Category Archives: Featured

For What Its Worth on Immigration

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

“Compromise,” as others have said before, “is not a four-letter word.” In a January 2014 column in The New York Times, Tom Friedman quoted former U.S. Senator Alan Simpson as having said: “If you can’t learn to compromise on issues without compromising yourself, you should not be in Congress, be in business or get married.”

Note: Sen. Simpson did not warn against being a columnist, being a radio host, or being a panelist on a cable TV program.
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Short History of Executive Orders

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

The President’s power to issue an executive order is not spelled out in the Constitution.

And for the first 75 years or so of our Republic, an executive order wasn’t even made public.  They were just directives sent from the White House to the various agencies, telling them what to do.

Continue reading

Resist the Bait

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

When the President issues his executive order granting temporary amnesty to up to 5 million undocumented immigrants, Republicans are going to be very unhappy.

The big question is: What do they do about it?

Conservatives want to have an early showdown with the President, using the power of the purse. That’s why they are pushing John Boehner and Mitch McConnell to agree to only a short-term continuing resolution to fund the government until March of next year. Continue reading

Questions About the Future of Immigration Reform

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

Will Congress and the President come to a meeting of the minds on fixing our broken immigration system or will they continue to play to their political bases in hope that they retain the upper hand on the issue?

That ‘s the big question that hangs over this whole debate.

The President misplayed the issue going into the midterms by promising and then not acting on his promise to use his executive authority to grant legal status to 5 million undocumented immigrants. Continue reading

Lest We Forget

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

My son plays soccer at Anacostia Field, across the river from Capitol Hill. It’s a short bike ride from the Capitol building and it was there that veterans of the Great War had assembled in 1932.

It had been a muddy swamp, but the grizzled ex-military men built a road and a sanitation system and otherwise made it habitable.

About 43,000 American soldiers came to Anacostia to march on Washington. They were jobless, desperate and angry. And they wanted to redeem certificates granted to them by the Congress in 1924 for a cash bonus. The certificates, a bond really, guaranteed them money for their Continue reading

O’s Not Wild About Harry

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

You know the old saying: “A victory has a thousand parents; but a failure is an orphan.”

Democrats in Our Nation’s Capital are busily trying to hang each other’s name over the door of the orphanage that was built over the past two years and officially opened for business last Tuesday night.

Not to rub it in too much but the Obama-led Democrats lost control of the U.S. Senate (by far more than anyone thought), saw the largest GOP majority in the U.S. House since Herbert Hoover’s election in 1928 (although we know how that turned out), and a two-seat pickup in Governors officers (when the GOP was slated to lose as many a net three). Continue reading

Do You Hear What I Hear?

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

When Sen. Barack Obama was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States on January 20, 2009 there were 257 Democrats in the U.S. House and 59 Democrats (and independents) in the U.S. Senate. In April, Arlen Spector of Pennsylvania crossed the aisle and became a Democrat giving the Ds a filibuster-proof 60-40 advantage.

His job approval was at 68 percent and he was just months away from being named the recipient of the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize.

By the time the dust settles after this year’s mid-term elections there are likely to be about 185 Democrat members of the House and 46 Democrat members of the Senate. That’s minus 72 in the House and minus 14 in the Senate. Continue reading

The Limits of Direct Democracy

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

I couldn’t do it.

Despite talking a big game about being for pot legalization, when I had the chance to vote for the policy, I voted no.

It didn’t matter. DC voters overwhelmingly approved the referendum.

I voted no because I really don’t think the city can handle more pot smokers. Continue reading

The Process Worked Again

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

Help me out with this:
— The Republican “brand” is seriously damaged.
— The number of people voting for Republicans is continuing to shrink.
— Republicans can’t win without increasing the votes of people of color.
— Voters disapprove of the President; dislike Congressional Democrats more; and hate Congressional Republicans most of all.

And, yet, no matter what the final numbers are, there is no doubt this was a huge win for Republicans. Continue reading

Take A Little Time to Govern

BY MICHAEL S. JOHNSON

Pollsters, camera-ready prognosticators, sages and soothsayers, for weeks have been predicting a Republican “wave” election today.

Two eminent Republican pollsters, Glen Bolger and Neil Newhouse had this to say about it in a Washington Post op-ed: “Such a victory gives the Republican Party a significant opportunity to recast itself in the eyes of the voters. But let’s be clear: Winning on Tuesday, will not necessarily portend success in 2016.”

It is not surprising that Bolger and Newhouse couldn’t wait for one election to be over before turning to the next. That is what they do. Continue reading

Picking at the Scabs of Race Relations

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

In 1950, Jesse Helms was in charge of publicity for the Senatorial campaign of Wills Smith, a conservative Democrat, a campaign that featured fliers with the unambiguous heading, “Wake Up, White People.”

