|
-
 December 12, 2011
-
 December 5, 2011
-
 November 28, 2011
-
 November 21, 2011
-
 November 14, 2011
-
 November 7, 2011
-
 October 31, 2011
-
 October 24, 2011
-
 October 17, 2011
-
 October 10, 2011
-
 October 3, 2011
-
 September 26, 2011
This issue: December 19, 2011 (Vol. 17, No. 14)
BY WILLIAM KRISTOL
In the last century, Republicans have posted large gains in midterm elections during the first term of a Democratic president five times. The elections of 1914, 1946, 1966, 1994, and 2010 all reflected popular disenchantment with big-government liberalism, and with the newly elected (or in the case of Truman, the newly sworn-in) Democratic president’s promotion of the same.
What happened next? The history isn’t encouraging for conservatives. In the three cases in which the incumbent Democratic president stood for election two years later—Woodrow Wilson in 1916, Harry Truman in 1948, and Bill Clinton in 1996—each prevailed. And in 1968, when Lyndon ...
BY THOMAS DONNELLY
In his history of the long-running conflict between Iran and America, Kenneth Pollack writes of the “two clocks” that measure time as it relates to ...
Will the sun set on the Anglican communion?
BY JOSEPH BOTTUM
The archbishop of Canterbury is going to resign next year. At least that’s the story making the rounds of newspapers in London, and the interesting part is not that the 61-year-old Rowan Williams should be willing to give up another decade in the job. Or even, if the Telegraph is right, that the clergy and his fellow bishops are working to push him out.
No, the interesting news about the looming resignation is how little attention anyone appears to be paying to it. The Church of England just doesn’t seem to matter all that much, fading from the world’s stage only slightly more slowly than the British Empire that planted it across the globe.
Aside from getting votes, he’s a great candidate.
BY JONATHAN V. LAST
There are three basic theories to explain why Mitt Romney hasn’t been able to build support above the 30 percent level, despite being the heavily ...
Obama’s intellectuals.
BY ANDREW FERGUSON
Is it possible that the people who run the Obama administration aren’t as smart as we’ve been led to believe?
How the Republican contests help Obama.
BY FRED BARNES
Republicans are paying a high price for allowing their presidential race to be dominated by nationally televised debates. The GOP candidates have reduced themselves to supplicants whose weak points are probed by media ...
A GOP opportunity to reverse TR’s mistake.
BY JOSHUA D. HAWLEY
Osawatomie, Kansas, is where Theodore Roosevelt famously announced his embrace of progressive politics—from atop a kitchen table, no less, ...
A movement custom-designed to hurt liberals.
BY NOEMIE EMERY
"God, I love ’em,” wrote Eugene Robinson in the Washington Post not long after the glorious dawning of Occupy Wall Street, saying that the ...
Turkey’s second thoughts.
BY PHILIP TERZIAN
One way to gauge the present state of European unity is to know that Turkey, which has energetically sought membership in the European Union for the ...
The saga of Stalin’s daughter.
BY CATHY YOUNG
It’s an old saw to call someone’s life worthy of a novel. Yet when several obituaries used the phrase to describe the life of Lana Peters, an ...
The liberal media’s latest attempt to control the discourse.
BY MARK HEMINGWAY
If you’ve ever found yourself engaged in a futile, one-sided argument with a politician on your TV screen, you’re hardly alone in your frustration. However, if you’re inclined to jot down such intemperate outbursts, and have the chutzpah to charge people for your services—you might have what it takes to join the ranks of one of journalism’s most popular and elite new breeds.
They call themselves “fact checkers,” and with the name comes a veneer of objectivity doubling as a license to go after any remark by a public figure they find disagreeable for any reason. Just look at the Associated Press to understand how the scheme works. The venerable wire service’s recent “fact check” of statements made at the November 12 GOP ...
The police, belatedly, solve a series of racist murders.
BY JOHN ROSENTHAL
"It seems . . . that we are in fact dealing with a new form of right-wing extremist terrorism,” German interior minister Hans-Peter Friedrich ...
History unfolds beneath the Ivory Tower.
BY JAMES BOWMAN
Mary Ann Glendon begins her chapter on Rousseau by recounting the story of Napoleon’s visit to the grave of that worthy on the estate of the Marquis René Louis de Girardin at Ermenonville and saying, “It would have been better for the peace of France if this man had never lived.” When the marquis sensibly pointed out that, without the impetus given by Rousseau’s writings to the French Revolution, Napoleon himself would not have existed, at least not as Napoleon, the first consul replied that only the future would tell if it would have been better if neither he nor Rousseau had ever lived.
The association of Napoleon—himself as real as a heart attack, as we would say today—with this kind of intellectual ...
The mystery of the land of Machiavelli and macaroni.
BY MICHAEL LEDEEN
This thoughtful and useful book is misnamed: It should be called Italy, a Historical Portrait of a Failed State. But David Gilmour’s timing is impeccable, giving us this affectionate profile just as Italy ...
The case for devouring two modern comic classics.
BY MICHAEL DIRDA
They wouldn’t have much to say to each other at a dinner party, but there are few more delightful young women in modern literature than Miss Lorelei Lee and Miss Flora Poste, the indomitable, and conniving, heroines ...
The midlife monologue of John Lithgow.
BY VICTORIA ORDIN
Show business memoirs, at least in the present age, tend to fall into one of two categories: confessional stories of addiction and rehab, to which creative endeavor is at best peripheral; or uneven and occasionally ...
Here’s a switch: Good novel makes bad movie.
BY JOHN PODHORETZ
Theresa Civantos, mountaineer
BY THERESA CIVANTOS
Some friends and I went hiking in White Oak Canyon in the Shenandoah Valley the other Sunday, and we stopped to take pictures at the foot of a tall cliff. Someone said we should climb it. I hesitated for a moment, then fell in behind the group. We made it to the top and were rewarded with glorious views of the surrounding valley.
Standing there on the cliff, I was flooded with memories of another climb, just six months before, in Israel. It was a climb that tested the limits of my endurance. At the time a college student with no mountaineering experience and a lifelong fear of heights, I’d gone along with friends, reluctant, but even more afraid of looking chicken in their eyes. Before I knew it, I’d found myself clinging to a ...
On June 1, 2009, a convert to Islam named Carlos Leon Bledsoe (aka Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad) opened fired on a military recruiting office in Little Rock, Arkansas. Muhammad killed one soldier and wounded another. His guilt and motivation have never really been in dispute. “I wasn’t insane or post traumatic nor was I forced to do this Act,” Bledsoe wrote in a letter to the judge who presided over his case, according to the New York Times. The shooting, Bledsoe added, was “justified according to Islamic Laws and the Islamic Religion. Jihad—to fight those who wage war on Islam and Muslims.” Bledsoe, who spent more than a year studying Arabic in Yemen, also claimed that he was dispatched by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
Browse 15 Years of the Weekly Standard
|
|