Today’s hysteria about the Trump administration was “already deeply seeded in the federal government throughout the 2016 campaign and the 2016–17 transition.” As Victor Davis Hanson explains in NRO, there seems to have been a number of powerful Obama officials who thought they had the moral right to nullify Trump. Many questions remain, “but Democrats, […]
Scheuer to Trump: Hit the Bastards Hard and Often
In a new post on his blog Non-Intervention.com, Michael Scheuer, the former head of the CIA’s bin Laden unit, encourages President Trump to “keep striking the bastards hard and often, and yell if you need help.” Scheuer is referring to the Nunes memo, and thinks the President needs to take drastic measures to renew loyalty […]
Christopher Steele and the FBI’s Due Diligence?
Having trouble navigating through the non-stop spin on the 2016 government surveillance abuses? The House Intelligence Committee’s memo reportedly is to be released today. Just in time is the WSJ’s Kimberley Strassel’s non-partisan guide on what to look for and what to ignore. She writes: Rationale. Did the FBI have cause to open a full-blown […]
Buchanan: The Media is Terrified the Deplorables Were Right
With the Trump administration gearing up to release a House Intelligence Committee memo on the FBI’s surveillance practices, Pat Buchanan, writing at The American Conservative, says the media is terrified. The reason they are scared says Pat, is that the memo may confirm that the Deplorables were right, and the media was wrong about efforts […]
Trump Speech “Impressive” Says TAC’s Robert W. Merry
Last night President Donald Trump gave his first State of the Union address to Congress. Writing at The American Conservative, Robert W. Merry (editor of The American Conservative and author of President McKinley: Architect of the American Century) called the speech “impressive,” and outlined some good, and some bad. Best of all, as Merry writes, the speech […]
A Change in D.C.’s Tone?
Optimistic was the general tone of President Trump’s State of the Union speech, writes Gerald Baker in the WSJ’s The 10-Point. Optimism was a constant of the evening and part of a different Trump that the president wanted voters to see, writes the Journal’s Gerald F. Seib. His speech differed starkly from his darker tone taken […]
My Takeaway from President Trump’s State of the Union Address
Even when called on to work together, Democrats sat on their hands during President Trump’s first State of the Union address. Despite a speech that at many times transcended partisanship, cheering on great American themes, Democrats seemed determined not to applaud during the president’s speech. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi was most noticeably annoyed during […]
Donald Trump—Blurting out the Truth
In Impromptus, National Review’s Jay Nordlinger writes on what Jay calls President Trump’s refreshing candor: I’ll tell you something I like about Trump — his occasional bursts of candor. You remember when he fired the FBI director? His flacks said he did so because the director had treated Hillary Clinton unfairly and all that. Trump […]
Charlie Daniels: America Was Nearly Lost to Clinton Conspiracy Machine
In an editorial at CNS, singer and songwriter Charlie Daniels lays out exactly why America dodged a bullet by not electing Hillary Clinton in November of 2016. Charlie, unsurprisingly, pulls no punches. Daniels writes: We almost lost our country last fall. America was unwittingly on the precipice of becoming a nation whose government was willing […]
The Fiscal Absurdity of Our Government Shutdown
One major difference between our latest government shutdown and the 2013 shutdown is how the shutdown is affecting our national parks, Bright reminds readers (The Federalist). In 2013, many national parks and monuments were barricaded. By contrast, this Administration’s Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke, who was at the World War II Memorial to greet […]
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