Drive-Bys Shocked to Learn Pope Francis is Catholic. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, March 14, 2013.
Statists Must Wipe Out Religion and Instill Blind Faith in Government. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, March 14, 2013.
The U.S. Media Just Can’t Understand the Vatican. By Jim Geraghty. National Review Online, March 14, 2013.
Limbaugh: “Pope Francis Is Bad News For The Drive-By Media.” Audio. Daily Rushbo, March 14, 2013. YouTube.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
The Myth of the Jewish Exile from the Land of Israel. By Israel J. Yuval.
The Myth of the Jewish Exile from the Land of Israel: A Demonstration of Irenic Scholarship. By Israel J. Yuval. Common Knowledge, Vol. 12, No. 1 (Winter 2006).
No, Rivkele, The Jews Weren’t Driven into Exile by the Romans. By Jerry Haber. The Magnes Zionist, July 29, 2007.
No, Rivkele, The Jews Weren’t Driven into Exile by the Romans. By Jerry Haber. The Magnes Zionist, July 29, 2007.
Israel’s Shas Party’s Anti-Russian Election Ad: A True Jew Won’t Kiss a Russian Shikseh.
Shas Ad: A True Jew Won’t Kiss a Russian Shikseh. By Jerry Haber. The Magnes Zionist, January 9, 2013.
Shas election ads: Using Jewish conversion for incitement. By Yair Ettinger. Haaretz, January 9, 2013.
Shas to shelve controversial “conversion star” campaign ad. By Jonathan Lis. Haaretz, January 9, 2013.
Converting Israel’s conversion law. By Roni Abramson. Haaretz, January 13, 2013.
Shas election ads: Using Jewish conversion for incitement. By Yair Ettinger. Haaretz, January 9, 2013.
Shas to shelve controversial “conversion star” campaign ad. By Jonathan Lis. Haaretz, January 9, 2013.
Converting Israel’s conversion law. By Roni Abramson. Haaretz, January 13, 2013.
Hamas’s Disenchantment With Morsi. By Hussein Ibish.
Hamas’s DesengaƱo With Morsi. By Hussein Ibish. The Daily Beast, March 11, 2013.
More on Egypt and Morsi here.
Ibish:
English has by far the largest vocabulary of any language, but there are still times when we have to look beyond its confines to convey a particular meaning. There is a Spanish word, desengaƱo, which connotes a combination of disappointment, disenchantment, disillusionment and despair, for which we have no precise English equivalent. And this, surely, best sums up the current attitude of the Hamas rulers in Gaza towards Egypt’s new government.
Many Hamas leaders were apparently convinced that the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and elsewhere would mean a radical transformation of its fortunes and hold the key to its eventual victory over secular nationalists for control of the Palestinian national movement. At a minimum, they expected the new government of President Mohammed Morsi would adopt a much friendlier foreign policy, ease the blockade, pressure Israel and provide Hamas with a steady stream of support.
As the months have dragged on, it's become clear that this not only isn’t the case, but that the Morsi government is at least as problematic from Hamas’s perspective as its much-hated Mubarak predecessor. The recent flooding of Gaza smuggling tunnels by the Egyptian military with raw sewage (in contrast to Mubarak’s occasional use of tear gas), pursuant to an Egyptian court order to close all such tunnels, is only the last straw.
Egypt has moved to stop the transfer of all goods, including huge shipments of fuel, through the tunnels and has again closed the Rafah border crossing. The Egyptian side of the blockade has never been so intense. These actions have had a devastating effect on the Gaza economy. They have brought reconstruction efforts almost to a halt, and sent the price of cement and building materials soaring. And they are costing both Hamas and Gaza businesses at least hundreds of millions of dollars, if not more, in lost revenues.
Moreover, Egypt reportedly recently refused to allow Hamas to establish a formal office in Cairo. Even more insultingly, Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood officials reportedly urged Hamas to abandon “armed struggle” against Israel and follow their example and “implement jihad in other ways.” Hamas, of course, denies these reports, but they scan perfectly with all other available information and political logic.
