration and "Liberal Elite Cranberry Glazed Brie."
While that approach seems comical, the problem is real. Michael Lazzaro, a Daily Kos contributing editor who goes by "Hunter," says about 10 people are banned each week, but many return by setting up new accounts. One person, easily identified by his writing, has opened more than 100 accounts since 2005, he says. "He basically comments for awhile really nicely and then out of the blue he'll start ranting about women or Jews or something like that," Mr. Lazzaro says.
The Clinton campaign simply yanks the posts of Mr. O'Neill and others. "We have very clear-cut terms of service that we ask people to read before posting to the site," says Peter Daou, the Clinton campaign's Internet director. The terms of service prohibit content that is "harmful" or "defamatory," among other things, and lets the campaign delete comments for any reason. Mr. Daou declined to comment on Mr. O'Neill's posts or the extent of the abuse at the site.
Readers on the Clinton site often take measures into their own hands. "Its nice to see you here on Hillary's sight, [sic]" one wrote to Mr. O'Neill. "It shows your fear that Hillary can win."
Mr. O'Neill, who goes by the handle "thepoliticalguy," doesn't let the comments get him down. "If they think I'm a troll, then so be it," he says, before immediately rejecting this premise. "It's wrong! It's wrong! Where's the freedom of ideas?" He pounds the table. "If you're on a site and you're just agreeing with each other all day, where's the argument?"
Mr. O'Neill has lived in northern Kentucky since he was 6, save for a few years spent in the Army. He worked 12-hour shifts for seven years, he says, keeping baggage flowing underneath the Cincinnati airport.
He returned to college three years ago, where he started to follow domestic politics with newfound zeal. "It's the arguments," he says. "I love to argue."
When he returns to his one-bedroom apartment, Mr. O'Neill flips on the computer and checks Mrs. Clinton's Web site. His comment on her stock portfolio is already gone. His brief disappointment gives way almost immediately to elation. "Wait a second!" he says, jumping to his feet, "I still have the little piece of paper." He retrieves the notes from his backpack near the door. "We'll just rewrite it."
He re crafts the post, and titles it "Hillary Clinton, the Oil, War and Fox News Profiteer." He lists Mrs. Clinton's ownership in BP PLC, Chevron Corp., Boeing Co. and News Corp., despite the fact that the candidate and her husband liquidated their blind trust in April to avoid any appearance of conflict of interest. "So the truth comes out," Mr. O'Neill concludes, "if she is elected, looks like we may spent a couple more years in Iraq, so someone can make more money on there stock dividends and guess what, its not Bush."
Mr. O'Neill's comment is back on the Clinton site in 20 minutes. And off again.
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 11:37 PM 0 comments
Romney and McCain Exchange Christmas Jeers
by FOXNews.com
Monday, December 24, 2007
Republican presidential contender Mitt Romney leveled his sights on GOP rival John McCain this weekend as he sought to maintain his shrinking lead in the Granite State.
On the primary trail in Petersborough, N.H, Romney on Sunday poked McCain in the eye over his vote against the Bush packages of tax cuts in 2001 and 2003, as well as for refusing to vote to eliminate the estate tax, known by opponents as the “death tax.”
While calling McCain a “good man” and noting they agree on foreign trade, Romney’s sharpest points for the Arizona senator were over taxes.
“Right now Senator McCain and I are both battling for your support and your vote. He’s a good man but we have differing views on this. He voted against the Bush tax cuts. He voted against eliminating the death tax forever, and so we’ve got some differing views here,” Romney said.
“I believe in pushing taxes down. I also believe in trade around the world and that’s a place where Senator McCain and I agree.”
McCain’s campaign didn’t take long to fire back, needling Romney on the tax issue as well as a number of the former Massachusetts governor’s recent public relations gaffes.
“Welcome to Mitt Romney’s bizarro world, in which everyone is guilty of his sins,” McCain adviser Mark Salter said.
Salter continued, saying Romney “didn’t support Ronald Reagan. He didn’t support President Bush’s tax cuts. He raised taxes in Massachusetts by $700 million. He knows John McCain is gaining on him so he does what any small varmint gun totin,’ civil rights marching, NRA endorsed fantasy candidate would do: he questions someone else’s credibility. ”
“New Hampshire is on to you, Mitt. Give it a rest. It’s Christmas.”
Salter’s statement drew its own response from Romney’s campaign.
The Full Story:http://youdecide08.foxnews.com/2007/12/24/romney-and-mccain-dont-share-christmas-spirit/
Ouch..... it's getting personal now
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 2:12 PM 1 comments
Sounds like they have newspapers like the Tribune and Deseret News there in Boston
Posted: 23 Dec 2007 08:11 AM CST
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 1:57 PM 0 comments
I had mentioned in an earlier Spyglass post that the lefty authors of Amicus, Bell, etc, etc, etc (Shall we Dance) would wait till the last minute on Saturday night to intentionally spike down the ratings of the Spyglass. Well I just happened to be reading some of the lefty blog posts this evening and what do I see? , nearly every article I posted early this morning was repeated by the left.
