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De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

From the Washington Examiner


For Pakistan and the United States, it's one delusion after another, By Michael Barone
Not many foreign policy experts would argue with the proposition that the country with which the United States has the most problematic relationship is Pakistan.

Obama's corporatist contraceptive mandate By Timothy P. Carney
The audacity and mendacity with which the Obama administration defends its illegal contraception mandate is standard fare for politics. What's distinctively Obamian in this fight is the insidious corporatism underlying it all.

HHS: 'We have met the goal' of fixing healthcare.gov ByMeghashyam Mali
The Obama administration on Sunday touted dramatic progress in its efforts to fix the botched healthcare.gov website by the president's self-imposed deadline, saying they had met the goal of having a system that works for most users.

Philip Klein: No, Obamacare isn't fixed By Philip Klein
The Department of Health and Human Services is claiming to have hundreds of software fixes to healthcare.gov. But that says more about how badly the website was functioning on its launch date than it says about how well the site is functioning now.

The Establishment fights back: Mitch McConnell leads GOP's battle against Tea Party insurgents By David M. Drucker
The Senate's top Republican had watched a Tea Party-driven government shutdown sink the GOP's already-weak brand and jeopardize McConnell's own chances of ever becoming majority leader. The solution, he concluded, was that the party's so-called Establishment had to start fighting back against..

Mitch McConnell preps for twin election challenges By David M. Drucker
Over the course of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's career, the publicly mild-mannered Kentucky Republican has inspired passions: Among his allies, heartfelt loyalty and admiration. Among his opponents, deep-seated frustration and enmity.

Blue ribbon panels stumble on trimming red ink
Since the end of World War II, more than a dozen high-profile bipartisan panels have been convened to tackle the nation's thorniest fiscal problems. Seldom have their recommendations spurred congressional action.

 

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