Speaking of Canadian resources, Washington Post reporter and columnist David Broder thinks the new Washington D.C. baseball team should be named the "Washington Reagans." Works for me. (But I'm still going to root for the Pirates.) ... READ MORE
National Center Senior Fellow Bonner Cohen is attempting to decipher Vladimir's Putin's strategy on Kyoto. He's just written a piece for newspapers nationwide. The Ft. Wayne News-Sentinel is the first paper to publish it. Money quote: The wily former spymaster ... READ MORE
Did John Kerry just tell an audience he can tell that none of them make over $200,000 a year just by looking at them? I suggest he read this book. Addendum: Michelle Malkin noticed the same thing ... READ MORE
Via Stop the Bleating!, which credits The Volokh Conspiracy: A website featuring old political TV ads. It has my #1 all-time favorite political commercial, the Reagan-Bush 1984 "Bear in the Woods." (Go to the website's 1984 GOP section and click ... READ MORE
National Center executive director David W. Almasi reports on his experiences at the U.S.-Russian Investment Symposium: In the 1984 presidential race, Ronald Reagan's campaign wasn't afraid to talk about the bear in the woods. At the time, the bear represented ... READ MORE
You've got to hand it to those Blame America Firsters -- even in the most improbable circumstances, they can find a way to Blame America First. Consider what this Canadian says in a story appearing in Britain's Independent about the ... READ MORE
One of the featured speakers at two prestigious symposiums in Washington this week on ways to promote new U.S.-Russian investment and business is a Russian government minister around whom allegations of corruption swirl. Since the rule of law is a ... READ MORE
I presume it is because of the VP candidates' debate Tuesday night, but for the last hour or so we've been getting a lot of hits on one of our newsletters from last year, probably because of the lead article, ... READ MORE
Via Instapundit comes a link to a story and video of AFL-CIO members attacking Bush-Cheney offices in Orlando and Miami, apparently to voice complaints over the Bush Administration's new overtime rules. Gotta love the softly nuanced way organized labor expresses ... READ MORE