Author Archives: mjohnson

A Humanitarian Crisis for All of Humanity

BY MICHAEL S. JOHNSON  |  SEP 1

Eleven-year-old-Bushra says she is forgetting how to read.

Bushra is in a refugee camp in Al-Minya, Lebanon, with her father, mother and sister, light years away from her school and life as a pre-teen. She told a reporter she struggled with the words in a pamphlet she found. She and her family are among roughly 4 million others, 750,000 of them children, who have fled Syria’s civil war for something better.

In this case a collection of make-shift shacks, smelly garbage, little food and no foreseeable future in a Lebanese refugee settlement, where the Lebanese government will not allow construction of better dwellings. Continue reading

Katrina Changed Everything

BY JOHN FEEHERY
AUG 28 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

Katrina changed everything.

Ten years ago, as the storm battered first Florida, then Mississippi and then Louisiana, the dreams and expectations of the American people were similarly battered.

Katrina exposed fault lines in our society, shattered faith in our political leaders and the political system and undermined confidence in democracy and capitalism. Continue reading

Raising the “Hero” Bar

BY RICH GALEN
AUG 24 | Reprinted from Mullings.com

We have cheapened the value of the word, “hero.”

A lot of people are brave. Teachers, nurses, local service volunteers, Priests, Rabbis, and Ministers. We’ve applied the word “hero” to most, if not all of them.

Firefighters and police officers who routinely run into grave danger qualify as heroes. Service members who have saved the lives of their mates – often at the cost of their own, do, too.

But, they have chosen to put themselves into situations where the need for heroism is, if not expected, at least recognized as a real possibility. Continue reading

Lunacy of the Campaign Lemmings

BY STEVE BELL  |  AUG 20

“Trump driving migrant debate,” read the headline over the lead story in the Washington Post.

The story beneath the headline seemed to imply that Presidential candidate Donald Trump’s rants on immigration have frightened into submission some of his opponents for the Republican nomination for President. Like lemmings heading seaward, Scott Walker, Rick Santorum, Rand Paul, and Lindsey Graham, according to the Post, have been suddenly converted to Trump’s way of thinking on several immigration issues, particularly overturning the birthright provisions of the Constitution. Continue reading

Class…Where Have You Gone?

BY B. JAY COOPER
AUG 18 | Reprinted from The Screaming Moderate (bjaycooper.com)

Cary Grant, Fred Astaire, Audrey Hepburn, Katharine Hepburn, Nelson Mendela, Indira Gandhi, Sidney Poitier. What do all those people have in common? Class.

Where has class gone? Is it dying because our politicians and celebrities are over-exposed? Is it dying because we are  so exposed these days that our faults are no longer hidden? Do we just know too much to accept anyone has class anymore? After all, there are cable TV channels and web sites for each of us: left wing, right wing; foodies, sports, hobbyist. We don’t have to be Continue reading

Trump and the American Character

BY MICHAEL S. JOHNSON  |  AUG 13

Our leaders are stupid. Our politicians are stupid. Megyn Kelly is a bimbo. The Mexicans are smarter than us because they are sending us their drugs, their crime, and their rapists. We have a weak President that [sic] kisses everybody’s ass. Rosie O’Donnell is a disgusting slob. Some women are fat pigs, dogs, and disgusting animals.

Donald Trump getting headlines. Donald Trump branding Donald Trump. Donald Trump ‘having fun.’

These Trumpisms also seem to appeal to the anger seething in millions of people over the state of their lives, their society,  town, workplace,  schools, the country, the world;  the sense that Continue reading

Cursing My Government For Not Using My Taxes to Fill Holes With More Cement

BY JOHN FEEHERY
AUG 4 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

“You fell asleep in my car

I drove the whole time

But that’s okay I’ll just avoid the holes so you sleep fine

I’m driving here I sit

Cursing my government

For not using my taxes to fill holes with more cement”

My son gets a kick out of that new song, “Tear in My Heart,” by Twenty One Pilots. I think it’s kind of funny too. Continue reading

Unplanned Parenthood

BY RICH GALEN
JUL 30 | Reprinted from Mullings.com

Federal funds should be halted – at least temporarily – to Planned Parenthood until the matter of whether they are trading in fetal tissues for profit is solved.

As you have heard, a group called the Center for Medical Progress, has gone into a number of facilities – including Planned Parenthood facilities – shooting undercover videos about buying and selling tissues from aborted fetuses.

The Washington Post’s David Weigel called the practice ” the little-covered and gruesome issue of fetal tissue sales.” Continue reading

Espo Retires

BY JOHN FEEHERY
JUL 24 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

You will never see Dave Espo’s face on Morning Joe.

While he didn’t have a face for radio, so to speak, he also didn’t have the blow-dried look of the modern day reporter.

For 41 years, Espo has plowed the fields of Congress, planting seeds among sources, reaping stories and helping to power the Associated Press. Continue reading

Media Mayhem Part I: Down on, Done with Donald

BY MICHAEL S. JOHNSON  |  JUL 22

“I like what he’s saying. He’s bringing things out.“ No I don’t think (he would be a good President). “He doesn’t have some of the qualities needed…”
Nancy Zeller, retired nurse on CBS Evening News July 20, 2015

“Some days I’m hot and some days I’m cold. There’s things he’s saying that other politicians don’t have the guts to say…But he tends to be a little thin-skinned and retaliates too easily. When I see that out of Obama and his people, I detest it.”
George Smith, retired consultant in the Washington Post July 21, 2015

It is so over for Donald Trump.  Continue reading

Obama’s Folly?

