By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on February 22nd, 2008 There is a difference between wishing that the world was a better place and offering to “change” it, and viewing the world as it actually exists, and attempting to improve it.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on February 6th, 2008 We’re going to lose in November not because the other side has a better vision for America. We’re going to lose because the other side had a better grip on reality.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on February 1st, 2008 Only those who play the game get to reap the rewards.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on January 16th, 2008 When asked to tell us what we actually need to do, rather than tell us what we all need to believe, ideologues on the Far Left and Far Right are uncharacteristically silent.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on January 12th, 2008 Those who do not learn the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on January 5th, 2008 Americans like to kill people for no reason — now that’s entertainment!
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on December 10th, 2007 Given the choices we have, do we use our vote to make a statement, or to win an election?
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on November 16th, 2007 There can’t be a solution until there is a problem.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on October 19th, 2007 Another liberal competes in the arena of ideas by opting out of the debate once his ideas are challenged.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on October 12th, 2007 You may think you know the answer. But think again.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on October 9th, 2007 There has to be a legitimate outrage to protest, before one can protest an outrage legitimately.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on October 4th, 2007 It’s a good thing we have a legion of experts to guide us through the trials and tribulations of life. Otherwise, we might not have any idea about what is really going on.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on September 5th, 2007 More answers to some commonly asked questions.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on August 27th, 2007 We need real world policy prescriptions, not high-minded slogans, to deal with the problems this country faces.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on August 21st, 2007 The answer is: they’re both equally nuts. In certain cases, although the foundations of these philosophies are based on polar opposite assumptions, the actual policies they propose are virtually indistinguishable from one another.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on August 9th, 2007 Matching political rhetoric with reality.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on July 27th, 2007 More answers to some commonly asked questions.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on July 13th, 2007 In the end, Raymond Ingles confuses the expression of a so-called public “morality” with the content of a God-given universal moral code, and equates rational action to further an individual’s wants, needs and desires with the intrinsic moral content of human behavior.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on July 11th, 2007 More answers to commonly asked questions.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on July 2nd, 2007 Some answers in life are complicated. Some aren’t. Here’s a quick guide to help understand the questions I’m most frequently asked.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on June 25th, 2007 Just when you thought it couldn’t get any loonier, along comes an email from Vermont.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on June 15th, 2007 Trust is something that must be earned over time, not simply bestowed upon request — whether it involves your family life, or the adoption of a new national immigration policy.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on June 8th, 2007 What do we really know, how do we know it, and what does it all mean anyway?
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on May 28th, 2007 Here’s a quick guide to the current debate on illegal immigration, and a practical solution that transcends all the major points.
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By Phillip Ellis Jackson, on May 18th, 2007 How would history have treated the same events if the “other guy” had won the election?
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