by Mark Rhoads
The White House press office on July 3 said President Bush will attend the opening ceremonies of the Olympic Games in Beijing. During 14 months in 1974 and 1975, former President George H. W. Bush, father of President George W. Bush, served President Gerald Ford as the Head of the Liaison Office to the People's Republic of China. He did not have the title of "ambassador" from the US because the US still recognized the government of the Republic of China on Taiwan at that time and did not switch until Jimmy Carter started his term in 1977.
But since 1974, many in the Bush family have always had a soft spot for business opportunities associated with the Communist regime in Beijing and that kow-towing obession has been beneficial to the Communist Chinese and effective political cover for a regime with an absolutely horrible record on human rights. As recently as 2003, the elder President Bush was serving the board of The Carlysle Group, a very large private equity investment firm doing business in China.
Continue reading "A Very Bad Call Mr. President" »
by Mark Rhoads
No matter how many times a new European constitution gets defeated by the voters, the bureaucrats in Brussels just keep trying to revive it by skating around their own rules. In a welcome surprise last Friday, voters in Ireland rejected the lastest scheme for more complex, more bureaucratic, and a less free European Union constitution called the Lisbon Treaty.
Continue reading "God Bless the Irish for Being Stubborn and Free" »
by Mark Rhoads
Southern Illinois politicians used to be very fond of the sage axiom "Even a busted clock is right twice a day." I am not normally a fan of Jack Cafferty at CNN who is often a tiresome windbag. But when he is right, he's right. Supposedly ethnic Chinese in Los Angeles are demostrating support for the current Beijing party line in demanding that Cafferty and CNN apologize for Cafferty's recent characterization of Chinese political leaders as the same old gang of "thugs and goons" who have led the Communist regime for almost sixty years. Now there are apologists for American businesses who see profit in China who have previously jumped all over me for my condemnation of Chinese Army killings in Tibet on March 15-16. They will no doubt jump again.
Continue reading "Jack Cafferty, for once, is right" »
by Matt Gauntt
Elvis Costello had a song years ago entitled "Peace, Love and Understanding". In it, he wrote the lyrics:
So where are the strong?
And who are the trusted?
And where is the harmony?
Knowing a little bit about Mr. Costello's politics, I would guess that he and I might not agree with the following political analysis, but his words match the point that I'd like to make. When it comes to Iraq, we need a little love and understanding with our Iraqi counterparts, if we expect to arrive at peace.
Many in the main stream press and on the left side of the political aisle in Congress have suggested numerous maladies facing Iraq and the war effort. Among some of those maladies, is the Iraqi's lack of ability to get to a consensus government. While it is easy for liberals to look down their noses at the Iraqi's, it might serve all of us well to take a short stroll down history's memory lane to see just how well we did as a young country.
Continue reading "Iraq: Peace, Love and Understanding" »
UTICA -- When U.S. Rep. Jerry Weller announced this past fall that he had decided not to seek re-election in 2008, Republicans in the 11th CD scrambled to find a successor. Just before the December petition filing deadline passed, three GOP candidates emerged: Utica resident Jimmy Lee, New Lenox Mayor Tim Baldermann and Terry Heenan, also of New Lenox.
The 11th CD race has almost been totally ignored by the district's mainstream media until just this week, when a call for debates among primary candidates was sent out by a new name and face on Illinois' political landscape: LaSalle County's Jimmy Lee.
Continue reading "IR Focus: Jimmy Lee, GOP candidate in 11th CD" »
Guest Commentary by Chris Robling
HBO’s “White Light / Black Rain, The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” premieres Monday August 6 on the cable network. A documentary by Stephen Okazaki, an Oscar recipient American filmmaker, it fills an empty space that has existed when we have considered the war-ending use of nuclear weapons on August 6 and 9, 1945. Okazaki simply lets victims and participants tell their stories. He shows how individuals of both groups became survivors of the same events.
It is an extraordinary film. I saw it at a preview July 31. Okazaki has done something unique – screening first person accounts of the brilliant summer mornings on which, in a millionth of a second, millions of lives changed forever.
Continue reading "Nuclear Fog" »
by John Ruskin
Below are the actual U.N. voting records of various Arabic/Islamic States as recorded by both the U.S. State Dept and United Nations itself:
- Kuwait votes against the United States 67% of the time
- Qatar votes against the United States 67% of the time
There's more . . .
Continue reading "Your Money At Work" »
The Trib carries a story today about Giving USA Foundation's annual report released Monday that says Americans are incredibly generous -- and not just the Gates and Soroses, but so are Americans who make under $100k a year.
And this says nothing about the billions of dollars America sends overseas through government-related agencies.
Maybe we're not so selfish and greedy after all . . .
Continue reading "Americans set new record in charitable giving" »
By Ralf Seiffe
Republicans have the chance to take the kind of jab at Democrats that the Democrats have served up to our side forever. The question is whether the Republicans will recognize the opportunity and have the sang froid to exploit it.
Continue reading "Denounce Carter" »