Several Hamas leaders in Gaza have erupted in anger in recent days, in spite of obvious efforts for many weeks to contain their rage and express “understanding” of Egypt’s predicament. Senior Hamas leader Mahmoud Al-Zahar expressed the group’s growing infuriation by declaring, “The previous [Egyptian] regime was cruel, but it never allowed Gaza to starve.” Yet Hamas leaders, including Al-Zahar, continue to pin their hopes on an eventual transformation of the Egyptian policy and, in spite of everything, pledge undying support for Morsi.
After all, what other choice do they really have? From a practical point of view, the answer is to increase trade with Israel, and Israeli-permitted exports to Europe and elsewhere. And, to their considerable chagrin and embarrassment, this is exactly what Hamas leaders have been doing, insofar as the Israelis have allowed it. As The Economist noted, this “makes Hamas more dependent on—and subservient to—Israel, to ensure vital supplies continue,” as opposed to what they expected to be their new major partner and, indeed, salvation: the Muslim Brotherhood government in Cairo.
No doubt from a purely ideological and theoretical perspective, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt is more sympathetic to Hamas at every level than the Mubarak regime had been. But there are ample reasons why a number of Israeli analysts recently argued, as I also have several times in the past, that Egypt's foreign policy hasn’t actually changed even if its official rhetoric has shifted somewhat.
First, while the ideology of Egypt’s presidency may have changed, its interests, challenges and options have not. Morsi may wish he lived in a different world, or inherited a different country from Mubarak, but he hasn’t. Egypt is still Egypt, Egyptians still Egyptians, and their interests will always come first for them. Among other things, Egypt has a vested interest in not being sucked back into control of, and responsibility for, Gaza. And it has a mutually advantageous peace treaty with Israel that no rational government is going to gamble with.
Second, Egypt’s national security policy remains both de facto and de jure in the hands of the military, which does not share the president’s ideology. So even if Morsi were inclined to intervene on behalf of Hamas at the expense of Egyptian interests, the military would almost certainly prevent this. As an Army spokesperson rather gently explained, “We realize how much our brothers in Palestine suffer, but that doesn’t mean that the Egyptian Armed Forces will allow anyone to harm national interests.”
Third, Egypt has a massive national security crisis in the Sinai Peninsula, particularly in the regions bordering Gaza. There, political extremists, terrorists, bandits and others run rampant, killing Egyptian soldiers, attacking the gas pipeline to Israel and disrupting almost all Egyptian government activities in the area. This is not only a national security issue for the military. It is a grave political challenge for Morsi, who cannot be seen as a president who is incapable of securing strategically vital areas of his own country.
It must be understood that smuggling tunnels from Egypt to Gaza run in both directions. There is a symbiotic and cooperative relationship between Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza and those in Sinai. Therefore there is no reason to suspect that Morsi is inclined to restrain the Egyptian military, despite any abstract ideological affinities towards Hamas.
For these reasons, and more, there’s no reason to expect that Egypt’s basic stance towards Hamas, Gaza, Israel or the rest of the region is likely to undergo any major transformation in the foreseeable future. Rhetoric on both sides notwithstanding, relations between Egypt and Gaza have become in every meaningful sense worse under Morsi than they were under Mubarak. As an Islamist, Morsi can more easily claim to his public that he’s acting in the essential national interest, perhaps even contrary to his own inclinations, and imply that it’s really the military that’s to blame.
As for Hamas, all they are left with is collapsing popularity, a retreat into increased reactionary social repression and misogyny to play to their core base and bolster their Islamist credentials, and the increasingly threadbare fantasy that Islamist rule in Cairo and elsewhere will save Gaza and deliver control of the broader Palestinian national movement to its de facto rulers.
Toxic Masculinity. By Jaclyn Friedman.
Toxic Masculinity. By Jaclyn Friedman. The American Prospect, March 13, 2013.
Steubenville and Challenging Rape Culture in Sports. By Dave Zirin. The Nation, March 13, 2013.
Steubenville and Challenging Rape Culture in Sports. By Dave Zirin. The Nation, March 13, 2013.
Limbaugh: Catholic Church “On Its Way To Irrelevancy If It Doesn’t Start Distancing” From Democratic Party.
Limbaugh: Catholic Church “On Its Way To Irrelevancy If It Doesn’t Start Distancing” From Democratic Party. By Meenal Vamburkar. Mediaite, March 12, 2013.
