Hey, is that me?
August 2, 2010 by Jeff Schreiber
Filed under Assigned Reading
Financial Times: The Crisis of Middle-Class America Quite a long article, but worth every second spent reading it. Here are a few choice quotes which jumped out at me: “If we lost our jobs, we would have about three weeks of savings to draw on before we hit the bone,” says Mark, who is sitting [...]
Unions? Violent? Nah…
April 9, 2010 by Jeff Schreiber
Filed under Assigned Reading
CBS2: Union Memo Hints at Gov.’s Death New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie isn’t laughing about a teachers union’s memo that hints of his death. The Record of Bergen County obtained the Bergen County Education Association memo that includes a closing prayer: “Dear Lord this year you have taken away my favorite actor, Patrick Swayze, my [...]
A Peach of a Conservative: AR Interviews Liz Carter, Congressional Candidate for Georgia’s 4th District
March 24, 2010 by John Feeny
Filed under Interviews @ AR, News & Views
As more and more Americans begin to wake up with each passing day from their politically-imposed fog, seemingly the past century of our history–much of which has been carefully shielded from the general populace and re-shaped with a precision that would make a master craftsman beam with pride–has come rushing back all at once. In [...]
Why Progressives Consistently Miss the Mark
March 10, 2010 by Brad Fregger
Filed under News & Views
Those of us who have been lucky enough to be able to clearly see the world and how it operates have difficulty understanding the Progressive mind and how Progressives can attempt the same thing time and time again. If you go by Albert Einstein’s definition, “doing the same thing over and over and expecting different [...]
Ring the Bell: School Is Back In Session
February 23, 2010 by John Feeny
Filed under News & Views
Many, many different issues have managed to crack cultural surface during this period of political and social transformation that we’re all experiencing. Suddenly, nearly every common-sense person in America is taking the time to stop, look around, and ask: “Wait…what’s going on here?” While some have picked up on this earlier than others, we’re now [...]
Illegal Immigrants to Receive In-State Tuition at NJ Universities
January 7, 2010 by Jeff Schreiber
Filed under News & Views
I think it’s time to come clean. For the past three-and-a-half years, I haven’t just been attending just any “law school in the Philadelphia area” — I’ve been attending school at Rutgers School of Law in tropical Camden, New Jersey. Whatever my reasoning was for keeping that tid-bit concealed from the general public, it doesn’t [...]
FUNNY: Misappropriation of Government Funds?
December 26, 2009 by Jeff Schreiber
Filed under News & Views
So, I’ve seen this advertisement floating around the Web from time to time. I even remember seeing it at America’s Right before the redesign. Normally, it shows a typical mom-like woman, no doubt delighted that she’s been given the opportunity for grants and other federal money–much of which have always been available, even before President [...]
The Patriot Movement and the Future of Conservatism in America
December 15, 2009 by Ronald Glenn
Filed under News & Views
By Ronald Glenn America’s Right For the past few years now, I have been associated with Ron Paul followers–most of which were not Republicans–and other members of the Patriot Movement. (For obvious reasons, I am excluding any branch of the movement that advocates violence against the United States in this discussion.) A couple months ago, [...]
Re-Education
December 15, 2009 by John Feeny
Filed under News & Views
By John Feeny America’s Right “Public schools are the nurseries of all vice and immorality.”– Henry Fielding (1707-1754), English novelist, dramatist I have been re-educated. My worldview has understandably been corrected. Whereas for much of my life I always believed in the goodness of the United States of America, I now see that this country [...]
KSM, New York City and My Growing Isolationism
November 15, 2009 by Jeff Schreiber
Filed under News & Views
680 miles. That’s how far I drove on Friday between our house outside of Philadelphia and our future hometown of Charleston, South Carolina. That’s also the distance between Karachi, Pakistan and Kabul, Afghanistan. And, interestingly enough, that was about how long it took me to have a sea change with regard to American presence in [...]
