Dinesh D’Souza on why they hate us, The Enemy at Home, and the culture war.
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Dinesh D’Souza on why they hate us, The Enemy at Home, and the culture war. John Edwards has normalized the distasteful habit of men obsessing over their grooming and appearance. David Yezzi on his favorite poets, Tupac Shakur, and the nature of poetry. The bottom line is that Mr. Hilton’s acerbic treatment of celebrities is exactly what those vapid and intellectually impoverished bonobos deserve. Mark Steyn on humor, theater, the process of writing, and the Montreal massacre. With the help of co-author Raoul Felder, Jackie Mason has put together a mostly lighthearted series of vignettes illustrating the schmuckery of 62 persons who have done much to advance the cause of human misery. A review of Schmucks! Jeremy Lott on virtue, hypocrisy, the culture wars, and his latest book, On Hypocrisy. John Derbyshire on many things, including “Woman’s Town” in China where women will rule and men obey. Its motto is to be “Women never make mistakes and men can never refuse woman’s requests.” The Extreme Makeover illustrates Hillary’s unfamiliarity with the virtue of responsibility, and that she is every bit as prolific and stunning a liar as her husband. The junior senator’s personality revolves around a lust for power, a need to control others, and rampant insecurity. Anger and irritability are natural attributes, and but only her [...] America’s true sickness isn’t racism; it’s the evil therapism society tries to interpose upon our relations with others. More fearless commentators like Ann Coulter — on both the Right and the Left — are precisely what this country needs. In Indoctrination U, David Horowitz chronicles his speaking tour in support of the Academic Bill of Rights, which prompted protests, pies, and other displays of leftist tolerance. John O’Sullivan on Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Pope John Paul II, the war in Iraq, and his latest book. In her new book The Female Thing, Laura Kipnis argues that it is their own “inner woman,” as opposed to men or a global conspiracy, that acts as the biggest barrier to women realizing the progressive utopia they deserve. Patricia Pearson on chivalry justice, female violence, and Camille Paglia. Jim Antle on internet journalism, his personal writing schedule, The American Conservative, and Hillary Clinton in 2008. Bernard Chapin takes on Professor W.C. Harris, author of "In My Day It Used to Be Called a Limp Wrist: Flip-Floppers, Nelly Boys, and Homophobic Rhetoric in the 2004 US Presidential Campaign." Most of Patrick J. Buchanan's insights in his new book are obvious, which is rather appalling in light of how irresponsibly they are ignored by our rulers. A review of his new book, State of Emergency. Carrie Lukas on political correctness, equity feminists, divorcing Uncle Sam, and her new book, The Politically Incorrect Guide to Women, Sex and Feminism. Bruce Bartlett on taxes, the Libertarian Party, and his disillusionment with George W. Bush. In The Shadow Party, David Horowitz and Richard Poe document the unwritten partnership between George Soros — whom the authors dub the Lenin of the Shadow Party — and Hillary Rodham Clinton. When aggression meets submission the result is slaughter. A review of Shelby Steele's White Guilt. John Daly is the epitome of a southern good old boy who happens to be plagued by, in the vernacular of our day, some serious issues. A review of his autobiography, My Life in and Out of the Rough. Howard Zinn contends that all history is skewed by the mind that conveys it, and that the best historians must be “engaged” in political and societal matters. A review of Howard Zinn — You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train. The Divided State does raise some important questions, but they surely are not the ones the film intended. |
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