Even Bob Schieffer Has Limits. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, March 12, 2013.
Limbaugh:
I would say the Catholic Church is on its way to irrelevancy if it doesn’t start distancing itself from the Democrat Party and the idea that liberalism equals charity. Because liberalism does not equal charity, and that’s how the church got sucked into supporting Democrats. Not just the Catholic Church, but all religions got sucked in to supporting the Democrat Party and all these movements, all these social causes, because they began to equate government largesse with charity. And it isn’t.
The government is not a charitable organization. Charity exists because people willingly donate their own money to the cause. That’s not what happens with government social programs. That money is extracted from people, and it’s spent on things that many people would never spend that money on if they had any control over it. But the church got roped in, and they weren’t the only ones that got roped in.
Even Bob Schieffer Has Limits. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, March 12, 2013.
Limbaugh:
I would say the Catholic Church is on its way to irrelevancy if it doesn’t start distancing itself from the Democrat Party and the idea that liberalism equals charity. Because liberalism does not equal charity, and that’s how the church got sucked into supporting Democrats. Not just the Catholic Church, but all religions got sucked in to supporting the Democrat Party and all these movements, all these social causes, because they began to equate government largesse with charity. And it isn’t.
The government is not a charitable organization. Charity exists because people willingly donate their own money to the cause. That’s not what happens with government social programs. That money is extracted from people, and it’s spent on things that many people would never spend that money on if they had any control over it. But the church got roped in, and they weren’t the only ones that got roped in.
The Coming Collapse of the Middle East? By Fred Kaplan.
The Coming Collapse of the Middle East? By Fred Kaplan. Slate, March 11, 2013.
Kaplan:
On Feb. 26, 2003, President George W. Bush gave a speech at the American Enterprise Institute, spelling out what he saw as the link between freedom and security in the Middle East. “A liberated Iraq,” he said, “can show the power of freedom to transform that vital region” by serving “as a dramatic and inspiring example … for other nations in the region.”
He invaded Iraq three weeks later. The spread of freedom wasn’t the war’s driving motive, but it was considered an enticing side effect, and not just by Bush. His deputy secretary of defense, Paul Wolfowitz, had mused the previous fall that the spark ignited by regime-change “would be something quite significant for Iraq . . . It’s going to cast a very large shadow, starting with Syria and Iran, but across the whole Arab world.”
Ten years later, it’s clear that the Iraq war cast “a very large shadow” indeed, but it was a much darker shadow than the fantasists who ran American foreign policy back then foresaw. Bush believed that freedom was humanity’s natural state: Blow away the manhole-cover that a tyrant pressed down on his people, and freedom would gush forth like a geyser. Yet when Saddam Hussein was toppled, the main thing liberated was the blood hatred that decades of dictatorship had suppressed beneath the surface.
Bush had been warned. Two months before the invasion, during Super Bowl weekend, three prominent Iraqi exiles paid a visit to the Oval Office. They were grateful and excited about the coming military campaign, but at one point in the meeting they stressed that U.S. forces would have to tamp down the sectarian tensions that would certainly reignite between Sunnis and Shiites in the wake of Saddam’s toppling. Bush looked at the exiles as if they were speaking Martian. They spent much of their remaining time, explaining to him that Iraq had two kinds of Arabs, whose quarrels dated back centuries. Clearly, he’d never heard about this before.
Many of Bush’s advisers did know something about this, but not as much as anyone launching a war in Iraq, and thus overhauling the country’s entire political order, should have known.
Kaplan:
On Feb. 26, 2003, President George W. Bush gave a speech at the American Enterprise Institute, spelling out what he saw as the link between freedom and security in the Middle East. “A liberated Iraq,” he said, “can show the power of freedom to transform that vital region” by serving “as a dramatic and inspiring example … for other nations in the region.”
He invaded Iraq three weeks later. The spread of freedom wasn’t the war’s driving motive, but it was considered an enticing side effect, and not just by Bush. His deputy secretary of defense, Paul Wolfowitz, had mused the previous fall that the spark ignited by regime-change “would be something quite significant for Iraq . . . It’s going to cast a very large shadow, starting with Syria and Iran, but across the whole Arab world.”