Well I couldn’t have felt more proud that many of you thought what I had already posted needed to be repeated under your byline. I also thought I must be running around 10 out of 10 possible in highest ranking, since every post I made today was repeated by somebody, but NOOOOO, the Spyglass was spiked down to 4 , FOUR!!!! You know who you are.
So the Gloves come off you ingrates, just watch in shock as your favorite Amicus,
And in closing, I will say for the record that Romney’s campaign is done. He painted himself with previous lies right up to the cliff’s edge. This latest whopper pushed him over the edge as far as this voter stands.
I and many others don’t want a prejudiced anti Mormon Southern Baptist minister as the leader of this great country (along with 5 million other voting Mormons) so Huckleberry Hound is toast. This latest thing with Rudy is going to bring back memories of his excuse of Prostate Cancer when he bowed out against Hillary “the ROD”
So I’m going out on a HUGE Limb tonight and tell you who I feel will be the nominees for their respective parties.
Obama will be like Fox’s 24 David Palmer, the first African American Presidential Nominee for the democrats, who will be his running mate? Wesley Clark most likely
As for the Republican’s, hold onto your hats folks, but here is the actual winning team that can take the White House. Drum roll please. You gatta hand it to Governor Jon Huntsman and AG Mark Shurtlef, they ignored them all and stayed loyal to Senator John McClain. He will likely win New Hampshire after Mitt stepped in it again by opening his mouth, and then come in second to Huckabee in SC. Mitt will likely win Iowa, but not by much, and he had to pander to those multi millionaire farmers about ethanol if he does.
At least McCain told them where they can stick their corncobs subsidies. And guess who will be his running mate? , the democratic Vice Presidential nominee of 2004 Joe Lieberman. Uncle Joe is squeaky clean, smart, and really wants to stick it to the Democrats who tried to toss him out of the US Senate. He is well respected on both sides of the aisle of the Senate, and probably could get some real work accomplished.
What’s happened to Romney? The more prevalent this revelation about Romney’s pattern of lying (especially about stuff that happened during the Olympics) gets out, he should save the Millions he would throw down the toilet, and give his son about 3 million to take on Matheson here in
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 8:58 PM 6 comments
Labels: 2008 presidential campaign, McCain, Mitt Romney, obama
The lights are on, but nobody’s home
http://deschamps.townhall.com/g/891b983b-0566-42af-a213-9a3c9063921e
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 7:38 PM 0 comments
Labels: 2008 presidential campaign, ron paul
By George F. Will
Published: Sunday, Dec. 23, 2007 12:03 a.m. MST
This was the first year since 1994 that Democrats controlled both houses. Consider Congress' agreeably meager record: It raised the hourly minimum wage from $5.15 to $5.85 — less than the $7 entry wage at McDonald's — thereby increasing the wages of less than 0.5 percent of the work force. Rebuffing President Bush, who advocates halting farm subsidies to those with adjusted gross incomes of more than $200,000, the Senate also rejected — more bipartisanship — a cap at $750,000. This, in spite of the fact that farm income has soared to record levels, partly because Congress shares the president's loopy enthusiasm for ethanol and wants more corn and other agricultural matter turned into fuel.
Although Congress trembles for the future of the planet, it was unwilling to eliminate the 54-cent-a-gallon tariff on Brazilian ethanol. But our polymath Congress continued designing automobiles to make them less safe (smaller) and more expensive. It did this by mandating new fuel efficiency — a 35 mpg fleet average by 2020 — lest the automotive industry design cars people want. And Congress mandated a 12-year phaseout of incandescent light bulbs.
Read Full Story:http://www.deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,695237868,00.html
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 11:16 AM 0 comments
By GLEN JOHNSON
BOSTON (AP) - Mitt Romney, who earlier this year had to backpedal on his hunting exploits, is explaining himself again after claiming an endorsement he did not receive and saying he witnessed his father in civil rights marches he could not have seen.
"It's a figure of speech," Romney said Thursday after media inquiries into the Republican presidential contender's statement during his recent religion speech that he watched his father, the late Gov. George Romney of Michigan, march with Martin Luther King Jr.
Romney, who was in high school at the time, later said he only heard of his father marching, and some historians have questioned whether his father, in fact, did march with King. The Romney campaign provided books and news articles it said supported his statement.
Romney said it was akin to him stating, "I saw my dad become president of American Motors." He told reporters in Iowa, "I wasn't there when he became president."
(AP) Republican presidential hopeful, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, right, walks to his...Full ImageRomney similarly backtracked after telling a national television audience Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press" that "I received the endorsement of the NRA" in 2002 while running for governor of Massachusetts.
The gun rights group did not endorse either candidate, and gave a higher issues rating to his Democratic opponent.
Romney said Monday, "It was, if you will, a support phone bank, which is not an official endorsement."
