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  • A covered statue of slain Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri stands in Beirut. Eleven of 30 Lebanese Cabinet members, all supporters of Hezbollah, resigned Wednesday, sinking the coalition government after months of disagreement over how to respond to a U.N. probe into the assassination. (Associated Press)

    ORIENT: Tucson reveals poisonous media milieu

    By Dr. Jane M. Orient - The Washington Times

    Tucsonans are grieved by the loss of family, friends and neighbors and are shaken by the reminder of mortality. Standing in line to greet their congresswoman, or just going to the grocery store, they could be killed by a malcontent. They are not immune from the violence that is rampant in the world, bringing sudden death from bombs, incendiary devices, missiles, gunfire or other means. Published 7:12 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Illustration: Taxes by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times

    CAMPBELL: The liberal tax

    By Rep. John Campbell - The Washington Times

    During the protracted debate over the extension of the "Bush tax cuts," much of the angst of President Obama and his fellow Democrats has been centered around increasing taxes on "the rich." "Rich," for purposes of this debate, has been defined by the president as individuals making more than $200,000 per year and families earning more than $250,000. Published 7:12 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Illustration: Lefty's resting place by Greg Groesch for The Washington Times

    TYRRELL: Liberalism's death knell keeps tolling

    By R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. - The Washington Times

    The evidence mounts that liberalism is dead. The liberal wizards, working their wonders at the New York Times and its clearinghouses in the major networks, cannot even dupe the American people with an absurd conspiracy theory anymore. In Dallas back in 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald, a pious communist awash in the Marxist-Leninist bilge, shot President John F. Kennedy. In no time, the liberals had the nation focused on the "dangerous right-wing atmosphere" supposedly pervading Dallas. Published 6:18 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin posted a video statement on her Facebook page Wednesday, criticizing media pundits for blaming her in the Arizona shooting. (AP photo)

    EDITORIAL: Blood libel against Palin, Limbaugh

    By The Washington Times

    Sarah Palin issued a statement yesterday condemning the "reprehensible" response to Saturday's shooting in Tucson by some members of the media. "Within hours of a tragedy unfolding," she wrote, "journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence they purport to condemn." Published 6:59 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Political Cartoons - Global Warming Hearings - H. Payne

    EDITORIAL: Chicken Little eats crow

    By THE WASHINGTON TIMES - The Washington Times

    Doomsayers who make a living warning that the sky is falling victim to human-induced pollution need to take a deep breath. It turns out Mother Nature has her own resources for cleaning up the air. Published 6:59 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • This undated photo released by the Pima County Sheriff's Office shows shooting suspect Jared Lee Loughner. (Associated Press/Pima County Sheriff's Department via the Arizona Republic)

    EDITORIAL: Avoiding the next Tucson

    By THE WASHINGTON TIMES - The Washington Times

    Last weekend's tragedy in Tucson is helping focus needed attention on the intersec-tion between serious mental illness and crime. Modern society prides itself on being open-minded, but there's still much room for progress in how we look at the mentally ill. Published 6:59 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Illustration: Online poker by Linas Garsys for The Washington Times

    MINTON: The online poker players next door

    By Michelle Minton - The Washington Times

    Ask any professional poker player after a losing night what happened, and very rarely will he attribute the outcome to bad luck. There is an element of chance involved - for example, in the cards one is dealt - but long-term success lies, literally, in each player's hands. Published 7:12 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Jared Lee Loughner appears in an undated photo obtained from MySpace. (Associated Press)

    FIELDS: Changing how we think

    By Suzanne Fields - The Washington Times

    We mourn, we weep, we wonder why. How could such things happen? Smart phones and online libraries constantly feed us information, but we don't get any wiser. We blame others for what goes wrong and for what we don't fully understand. Pundits argue and provoke, pretending to seek wisdom from the dialectic, but they're merely in love with the sound of their own voices. Jeremiahs predict the worst, Pollyannas foresee a rosy future and the ostrich buries his head in the sand (where insights as wise as any other may lurk). Published 6:18 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Maria Cino, an official in the George W. Bush administration, is among several people who have emerged as potential challengers to Republican National Committee Chairman Michael S. Steele. (Associated Press)

    BERG: Who should lead the GOP?

    By Dave Berg - The Washington Times

    The 168 members of the Republican National Committee (RNC) will be voting tomorrow to elect a new chairman. Most Republicans don't even know about this election, but its importance cannot be overstated. The outcome will have much to do with whether a Republican president is elected in 2012. Published 6:18 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • IN THE RUNNING: Michael S. Steele says he'll seek another term as head of the Republican National Committee. (Associated Press)

    MELADY: Michael S. Steele for RNC chairman

    By Thomas P. Melady - The Washington Times

    Tomorrow, Republicans through their state chairmen and committeemen will elect the chairman of the Republican National Committee. There is special importance to the election as this chairman will lead the party in the national presidential elections of November 2012. Published 6:18 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Illustration: A strong China by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times

    GAFFNEY: The provocative danger of weakness

    By Frank J. Gaffney Jr. - The Washington Times

    Two recent episodes offer an insight into a world in which the United States deliberately adopts a policy of pursuing international peace despite weakness, rather than practice what Ronald Reagan called "peace through strength." Published 6:18 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Illustration: China cuffs by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times

    LEHMANN & APPLETON: Tension grows with China

    By Jean-Pierre Lehmann and Arthur Appleton - The Washington Times

    When President Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao meet in Washington on Jan. 19, they should recognize that generally when a new big power rises, war ensues. Published 6:07 p.m. January 11, 2011 - Comments

  • BOOK REVIEW: Sister who embraced Stalinism

    By Martin Rubin - The Washington Times

    In the many volumes of what might be termed Mitfordology - studies of that endlessly fascinating and appalling clan - next-to-last daughter Jessica often appears as a salutary counterpoint to her Nazi and fascist siblings. But in the account of her life in this adulatory biography, what is most striking is not what sets her apart from all those other Mitfords, but rather her horrible similarity to them. Published 6:18 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Emphasize academic content, not process

    By The Washington Times

    I agree that too much time and effort have been spent on the skills required for teaching and not enough on the mastery of the subject by the teacher ("America woefully out-scienced," Web, Dec. 29). Published 6:59 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

  • Resurrect our nation's founding values

    By The Washington Times

    Our country is hemorrhaging from reckless spending, leaving the people in debt with the interest payments alone while the presses are busy printing more currency. Will the recently elected Republican House of Representatives follow our words or fall into the same old routine as its forerunners by neglecting those it represents to follow its own agenda? To those newly elected congressmen, listen to your hearts. We must restore honor and truth in this country before the candle of liberty is snuffed out. Published 6:59 p.m. January 12, 2011 - Comments

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