Morning Briefing
For October 25, 2013
1. Follow the Law
Vladimir Lenin is said to have observed, “the
worse, the better,” meaning the worse things got for Russians the
better it was for the communists.
Lately, the left has taken to calling conservatives “Leninists” for our refusal to fix Obamacare.
The implicit acknowledgement here is that Obamacare is going to make things worse, despite their claims to the contrary.
No conservative wants things to get worse. We
just know things will get worse. Obamacare will be deeply destructive.
People are already seeing it. The only way Obamacare would ever work is
if people behaved irrationally. It is a system that requires the young
to go out and by their own insurance, but allows them to stay on their
parents’ insurance until they are well into their twenties. The law
operates only if people do not behave like people. . . . please click here for the rest of the post →
2. Americans for Tax Reform’s Ryan Ellis Thinks Tea Party Activists Are “Freaking Retarded”
When last we checked in on Ryan Ellis, the
Tax Policy Director for Americans for Tax Reform, he was online saying
Ted Cruz can go to hell and comparing Cruz to Aaron Burr.
Not content to express his hatred of Cruz, Ellis is now going after the tea party. Like with Cruz, his tweet speaks for itself . . . please click here for the rest of the post →
3. Obama on Syria: “Being President is Boring and Hard”
The
New York Times has an article out now laying out the White House’s
approach to the decision-making process on Syria, and the picture it
paints, whether the Times wishes to admit it or not, is not pretty, to
put it mildly. It acknowledges that the Obama administration knew it was
staring into the depths of what would almost certainly be a quagmire,
and yet that still did not stop them from slouching towards involvement . . . please click here for the rest of the post →
4. Adding to the Infantry
Regardless
of your perspective on the tactics and strategy employed by the various
factions in the recent shutdown fight, I think all reasonable people
will agree with one unassailable conclusion: We’d have gotten better
results with more conservative Republicans holding office. Even the
folks who roundly criticized Cruz, et al did so specifically because of
their belief that Republicans had insufficient clout to have any
realistic chance of achieving their desired goals. I don’t know of
anyone on the Republican side who just didn’t think that fighting
against Obamacare was a good idea on principle. . . . please click here for the rest of the post →
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