Paul Ryan Gives An Acceptance Speech That Most People Will End Up Forgetting
Paul Ryan did what he needed to do last night, but in the long run his speech will be lost to history.
Paul Ryan did what he needed to do last night, but in the long run his speech will be lost to history.
Paul Ryan pointed to a shuttered GM plant in his hometown as proof of Obama’s failed policies. The truth will make your head hurt.
Health care is eating up 10 percent of the Pentagon’s budget and rising fast.
The Obama campaign’s focus on Mitt Romney’s years at Bain Capital don’t seem to be working.
It was supposed to be the return of the heady days of the great Tech Industry IPOs. But, things didn’t quite go as planned.
Mitt Romney is being rightfully ridiculed for trying to take credit for saving General Motors and Chrysler.
GM’s big gamble on the future, the Chevy Volt, isn’t yet paying off.
Romney eked out a win in the Michigan primary. He’s going to have a harder time there in November.
Was Clint Eastwood’s Chrysler ad a political message, or just a well done commercial?
The speech did exactly what it was supposed to do: kick off Obama’s re-election campaign while disguised as a call for unity.
It’s not just low wages that have kept technology manufacturing jobs out of the United States.
Conservatives are rejecting Andrew Sullivan’s Newsweek essay out of hand, but they ought to pay attention to what he’s saying.
The Republican candidates for President have apparently forgotten that this guy was their party’s nominee twice.
Conservative groups are upset because a new reality show depicts Muslim-Americans as, well, normal Americans.
It was clear from the start that “Cash For Clunkers” was a bad idea.
The Tea Party flame was lit by the battle over TARP, but they quickly forgot about those bailouts that supposedly upset them so much.
On paper, the U.S. lost $1.3 billion on the Chrysler bankruptcy, but the true cost is far higher than that.
Is our current economic situation the result of massive government intervention? The Randians certainly think so.
Natural disasters in Japan have lessened the supply of pigments necessary to make black paint.
General Motors, and Barack Obama, are betting the future on a car that may be nothing more than an electric lemon.