Why NPR wanted that congressional pay raise Happy New Year! In 18 days, we bring back President Trump.
Money talks. While congressmen whine about billionaires taking over DC, the fact is the 535 voting members of Congress spend like trillionaires.
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
Money talks. While congressmen whine about billionaires taking over DC, the fact is the 535 voting members of Congress spend like trillionaires.
Last night, we bade adieu finally, to more of 2024—a year so big it needed an extra day.
Tonight the world turns 2025 and it will look a day older than 2024 because that is what it will be. The story of the year is not that President Trump won but that the deep state failed.
The media is doing debriefings of defeated Democrats as they exit stage left—really, really, really left. These pieces amuse me but the stories also inspire me because these exit interviews underscore how we can stop Democrats from destroying America.
Once again the rapier wit of Don Surber looks at last week’s significant events and provides his own, somewhat ribald interpretation.
Qualifications no longer matter because elected officials prefer to let the bureaucracy run itself. Governor LePetomane from Blazing Saddles is their role model. Sadly, none of the presidential chiefs of staff look anything like his secretary. Christmas is over. I hope you had a merry one and a Happy Hanukah. I get that Orthodox and …
Impeachment. Lawfare. Even assassination. The establishment failed time and time again to thwart the return of the Lion of Mar-a-Lago.
The politics of open borders has changed dramatically. Democrats are losing support in two key voting blocs: Hispanics and black voters.
In their retreat from the presidency and control of the Senate, Democrats are leaving a scorched trail behind them. Biden commuted the sentences of 1,500 thugs, mugs, pugs and doctors who peddle prescription drugs.
Once again the rapier wit of Don Surber looks at last week’s significant events and provides his own, somewhat ribald interpretation.
The New York Times calls it the Great Capitulation as Trump’s critics and defamers are resisting a resistance this time. He’s the president and if you want to do business with him, you had better fly down to Mar-a-Lago—just as you visited Rehoboth Beach four years ago.
60 years ago, the liberal Supreme Court in 1965 gave the press a License to Lie in the NYT v. Sullivan case in which the Times ran a libelous ad by civil rights activists against police in Birmingham, Alabama. The court said, well, unless NYT meant actual malice, the libel was not a libel.
B is for boycott. Bud Light is now a verb. Conservatives have made Ford and other major corporations jettison DEI like the original tea party tossed crates into Boston Harbor.
Once again the rapier wit of Don Surber looks at last week’s significant events and provides his own, somewhat ribald interpretation.
The nation’s reaction to the re-election of President Donald Trump is a calm return to optimism after nearly four years of failure by the dumbbell Biden
Sarah Hoyt dropped one of her 4 AM links to an essay by J.K. Rowling on the backlash and death threats for daring to say men cannot become little girls. The essay was a lengthy series of tweets that responded to a New York Times essay.
A jury found Daniel Penny innocent of Alvin Bragg’s ridiculous charges related to subduing a homeless man who threatened passengers in a subway car. The exoneration demolished a media narrative that Penny was a white supremacist stalking black men.
20 Republican senators are up for re-election in 2026. It is time to shake some of them up because they have forgotten for whom they work.
This is a reality check for Trump supporters. Electoral victories by Orban in Hungary, Milei in Argentina and Meloni in Italy have given us comfort and encouragement.