Ten years later, it’s clear that the Iraq war cast “a very large shadow” indeed, but it was a much darker shadow than the fantasists who ran American foreign policy back then foresaw. Bush believed that freedom was humanity’s natural state: Blow away the manhole-cover that a tyrant pressed down on his people, and freedom would gush forth like a geyser. Yet when Saddam Hussein was toppled, the main thing liberated was the blood hatred that decades of dictatorship had suppressed beneath the surface.
Bush had been warned. Two months before the invasion, during Super Bowl weekend, three prominent Iraqi exiles paid a visit to the Oval Office. They were grateful and excited about the coming military campaign, but at one point in the meeting they stressed that U.S. forces would have to tamp down the sectarian tensions that would certainly reignite between Sunnis and Shiites in the wake of Saddam’s toppling. Bush looked at the exiles as if they were speaking Martian. They spent much of their remaining time, explaining to him that Iraq had two kinds of Arabs, whose quarrels dated back centuries. Clearly, he’d never heard about this before.
Many of Bush’s advisers did know something about this, but not as much as anyone launching a war in Iraq, and thus overhauling the country’s entire political order, should have known.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
The Actual Politics of Professors. By Neil Gross.
The Actual Politics of Professors. By Neil Gross. The Chronicle of Higher Education, March 5, 2013.
On the Temple Mount, a Battle Brews Over Jewish Prayer. By Matti Friedman.
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The Dome
of the Rock, March 1, 2013 (Photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90).
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On the Temple Mount, a battle brews over Jewish prayer. By Matti Friedman. The Times of Israel, March 12, 2013.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Charles Krauthammer: Obama Wants to Tranform America Into a Social Democracy.
Will Obama finally cut some programs? Krauthammer’s take on federal spending. Video. The O’Reilly Factor. Fox News, February 12,
2013.
Give the Children the Vote? By Chrystia Freeland.
Give the children the vote? By Chrystia Freeland. Reuters, March 8, 2013.
Fighting Grey: Why do China’s Leaders Dye Their Hair? By Celia Hatton.
Fighting grey: Why do China’s leaders dye their hair? By Celia Hatton. BBC News, March 11, 2013.
The Axis of Ennui. By David Brooks.
The Axis of Ennui. By David Brooks. New York Times, March 11, 2013.
The Real Winners of the Global Economy: The Material Boys. By Joel Kotkin. New Geography, March 6, 2013.
The Real Winners of the Global Economy: The Material Boys. By Joel Kotkin. New Geography, March 6, 2013.
In the South and West, a Tax on Being Poor. By Katherine S. Newman.
In the South and West, a Tax on Being Poor. By Katherine S. Newman. New York Times, March 9, 2013.
Conservatism and the Search for Apostates. By Peter Wehner.
Conservatism and the Search for Apostates. By Peter Wehner. Commentary, March 11, 2013.
The End of the Two-State Solution. By Ben Birnbaum.
The End of the Two-State Solution. By Ben Birnbaum. The New Republic, March 11, 2013. Also find it here.
Did the Palestinians Murder Baby Omar. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, March 12, 2013.
Don’t Let Facts Hinder Israel-Bashing. By Jonathan S. Tobin. Commentary, March 12, 2013.
The Misplaced Faith in Abbas. By Seth Mandel. Commentary, March 11, 2013.
Why Debate the Jewish State? Prejudice. By Jonathan S. Tobin. Commentary, March 12, 2013.
On Questioning the Jewish State. By Joseph Levine. New York Times, March 9, 2013.
Flawed Questions About Israel’s Right To Exist. By Mira Sucharov. The Daily Beast, March 12, 2013.
Why BDS Isn’t Compatible With Two States. By Mira Sucharov. The Daily Beast, February 8, 2013.
Who Is a Liberal Zionist? By Jerry Haber. The Daily Beast, March 11, 2013. Also at The Magnes Zionist.
Did the Palestinians Murder Baby Omar. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, March 12, 2013.
Don’t Let Facts Hinder Israel-Bashing. By Jonathan S. Tobin. Commentary, March 12, 2013.
The Misplaced Faith in Abbas. By Seth Mandel. Commentary, March 11, 2013.
