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Written by Chris Horner, Planet Gore
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Monday, 20 October 2008 |
Clinton-Gore administration Secretary of State Madeleine Albright led the Washington Times
front page Friday with an interview in which, among other things, she
slams the wisdom of touting a "date certain" for pulling U.S. troops
from Iraq.
In support of her opposition, Albright says "In
Bosnia, we gave a date certain, and then we couldn't get out and that
undercut our credibility."
Why is this PG-relevant? Well, in
Kyoto we said we'd do something that our Senate had already said we
couldn't do and that stunt — I presume that, over this, there is little
debate — ended up hurting our credibility. Neither that administration
nor the current one asked the Senate to ratify the promise. The Senate
has every ability to vote on signed treaties (see Art. I Sec. 5, Art.
II Sec. 2) but has had no interest in forcing the matter.
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Written by Wall Street Journal
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Thursday, 25 September 2008 |
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The classic definition of a gaffe is when a politician accidentally
tells the truth, and specialists like Joe Biden can work wonders with
the form. On Tuesday Barack Obama's running mate blew an easy question
about coal, revealing volumes about liberal energy politics.
Working the rope line in Maumee, Ohio, the Senator was asked by an
environmentalist why he and Mr. Obama support "clean coal." "We're not
supporting clean coal," Mr. Biden responded. Then, riffing on China's
breakneck construction of new coal plants, he continued, "No coal
plants here in America. Build them, if they're going to build them,
over there."
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Written by The Chilling Effect
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Wednesday, 24 September 2008 |
Sen. Joe Biden flatly stated that coal is killing you, just months after Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said it’s making us sick. So what about it? Is coal killing us?
We doubt anyone would suggest huffing coal particulates for kicks
and giggles, and if they did, it would be best not to heed their call.
But here’s something that Senators Biden and Reid may have missed,
probably because they are not on the Senate committee overseeing the Department of Health and Human Services.
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Written by Don Frederick, LA Times Blogs
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Friday, 12 September 2008 |
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Sarah Palin on global warming: Humans might be partly to blame
Sarah Palin,
who has struck many as a refreshing break from politicians-as-usual,
seemed to do Thursday what politicians usually do as their horizons
expand -- moderate a previous position on a controversial subject.
By the same token, a close reading of what she said shows a lot of hedging on her hedge.
The subject was global warming, covered in Chapter 2 of ABC's multi-part interview with the Alaska governor whom John McCain cast as his running mate. Just a few weeks ago, in an interview with the conservative-leaning website Newsmax.com, Palin had this to say: "I'm not one ... who would attribute [global warming] to being man-made."
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Written by Ben Shapiro, Patriot Post
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Wednesday, 20 August 2008 |
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Late Sunday night, my wife and I drove from Sacramento, Calif., to Los
Angeles. We figured that it would be wise to leave Sacramento in the
early evening to avoid traffic. At 7 p.m., we climbed into the car and
headed for Interstate 5, the major highway connecting Northern
California and Southern California.
For the first five hours of
the drive, things went as planned. The highway was relatively clear,
and we sailed along happily at 80 mph.
Then we saw it. A sign. A large orange sign reading: Freeway Closed Ahead, 11 p.m.-4 a.m.
It was too late to get off the freeway; it was too late to turn around.
There were no turnoffs, no exits, no restrooms. We were stuck an hour
from Los Angeles, bumper-to-bumper, moving less than 1 mph. Literally.
During the next three hours, we moved a grand total of 1.6
miles. Families were pulling onto the shoulders of the highway to catch
some winks. One creative fellow actually attempted to drive off the
freeway by cutting through some wire separating the freeway from an
adjacent road. The cops immediately arrested him.
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Written by Roy Innis & Newt Gingrich, Canada Free Press
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Friday, 15 August 2008 |
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Senator Jeff Bingaman, Congressman Nick Rahall, House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi and other members of Congress who oppose producing more American
oil are in a bind.
They know voters are hurting from high gas prices and overwhelmingly
want the government to allow more American oil production. But they
can’t side with the American people and risk upsetting their left-wing
base. So they needed a way to make us think they support more drilling
– while effectively preventing us from ever drilling a single new well.
They think they’ve found a solution: a proposed “use it or lose it”
law on federal leases for energy exploration. Bingaman, Rahall and
fellow drilling opponents accuse the oil industry of “sitting on” 68
million acres of “non-producing” leased land. They want to force energy
companies to “use” this leased land within ten years – or lose all
exploration and drilling rights.
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