Mad pursuit.
The ‘mad pursuit of zero’ precludes policy makers and politicians from ever asking, “Will the benefits of doing this outweigh the costs?”
The ‘mad pursuit of zero’ precludes policy makers and politicians from ever asking, “Will the benefits of doing this outweigh the costs?”
Elections are never purely about policy. Personality and style and comportment matter – particularly to those voters who can go either way.
Somewhere back there, the political contest quietly shifted from Democrats vs. Republicans to Elites vs. the Folks. It’s almost as if new political parties got formed.
Trump is loathed by the ruling class because he opened the doors, turned on the lights and threw up the window shades.
Even though information on any topic is readily available with the tap of a finger, the American populace is both less informed and simultaneously more misinformed than at any time in the last century.
From a single storm in what has otherwise been a very quiet hurricane season, the Left has conclusive proof of the looming climate apocalypse.
If one of the wealthiest enclaves in the western hemisphere can’t feed and house 50 impoverished migrants, how do they imagine that a poor town like, say, Eagle Pass, Texas deals with thousands of such migrants every single week?
After pursuing a blindly green energy policy for a couple of decades, Europe’s greenie chickens are coming home to roost.
For seven decades Elizabeth executed the duties of her office with uncommon grace and dignity.
A small handful of very powerful people in very powerful corners of our government now believe that their judgement as to who should win elections supersedes yours and mine – and they have the capability of acting on that belief.
Just because Molly doesn’t have to pay $10,000 of the student debt she ran up getting her gender studies degree (while living in the Kappa house) doesn’t mean the debt went away.