Helms would later run and win as a Senator from North Carolina. In 1990, running against Harvey Gantt, the Helms campaign released an ad that tightly focused on a pair of white hands, crumpling up a job-rejection letter, with a voice over that he lost the job because they had to hire a minority. Continue reading

Sharing the Danger

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

This is a difficult MULLINGS to write because I am not certain how I would react if it were me.

The issue is mandatory isolation – quarantine – of doctors, nurses, and military personnel who have been in the Ebola area of West Africa. I have unending respect for Americans who make the decision go into dangerous places to help try to save people’s lives.

The case making current news has to do nurse Kaci Hickox who had been in Sierra Leone working with Doctors without Borders. Continue reading

Media Malpractice in Ferguson

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

The nation’s news media has never been held in lower esteem. And never has that derision been more deserved than in Ferguson. It’s astounding really, how irresponsible the news coverage has been.

The facts are thus. A white cop and a black man get into scuffle. The white cop shoots the black man.

End of story.

Tragic? Yes. But hardly the conspiracy that we have been led to believe by the news media. Continue reading

What “Winning the Senate” Means

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

We’ve heard all the chatter about the chances of the GOP taking control of the U.S. Senate in the midterm elections a week from Tuesday.

But what, if that should happen, would that mean, in practice?

First of all, assuming Republicans end up with a net six seats (either through knocking off six Democrats in the elections, getting a few sitting Democrats to switch sides, or both) they will get to organize the Senate. Continue reading

Quotes to Remember When Bad News Breaks

BY WILLIAM F. GAVIN

Through the years (I won’t mention how many) my mind has accumulated a great deal of quotations, not in any systematic way, but through the random process of reading and listening. Many of the quotes that I remember most clearly come from sources—-old radio shows and old songs in particular–not known for providing nourishing food for the mind.

Why I remember certain quotations and not others is a mystery. I wish I could say I know great chunks of the Bible or Shakespeare or Lincoln by heart, but I don’t. Throughout my life, when I try to memorize something special, I almost always fail to do. I can hold my own in a contest to recall song lyrics written by such Golden Age giants as Johnny Mercer, Lorenz Hart, Ira Gershwin, and Cole Porter, but I think this is because the words are accompanied by irresistibly memorable tunes which can be great mnemonic devices. Continue reading

Ebola

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

I have no interest in adding to the rising level of fear-mongering and finger-pointing that we’re reading, hearing, and seeing about Ebola. It is scary enough without a bunch of people running around like a character in an Edvard Munch painting.

I just looked this up. According to webmd.com an outbreak “happens when a disease occurs in greater numbers than expected in a community or region or during a season.” Continue reading

Reflections on Failure, in Baseball and Politics

BY WILLIAM F. GAVIN

Long ago I read a short story (I believe it was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald) in which a rich young man loses the girl he loves. He resumes his dissolute life, going to parties, laughing at every joke, dancing exuberantly with pretty girls who adore him. There is only one problem that suggests he may not have recovered from his loss. Every now and then, no matter where he is, at a formal dinner or a party or a dance, he suddenly bursts into tears, and sobs uncontrollably as his friends look on.

I do not wish to suggest that my grief over the Washington Nationals post-season loss against the San Francisco Giants is as great as that of the character who lost his soul-mate, but I didn’t take the defeat easily. Continue reading

Oil & Gas

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

The American oil and gas industry has saved our collective bacon.

On July 3, 2008, oil closed at $145.29 a barrel. Demand was strong. Inventories were low. And production was inelastic.

A few weeks ago, headlines screamed that U.S. and Gulf State aircraft had target Syrian oil installations under ISIS’ control in an attempt to degrade its ability to fund its operations. Continue reading

Soda Tax & Yoga Tax: The Common Thread

BY JOHN FEEHERY
Reprinted from TheFeeheryTheory.com

On one side of the country, in the People’s Republic of Berkley, the city council there is trying to raise taxes on soda pop.

On the other side of the country, in the People’s Republic of Washington D.C., the City Council raised taxes on people doing Yoga.

So what is the common thread linking the Soda tax and the Yoga tax?

Taxes, of course. Continue reading

Chocolate Chips, Computer Chips, A Cookie By Any Other Name

BY MICHAEL S. JOHNSON

So, the points I had accumulated with a company were about to expire. Use them or lose them, the notice said. But don’t despair.  You can redeem your points today. It’s easy.  Simply check the box next to magazines to which you want to subscribe and they’ll be on your doorstep in a matter of days. Oh, goodie.

The last time I ordered magazines, I believed I could win the Publisher’s Clearinghouse Sweepstakes.

The only magazine I’ve subscribed to since is the Minneapolis-St Paul magazine. It’s the best, and if you live in Minnesota or used to live in Minnesota or used to live near Minnesota and don’t get it, well you don’t get it, as the Washington Post likes to say. But I digress. Continue reading