New Column Up!!!
Yes, it's the first of the month and that means the new edition of Common Conservative is up! Common Conservative highlights some of the best, lesser known conservative authors and pundits on our side of the aisle. Sometimes we're funny, sometimes we're serious, but anyway you look at it we're always relevant.
Thomas Lindaman, editor extraordinnaire kicks us off this month with calling the Democrats on the carpet regarding taxes, with his usual witty approach.
Tom Adkins and Vincent Fiore still on hiatus. Their previous columns are still up.
Patrick Shanahan brings up history as it relates to today. We've always said that we should really pay attention to history because it has a nasty tendency of repeating itself. Patrick shows us that our wisdom is well-founded.
Marcie and I decided to make a return to our original, not-so-famous column "Passing Thoughts In Life's Rearview Mirror" as we recount the months bigger stories.
And Larry Simoneux's casual observance this issue focuses on wolves. Not the animal sort, (though after reading his piece, you may join us in our opinion that he is talking about "animals".) He's, of course, referring to the worst of human beings, just not the infamous ones. At least not yet.
Sher Zieve is discussing attorneys being fired, and how interestingly enough President Bush doesn't seem to have the same ability that previous presidents have utilized quite effectively.
Doug Patton is talking about how Al Gore has declared the debate on global warming over. Ah, if only Al Gore pulled his head out of his carbon credits, and actually listened to others in the field tell him he's full of it.
Carey Roberts is talking feminism, and her opinion isn't pretty for those liberated, determined, militant, and completely unhinged.
If verbally slapping a woman around was a crime, Doug Lillpop would be in jail for his rightfully-leveled verbal assault on House Speak Pelosi. And with Madame Pelosi, she's the epitome of being "stuck on stupid."
Diversity isn't a bad thing. But as the old adage goes "too much of a good thing can be bad," and Tom Ledford how that adage is still true today.
Robert Meyer is discussing health care. Specifically, the sort we should never resort to no matter how bad things seem to be.
As always, this post will stay at the top of the page for the next 24 hours, and any updates to the site will follow below this one, so please remember to scroill down.
Publius II
Thomas Lindaman, editor extraordinnaire kicks us off this month with calling the Democrats on the carpet regarding taxes, with his usual witty approach.
Tom Adkins and Vincent Fiore still on hiatus. Their previous columns are still up.
Patrick Shanahan brings up history as it relates to today. We've always said that we should really pay attention to history because it has a nasty tendency of repeating itself. Patrick shows us that our wisdom is well-founded.
Marcie and I decided to make a return to our original, not-so-famous column "Passing Thoughts In Life's Rearview Mirror" as we recount the months bigger stories.
And Larry Simoneux's casual observance this issue focuses on wolves. Not the animal sort, (though after reading his piece, you may join us in our opinion that he is talking about "animals".) He's, of course, referring to the worst of human beings, just not the infamous ones. At least not yet.
Sher Zieve is discussing attorneys being fired, and how interestingly enough President Bush doesn't seem to have the same ability that previous presidents have utilized quite effectively.
Doug Patton is talking about how Al Gore has declared the debate on global warming over. Ah, if only Al Gore pulled his head out of his carbon credits, and actually listened to others in the field tell him he's full of it.
Carey Roberts is talking feminism, and her opinion isn't pretty for those liberated, determined, militant, and completely unhinged.
If verbally slapping a woman around was a crime, Doug Lillpop would be in jail for his rightfully-leveled verbal assault on House Speak Pelosi. And with Madame Pelosi, she's the epitome of being "stuck on stupid."
Diversity isn't a bad thing. But as the old adage goes "too much of a good thing can be bad," and Tom Ledford how that adage is still true today.
Robert Meyer is discussing health care. Specifically, the sort we should never resort to no matter how bad things seem to be.
As always, this post will stay at the top of the page for the next 24 hours, and any updates to the site will follow below this one, so please remember to scroill down.
Publius II
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