by Thomas Sowell | Feb 9, 2003 | Education, POLITICS
It has been said that, when Ronald Reagan was governor of California, someone told him that admitting students to the University of California on individual performance alone could mean that all the students at Berkeley might be Asian Americans. “So what?”... by Bill Rost | Feb 8, 2003 | POLITICS
Beginning with the publication of “Silent Spring”, the environmental movement has become progressively disconnected from science and more rigidly defined by a utopian ideology. Based primarily on exaggerations, distortions, and a willful neglect of valid... by Joseph Kellard | Feb 8, 2003 | POLITICS
Under the pretense of combating racism, “diversity” advocates such as Clinton actually champion its basis, racial collectivism, and destroy individualism, its only antidote.
by Thomas Sowell | Feb 8, 2003 | POLITICS
Not the least of the damage done by affirmative action is damage to the English language. In addition to all the euphemisms concocted to evade the simple fact of racial quotas and double standards, there has long been a fog of obscure phrases shrouding the issues... by James Glassman | Feb 7, 2003 | POLITICS
The name “Glassman” has been popping up a lot lately. And it’s not just me and my family. In fact, with the exception of my brother, the illustrious Washington veterinarian, I am not related to any of the recently famous Glassmans, who include such... by S.M. Oliva | Feb 7, 2003 | POLITICS
Lawyers are supposed to act as advocates, defending the individual rights of their clients before the law. In any controversy, be it civil or criminal, the case must revolve around the parties, not their counsel. Yet that is no longer a guiding principle for many... by Scott Holleran | Feb 7, 2003 | POLITICS
President Bush has kept his promise to dispatch Secretary of State Colin Powell to make the case against Iraq before the United Nations — and, by doing so, he has totally capitulated to the whims of world opinion. The premise of Powell’s speech is that... by Ron Pisaturo | Feb 6, 2003 | POLITICS
Historians have always been fascinated by the falls of great civilizations such as ancient Greece and Rome. But no fall contains more important lessons for mankind than the fall of the United States of America, which ended the Age of Invisible Virtue and plunged the... by S.M. Oliva | Feb 6, 2003 | Antitrust & Monopolies
This Monday President Bush proposed a $2.2 trillion federal budget to Congress. Momentarily setting aside the sheer outrage over the destruction of such vast wealth in the pursuit of unconstitutional government programs, two items are of particular interest to those...