Why Debate the Jewish State? Prejudice. By Jonathan S. Tobin. Commentary, March 12, 2013.
On Questioning the Jewish State. By Joseph Levine. New York Times, March 9, 2013.
Flawed Questions About Israel’s Right To Exist. By Mira Sucharov. The Daily Beast, March 12, 2013.
Why BDS Isn’t Compatible With Two States. By Mira Sucharov. The Daily Beast, February 8, 2013.
Who Is a Liberal Zionist? By Jerry Haber. The Daily Beast, March 11, 2013. Also at The Magnes Zionist.
Is War Civilized? By David A. Bell.
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| Attack of the Prussian Infantry, June 4, 1745. By Carl Rƶchling. Wikipedia. |
Is War Civilized? The Evolution of the Battlefield. By David A. Bell. The New Republic, March 3, 2013. Also find it here.
What the Internet Did to Aaron Swartz. By Noam Scheiber.
So Open It Hurts: What the Internet did to Aaron Swartz. By Noam Scheiber. The New Republic, February 25, 2013. Also find it here.
The Inside Story of Why Aaron Swartz Broke Into MIT and JSTOR. By Noam Scheiber. The New Republic, February 13, 2013.
Aaron Swartz, Internet Pioneer, Found Dead Amid Prosecutor “Bullying” In Unconventional Case. The Huffington Post, January 12, 2013.
The Inside Story of Why Aaron Swartz Broke Into MIT and JSTOR. By Noam Scheiber. The New Republic, February 13, 2013.
Aaron Swartz, Internet Pioneer, Found Dead Amid Prosecutor “Bullying” In Unconventional Case. The Huffington Post, January 12, 2013.
The Great Uprising. By James C. Bennett.
The Great Uprising. By James C. Bennett. National Review, March 25, 2013.
Review of 1775: A Good Year for Revolution. By Kevin Phillips. New York: Viking, 2013. 656 pp.
Bennett:
Shelley described George III in 1819 as “an old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king,” an example of “rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know, / But leech-like to their fainting country cling.” This would not have been a fair description of the George III of 1775, who was sane, sober, and dedicated to his work — yet it was a perennially accurate description of a governing paradigm that has always failed. Many ruling classes will blindly adhere to existing policies, doubling down on the very features that make them disastrous, and reach for coercion where reason and persuasion can no longer serve.
Kevin Phillips has written a timely and useful portrait of the beginning of the end of the first British Empire and the mercantilist system that guided its rulers. The story he tells is a fascinating one for people interested in that era, but it has contemporary relevance as well. It is a case study for those of us seeking to understand the rapidly approaching end of the failing institutions of our own era: big bureaucratic government, labor unions, and crony corporations. Just as George III did, our rulers cling to power and seek to intensify the very features that are causing their downfall.
Review of 1775: A Good Year for Revolution. By Kevin Phillips. New York: Viking, 2013. 656 pp.
Bennett:
Shelley described George III in 1819 as “an old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king,” an example of “rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know, / But leech-like to their fainting country cling.” This would not have been a fair description of the George III of 1775, who was sane, sober, and dedicated to his work — yet it was a perennially accurate description of a governing paradigm that has always failed. Many ruling classes will blindly adhere to existing policies, doubling down on the very features that make them disastrous, and reach for coercion where reason and persuasion can no longer serve.
Kevin Phillips has written a timely and useful portrait of the beginning of the end of the first British Empire and the mercantilist system that guided its rulers. The story he tells is a fascinating one for people interested in that era, but it has contemporary relevance as well. It is a case study for those of us seeking to understand the rapidly approaching end of the failing institutions of our own era: big bureaucratic government, labor unions, and crony corporations. Just as George III did, our rulers cling to power and seek to intensify the very features that are causing their downfall.
Sam Tanenhaus Smears Conservatism. By Ramesh Ponnuru and Jonah Goldberg.
Sam’s Smear: Preposterous history from The New Republic. By Ramesh Ponnuru and Jonah Goldberg. National Review, March 25, 2013. Also find it here.
Why the GOP Is the Party of White People. By Sam Tanenhaus. The New Republic, February 10, 2013.
Why the GOP Is the Party of White People. By Sam Tanenhaus. The New Republic, February 10, 2013.
