Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Joe Miller: Tilting At Windmills

It is high time for Alaska Republican U.S. Senate candidate Joe Miller to admit what everyone else in America already knows-that he lost the November Senate race to incumbent Senator and write-in candidate Lisa Murkowski. Drop the recount and ballot challenges and admit that your Tea Party Darling status and Sarah Palin endorsement were unqualified failures and that the people of Alaska made their choice loud and clear-Senator Murkowski is the Senator they want. Stop embarassing yourself and return to private life. Show you can do what is in the best interest of the people of Alaska, unlike your headline-grabbing, self-promoting patron and Governor washout Sarah Palin.

Self-Made Billionairess Could Become An Even Bigger Force For Social Good

With the premiere of her new OWN Network on cable this coming Saturday, Oprah Winfrey may conquer the cable world as she has the talk show world for the last 25 years.
Her new network, a 50/50 collaboration with the Discovery Channel, could very well serve as a force for global understanding, empathy, and kindness in an increasingly hectic world that is already exhibiting too little of all three.
And, to the naysayers who criticize the recent Kennedy Center honoree as some conspiratorial entertainer out for world domination, I say: The woman is a self-made billionaire who has done countless acts of goodwill for people the world over.
When you can say the same, then and only then can you dare to malign her.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

A Real Opportunity for John Boehner

As the newly seated Congress returns to Washington, D.C. next week, a rare opportunity for compromise and legislative progress exists.
As evidenced by the success of the recently adjourned lame duck Congressional session,Democrats and Republicans can work together to advance the national interest.
The incoming House Speaker, John Boehner (R-OH), can show himself to be a true statesman by cooperating with Democrats in Congress and the Obama Administration on issues where agreement is possible between the parties.
If Boehner hits the ground running on Energy legislation, jobs legislation, and economic and business legislation, great success is possible in the upcoming session of Congress.
If, however, Boehner and his colleagues decide right out of the box to pick fights on health care, foreign policy, and anti-Obama policies simply to deny the President any successes and possible reelection in 2012, then Boehner will lose a historic opportunity to shine in the Speaker's chair he has long coveted.