The questions are especially sensitive for Romney, who is trying to rebound against rival Mike Huckabee in Iowa and maintain a lead in New Hampshire, the leadoff contests in the voting for presidential nominees.
Throughout his campaign, he has been dogged by allegations of flip-flopping on key issues, from abortion rights to gun control and gay rights.
It's the fine-tuning that's created the problem. It's always that one extra step that causes him the trouble," said Tobe Berkovitz, a longtime Romney observer and the interim dean of Boston University's College of Communication. "You can't just say that African-Americans were accepted into the church and I was happy, you have to say you pulled over and you cried."
The latter was a reference to another statement Romney made on "Meet the Press," in which he tried to convey his emotion after learning in 1978 his Mormon church had given full privileges to blacks.
Romney recalled his exact location when he heard the news - the Fresh Pond traffic rotary in Cambridge - but he misspoke when he said he thought he was in law school at the time. In fact, he had graduated from Harvard Law School three years earlier.
"If this had been three months ago, it would have been more water off the back of the duck, but right now, everything is magnified not only for him but Rudy and Hillary and everybody else," said Berkovitz, mentioning fellow presidential contenders Rudy Giuliani and Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Democrat Al Gore faced similar questions during the 2000 campaign, when he falsely claimed to have accompanied a federal disaster relief official on a tour of a fire zone, and on previous occasions when he claimed more credit than many felt he warranted about the creation of the Internet, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and the Love Canal toxic waste investigation.
Romney is well aware of the power of words in politics. His father saw his own presidential campaign founder in 1968 amid questions about his statement that he was subjected to "a brainwashing" by U.S. generals during a visit to Vietnam.
The elder Romney switched from supporting the war to opposing it, despite the generals' efforts to maintain his backing, but in campaign discussions his observation morphed into the suggestion that he was mentally unfit for office.
Mitt Romney says that experience is why he detests "gotcha" journalism. Aides say it also explains why he blows by reporters except for scheduled news conferences, and why he is wary of a "YouTube moment" in which stray tape recorders or cell phone cameras capture him making an offhand remark.
"I try to be as accurate as I can be," he said Thursday.
Nonetheless, Romney faced snickers in April after his staff said he had been hunting on only two occasions despite his telling a New Hampshire voter, "I've been a hunter pretty much all my life." Romney later said he had hunted more than twice but only for "small varmints" and that he did not own a gun or have a hunting license.
This week, there were fresh examples of Romney treading a rhetorical line on what he says and doesn't say.
Speaking at St. Anselm College in Goffstown, N.H., he told an audience likely to have an aversion to its southern neighbors, "I came out of school and got a job in Boston. People always ask me, why'd you choose Boston? It's, like, pretty simple. That's where I got my first job."
The "school" Romney mentioned was Harvard, where the Michigan native attended both law and business school after graduating from Brigham Young University in Utah. Three of his five sons also attended Harvard Business School, but Romney is more likely to condemn Harvard or its fellow Ivy League institutions for inviting speakers from Iran than he is to note it was his alma mater.
During the same town hall meeting, Romney also cast himself as a reluctant politician, focusing instead on his 25-year business career and stint helping to resurrect the financially troubled 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics.
"When I came home, some people in the Massachusetts Republican Party encouraged me to run for office and said, 'We need somebody who can win and who can fix Massachusetts,'" Romney said.
Romney returned to Massachusetts from Utah on Sunday, March 17, 2002. He declared he was running for governor on Tuesday, March 19, just hours after his fellow Republican, acting Gov. Jane Swift, announced she was yielding to the Romney juggernaut.
"I'm in," he said roughly 48 hours after returning to Massachusetts. "The bumper stickers are printed, the Web site's going up. The papers are going in today."
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 10:31 PM 0 comments
You need to read this: http://www.ephesians5-11.org/handshakes.htm
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 7:42 PM 0 comments
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 5:00 PM 3 comments
As Voting Nears, Romney Shifts Political Narrative Posted: 20 Dec 2007 10:54 AM CST |
Clinton Toeing the Line of Campaign Negativity Posted: 20 Dec 2007 10:51 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 10:50 AM CST |
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 12:42 PM 0 comments
Why Did Clinton Overlook Obama? Posted: 20 Dec 2007 08:30 AM CST |
A Middle East Transformed? Hardly Posted: 20 Dec 2007 08:25 AM CST |
Back from the Dead Again: McCain Rising Posted: 20 Dec 2007 08:15 AM CST |
Real-Deal Conservatism Missing From Race Posted: 20 Dec 2007 08:00 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 06:05 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:45 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:42 AM CST |
2007: Damming the Flow of Freedom Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:42 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:42 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:41 AM CST |
Resolve To End Hyper-Partisanship Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:40 AM CST |
Confusion Reigns On Campaign Trail Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:35 AM CST |
Obama Still Faces an Up-Hil Climb Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:34 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:33 AM CST |
Posted: 20 Dec 2007 12:31 AM CST |
Posted by Mark E. Towner at 11:11 AM 0 comments