Women Troubles. By Mona Charen.
Women Troubles. By Mona Charen. National Review Online, March 12, 2013.
The Right’s Take on the New Ryan Budget.
Ryan’s Conservative Budget. By Andrew Stiles. National Review Online, March 12, 2013.
The GOP Plan to Balance the Budget by 2023. By Paul Ryan. Wall Street Journal, March 12, 2013.
The Path to Prosperity: A Responsible, Balanced Budget. By Paul Ryan and the House Budget Committee. PaulRyan.house.gov, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s budget: Reagan conservatism with a side of deficit reduction. By Conn Carroll. Washington Examiner, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan Presents a New Budget. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, March 12, 2013.
The GOP Plan to Balance the Budget by 2023. By Paul Ryan. Wall Street Journal, March 12, 2013.
The Path to Prosperity: A Responsible, Balanced Budget. By Paul Ryan and the House Budget Committee. PaulRyan.house.gov, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s budget: Reagan conservatism with a side of deficit reduction. By Conn Carroll. Washington Examiner, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan Presents a New Budget. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, March 12, 2013.
Israel: Where Soccer Fans Boo Their Own Players When They Score. By Dave Zirin.
Israel: Where Soccer Fans Boo Their Own Players When They Score. By Dave Zirin. The Nation, March 11, 2013.
Some Fear a Soccer Team’s Racist Fans Hold a Mirror Up to Israel. By Jodi Rudoren. New York Times, January 30, 2013.
“It’s not racism. The Muslim players just shouldn’t be here”: Beitar Jerusalem fans walk out over signing of two Muslim Chechen players. By Alistair Dawber and Shaun Walker. The Independent, March 4, 2013.
No Arabs Allowed. By Dan Ephron. The Daily Beast, February 20, 2012.
Hundreds of Beitar Jerusalem fans beat up Arab workers in mall; no arrests. By Oz Rosenberg. Haaretz, March 23, 2012.
Some Fear a Soccer Team’s Racist Fans Hold a Mirror Up to Israel. By Jodi Rudoren. New York Times, January 30, 2013.
“It’s not racism. The Muslim players just shouldn’t be here”: Beitar Jerusalem fans walk out over signing of two Muslim Chechen players. By Alistair Dawber and Shaun Walker. The Independent, March 4, 2013.
No Arabs Allowed. By Dan Ephron. The Daily Beast, February 20, 2012.
Hundreds of Beitar Jerusalem fans beat up Arab workers in mall; no arrests. By Oz Rosenberg. Haaretz, March 23, 2012.
The Left’s Take on the New Ryan Budget.
What Paul Ryan’s Budget Means for Women. By Bryce Covert. The Nation, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s Bumper-Sticker-Slogan Budget. By John Nichols. The Nation, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s Budget Still Relies on the Fantasy of Obamacare Repeal. By Jill Lawrence. The Atlantic, March 11, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s budget: Social engineering with a side of deficit reduction. By Ezra Klein. Washington Post, March 12, 2013.
Ryan in Fantasyland. By Eugene Robinson. Washington Post, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan Throws Granny Off the Cliff. Video. The Agenda Project, May 17, 2011. YouTube.
Paul Ryan Has Granny Issues. Video. SaveGranny.org., March 11, 2013. YouTube.
Paul Ryan’s Bumper-Sticker-Slogan Budget. By John Nichols. The Nation, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s Budget Still Relies on the Fantasy of Obamacare Repeal. By Jill Lawrence. The Atlantic, March 11, 2013.
Paul Ryan’s budget: Social engineering with a side of deficit reduction. By Ezra Klein. Washington Post, March 12, 2013.
Ryan in Fantasyland. By Eugene Robinson. Washington Post, March 12, 2013.
Paul Ryan Throws Granny Off the Cliff. Video. The Agenda Project, May 17, 2011. YouTube.
Paul Ryan Has Granny Issues. Video. SaveGranny.org., March 11, 2013. YouTube.
Megyn Kelly Debates Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s Views on Women in the Workplace.
Megyn Kelly Debates Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s Views on Women in the Workplace. Video. America Live with Megyn Kelly. Fox News Insider, March 11, 2013.
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