Friday, March 27, 2009

The Washington PLO-ost

The Washington Post recently published this cartoon, apparantly the first shot of open antisemitism in the MSM.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Housing's Nestle Crunch

Sales of existing houses surged in February to the highest level since 2003. Prices have been falling, which helps explain the surge. Call it housing's Nestle Crunch.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

When Going Gets Tough, Obama Flees

That's the only way to describe how The Man On The Way Up deals with serious issues. Instead of actually leading, he hits the campaign trail. All the while his inability to lead becomes more and more obvious.

It's a process also being seen as the Democrats suddenly realize that their insistence that Afghanistan is "the war we must win" instead of the far stronger Saddam Hussein war requires actual commitment, so now the Democrats are backtracking.

The Big Oaf Continued

The Man On The Way Up clearly has a tinnier ear than the Denver Broncos' new coach as the AIG absurdity continues.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Saturday, March 14, 2009

The Big Oaf

The Man On The Way Up has now been in office for the better part of six weeks, and the record of The Big O (no, not WEEI's version) warrants the name The Big Oaf as he plays it fast and thick and displays the ineptitudes inevitable with being a control freak.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Obama's Botched Bank Shot

The Man On The Way Up is a basketball fan, and he's showing he's Pervis Ellison when it comes to his bank shot.

Turning On The Stimulus Sham

From Februrary 25:

Not everyone is welcoming The Man On The Way Up's stimulus sham - indeed, it would seem it may be the start of a trend.

UPDATE: now moderates in The Man On The Way Up's party are beginning to turn against his sham "stimulus."

Some Rationality On The Economy

Amid all the pessimism permeating coverage of the economy, some more optimistic epistles are to be found, such as the fact that housing foreclosures are not nationwide, that the fact that banking is still far stronger than in the early 1990s (see also here), and we're still earning more money.