Enemy of the Week
Careful What You Say
11.22.02
Holding your tongue doesn’t count if it’s sticking out.
Holding your tongue doesn’t count if it’s sticking out.
Their simmering war gets hotter. Also: Talent no-show. Plus: 2004 jitters.
Only a liberal would find free speech taxing. Has he finally tired of calling Rush Limbaugh a big fat idiot?
A German cut-up bares all for London audiences.
David Letterman, Warren Zevon, and the art of saying goodbye.
The hope is that His SUV doesn’t come equipped with a television.
The liberals’ sense of loss. A new JFK. Cold Canadian syrup. What Ailes meant. Plus much more.
The New Rudy needs the Old Rudy. But why does he need the Old Rudy now?
Even Trent Lott won’t take him seriously. Plus: Rahm Charger.
Why is it that when Israel suffers the loss of hundreds of innocent lives on a daily basis Jews all over the world suddenly become divided between ”left” and ”right”?
For thirty years he has marched across enemy terrain, conquering.
The first crime of Father Amaro, it seems, was ever allowing himself to get mixed up with that gang of mobsters known as the Roman Catholic Church.
Democratic leftward drift favors the Massachusetts senator. But where does that leave Terry McAuliffe?
The liberal paper of record seizes on Bob Woodward’s latest — but without naming him — to trash the man behind Fox News.
Al Gore’s championing of Canadian health care is not exactly new.
It is a quintessential New York story, with something in it for everyone.
Why this sudden interest in John F. Kennedy’s dreadful health problems, which biographers like Thomas Reeves and Richard Reeves documented years ago?
He listens to its every beat. Also: Shays on the run. Plus: All eyes on Mississippi 2003.
Kofi Annan speaks only for himself and all the little Sophies out there.
Not since wolves were re-introduced to Yellowstone Park has there been such a howl.
Atom Egoyan’s curiously unemotional re-telling of the story of the Armenian massacres of 1915 loses itself in its inability to tear itself away from the present day.
Bill Clinton’s new motto: You pay, you lose. Also: Bill Frist’s bill comes due. Also: President Di-Fi.
The election of 2002 looms as big as FDR’s victory in 1932.
Come December 8 Saddam will likely do as he has done with U.N. resolutions for 11 years: harrumph, obfuscate and play cat-and-mouse.
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A man of faith in a godless age is hitting Americans where it hurts.
Mr. and Mrs. American Spectator Reader, let P.J. O’Rourke talk sense to your kids.
In Britain, defending your property can get you life.
The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our culture.
It won’t take long for conservatives to scratch this presidential wannabe off their 2008 scorecard.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it, makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so many people seem to be hostile to it?
Was the President done in by the economy, or by the politics of the economy?
H/T to National Review Online