The U.S. drops its support for Honduran former president Manuel Zelaya. Hugo Chavez says nothing, a development in itself.
Maybe we could sell other countries our celebrities — as long as they promise to take good care of them and groom them and give them walks every day.
What’s in a name? Words can demonize the innocent and angelize the culpable.
All the warning signs were there. This was no random act of violence.
The Pentagon has yet to define a threat model to identify, let alone address, jihadism.
It is startling the lengths to which some will go to remain in politically correct denial. (See also "Dissent is the Highest Form of Patriotism" by Richard Fernandez and "Political Correctness Runs Amuck in the U.S. Government (Continued)" by Roger Simon.)
The Israeli Foreign Ministry contacts a Pajamas Media writer regarding his report on Iranian rockets fired at U.S. troops in Iraq two years ago. Why?
When the president favorably quotes a Koranic passage popular among jihadists, the answer should be clear.
If, for example, Democrats are hell-bent on massive, "comprehensive" reform of the health care system, should Republicans really work with them to pass it?
What happens when you combine an iconic American brand with potentially the world’s biggest market?