Politics is entertainment now. Most of our representatives are just as big of morons as most entertainers. All they’re after is getting in zingers on TV and Twitter.
twitter.com/Bookstore…

I’m quite serious and sincere in asking this:

If you have to show ID to buy alcohol, get vaccinated, get a payday loan, or board a plane, why is it an imposition to show ID to vote?

What is happening in each scenario is simply proving you are who you say you are.

With the continued division we see in our nation, I cannot help but feel Andy Andrews’ How Do You Kill 11 Million People? remains relevant.
Amazon: www.amazon.com/dp/084994…
Bookshop: bookshop.org/a/16805/9…

If you can’t have fun with this insanity, what’s the point?



When you send me an unsolicited text message on behalf of a political person I did not, do not, and would not support, and your systems are screwed up so you think it’s my wife’s phone, well, you get what you get.



Why is it that a large segment of left has embraced a code of appeasing “sensitivity” toward Islam—when they are its obvious next victims? Why do they wring their hands over “microagressions,” while urging us not to provoke people who execute homosexuals and throw acid in women’s faces?

Why does the left kowtow to Islam?

ABC News, if it cares one whit about its reputation, should ban Stephanopoulos from doing any 2016 campaign coverage. It’s bad enough that he was once a Clinton White House staffer. But everyone went along with the charade that his political days were behind him and that he just wanted to be an objective reporter. That charade ends today.

There is no maxim, in my opinion, which is more liable to be misapplied, and which, therefore, more needs elucidation, than the current, that the interest of the majority is the political standard of right and wrong.

—James Madison, letter to James Monroe, 1786

The United States is a nation of laws, not men.

Just make sure, if you’re going to get on your high horse, that you’re calling it on both sides.

The price for this freedom at times has been high, but we have never been unwilling to pay that price. … It is time for us to realize that we are too great a nation to limit ourselves to small dreams. We’re not, as some would have us believe, doomed to an inevitable decline. I do not believe in a fate that will fall on us no matter what we do. I do believe in a fate that will fall on us if we do nothing.

–Ronald Reagan, whose 101st birthday is today.