BY FRANK HILL
JUL 16 | Reprinted from TelemachusLeaps.com

When you think about it, throughout history the United States has struck some pretty good deals with foreign adversaries.

In fact, some great ones.

Seward’s Folly: On March 30, 1867, “U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward sign(ed) a treaty with Russia for the purchase of Alaska for $7 million. Despite the bargain price of roughly two cents an acre, the Alaskan purchase was ridiculed in Congress and in the press as ‘Seward’s folly,’ ‘Seward’s icebox,’ and President Andrew Johnson’s ‘polar bear garden.”‘ Continue reading

Those Crazy Persians

BY RICH GALEN
JUL 16 | Reprinted from Mullings.com

I could have written a column about the reaction to a deal with Iran five months ago and I wouldn’t have missed by much: Republicans are furious. Democrats are wary. The Obama Administration is taking, not a victory lap, but running a victory marathon.

Here’s what I don’t know about the Iran deal: Everything.

No one who raced to get in front of a camera on Tuesday had read the text of the agreement(s). And, because of the nature of these things, there are secret appendices and side agreements that we may never know. Continue reading

Can Republicans Override a Presidential Veto on Iran?

BY JOHN FEEHERY
JUL 14 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

Originally published in the Wall Street Journal’s Think Tank

It’s easy for Republicans to oppose this nuclear deal with Iran.

They don’t trust President Barack Obama, they don’t like John Kerry, and they love Benjamin Netanyahu.

The question is: Can they override a presidential veto of a resolution of disapproval? Continue reading

A Brave New GOP

BY JOHN FEEHERY
JUL 7 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

Originally published in The Hill

To build a modern America, we have to modernize the Grand Old Party.

Events over the last week have put an exclamation point on the past. We must move to bravely embrace the new world.

The Civil War is over. Finally. Let’s retire the flag of resistance and work to heal the wounds of past sins.

The Supreme Court has decided that everybody deserves a right to have a family, no matter what their sexual orientation. So be it. Let’s move on. Continue reading

It’s All Greek to Me

BY RICH GALEN
JUL 6 | Reprinted from Mullings.com

Let me say, at the outset, that I am so far out of my depth in this issue that, if I look up, all I see is a sea of numbers. If I were you I would roll my eyes, sigh loudly, hit the DELETE key, and return to a close examination of this morning’s postings by your Facebook friends.

If you’re still with me, hang on.

Voters in Greece, yesterday, rejected an austerity program that would have allowed the European Central Bank (the European Union’s Fed) to lend money to Greek banks so they would have enough Euros to pay depositors. Continue reading

Charleston: Messages, Meaning, and Moving On

BY MICHAEL S. JOHNSON  |  JUL 2

Charleston has now buried its dead. The nine victims of Dylan Roof have been immortalized.

The families of the victims have reacted with truly amazing grace, not sung but practiced. They have offered one of the most difficult yet most meaningful gifts one human being can offer another — forgiveness.

“I just wanted everybody to know to you I forgive you,” Nadine Collier, the daughter of victim Ethel Lance, said to Roof during his first court appearance. “We are here to combat hate-filled actions with love-filled actions,” Alana Simmons, who lost her grandfather, Pastor Daniel L. Simmons Sr., said. Continue reading

Supreme Court Chumps

BY JOHN FEEHERY
JUN 30 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

Originally published in the Wall Street Journal’s Think Tank

It took nine decades for Congress and the states to amend the Constitution to allow for the direct election of U.S. senators.

It took only a few years–and a couple of months before the Supreme Court–for control of congressional redistricting to be taken away from politicians and put directly into the hands of the people. Continue reading

The Day The Earth Stood Still

BY RICH GALEN
JUN 29 | Reprinted from Mullings.com

I was very, very disappointed as I awoke Friday morning. I turned on CNN, then Fox, then MSNBC, even Bloomberg looking for some report of a flying saucer having landed on the National Mall near the Washington Monument.

I even practiced saying Klaatu barada nikto in case it missed by a little and ended up in the Potomac River at Alexandria, Virginia and I had to communicate with Gort.

After the dire predictions leading up to (a) the Congressional action on Trade Promotion Authority then the Supreme Court rulings on (b) Obamacare and (c) Freedom to Marry I thought for sure last Friday would be the day the Earth Stood Still. Continue reading

Office of Personnel Mismanagement

BY RICH GALEN
JUN 25 | Reprinted from Mullings.com

I got my letter from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) alerting me that I might/could/probably/was included in the 4/8/18/32 million records that are now being pored over like the White House travel staff’s in Hillary Clinton’s office.

The U.S. government believes the Chinese government is behind this.

The hack that was originally reported by the Democratic Administration of President Barack Obama included the social security numbers, dates of birth and – for all we know our mothers’ maiden names – of people who not only worked in some branch of the federal government, but had ever applied for a job with some branch of the federal government. Continue reading

Confederate Battle Flag Belongs in Museum

BY JOHN FEEHERY
JUN 23 | Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

It’s easy for me to say it.

I am from Illinois. I was taught, growing up, that Abe Lincoln was America’s greatest President and that the Civil War was a noble cause to keep the Union together and to rid the nation of the ugly stain of slavery.

So, for me, it’s a no-brainer. The Confederate Battle Flag belongs in a museum, not outside any State Capitol.

I am a history buff, so I actually think the Rebel flag is an interesting item for the museum.

The flag itself is visually attractive. Continue reading