Romney's Faith Doesn't Engender Much

For a speech being praised so highly by so many mainstream pundits and pols, Mitt Romney's speech "on his faith" didn't engender much faith in him, at least in my house.

Credit Card Companies: The Next Big Meltdown?

And it's wah, wah, wah as our government starts to turn the tables on the credit card issuers, what with their quantum math, statements that read like Tolstoy, and well, unfair practices. And the cool part? They're not happy, of course. Didn't they, using their lobby dollars, revise the bankruptcy laws to their liking? Yes. So, what are they unhappy about now?

FCC Investigated by Congressional Committee

Adding to the number of fed employees and agencies under congressional investigation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee announced yesterday that it will investigate the FCC, specifically whether its Chairman, Kevin Martin, has been conducting its affairs in an appropriate manner.

Is the U.S. Trying to Get Don Rumsfeld Kidnapped?

If you think that's a bizarre question, hang on a minute. The U.S. has, once again, formally stated it's position that it has the perfect right to go to a foreign country and kidnap one of its citizens to be taken back to the U.S. for trial on criminal charges.

Those Sane & Happy Repubs: View from a Happy, Healthy 'Hindrocket'

John Hinderaker runs the Powerline blog, and adopts the name "Hindrocket." And he has news for you and me and all those of us who are Democrats or liberals (he doesn't seem to see any difference): we're probably not as sane, healthy, and happy as he and his fellow conservatives are, which is why "if you're a Republican, the message is mixed: you're probably happier and healthier than your Democratic neighbors, but you're also less likely to be passionate about imposing your political views on others."

Peggy Noonan Can't Pin the Tail on a Donkey

Right-wingers have gone ballistic since Wednesday's Republican YouTube debate because four of the questioners appear to be Democrats, including the retired "do ask, do tell" soldier who hogged not one but two microphones, and it's apparently GOP policy to avoid speaking to outsiders until the general election. But when Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan went hunting for Democrats today in that debate's target-rich environment, she still came up empty-handed.

Job Creation AND Loss Slowing Down: What's the Obvious Question?

So today's NY Times section on Business carries a lengthy story by David Leonhardt headlined "A Slowdown in Jobs Lost, and Created." The gist is that in the past "few years" the rates of both new job creation and old job loss have been slowing. Why?

The Irony Never Stops on Pennsylvania Avenue

What else would you expect from our current administration, renowned for its incompetence and its corruption, but a strange Executive Order creating a broad "Performance Improvement Council," along with a "Performance Improvement Officer" for every federal agency?

CNN's Self-Importance is Beyond Debate

At last night's Democratic presidential debate in Las Vegas, CNN moderator Wolf Blitzer spoke for more time than five of the seven candidates, repeatedly getting in the way of substantive discussion by reducing issues to yes/no options. But it wasn't until the audience got its chance to ask questions that the CNN team demonstrated how inflated in self-importance our leading broadcast journalists have become during presidential campaigns.

What's the Difference Between Military Procurement and Waste Treatment?

You've got me. This is such a ridiculous procurement story that it's 50-50 whether you laugh or cry.